Asmara - Book Reviews,
by Edward Denison
Asmara FROM THE PUBLISHER Asmara, the capital of the small east African country of Eritrea, bordering
the Red Sea, is one of the most important and exciting architectural
OEdiscoveriesᄑ of recent years. Built almost entirely in the 1930s by the
Italians, Asmara has one of the highest concentrations of Modernist
architecture anywhere in the world, and has been evocatively described as
ᄑthe Miami of Africaᄑ. Desperate to build quickly, the colonial government
of the time allowed radical architectural experimentation that would not
have found favour in the more conservative European environment. Asmara
therefore became the worldᄑs prime building ground for architectural
innovation during the Modern Movement. That this occurred at all is
remarkable enough, but that these buildings should have survived in such
numbers today makes it one of the finest Modernist cities in the world.
Asmaraᄑs extraordinary history ᄑ engagingly retold at the beginning of this
book ᄑ has meant that this important architectural legacy has escaped the
destruction wrought by war and the exploitation of land that, elsewhere, has
occurred in peacetime. Now that the city is open to the world, following the
declaration of Eritreaᄑs independence from Ethiopia in 1991, there has been
a growing awareness of its architectural richness and significance, but
never before has this legacy been published. This building-by-building
survey, illustrated with rare archival material and specially commissioned
photographs, is a groundbreaking publication that is set to become one of
the most important new books on Modernist architecture of recent decades
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