Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976

Construction aid was a physical tool – and indeed a key tactical manoeuvre – of international diplomacy that became especially obvious during the Cold War period. Among the outcomes of construction aid were cultural and technical exchanges between the donor and recipient countries. This essay examin...

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Main Authors: Wei Chang, Charlie Xue, Guanghui Ding
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2019-04-01
Series:ARENA Journal of Architectural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajar.arena-architecture.eu/articles/147
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spelling doaj-a312efe53b4e47bc856895e3bfca720c2020-11-24T21:26:03ZengUbiquity PressARENA Journal of Architectural Research2397-08202019-04-014110.5334/ajar.14715Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976Wei Chang0Charlie Xue1Guanghui Ding2Tangshan UniversityCity University of Hong KongBeijing University of Civil Engineering and ArchitectureConstruction aid was a physical tool – and indeed a key tactical manoeuvre – of international diplomacy that became especially obvious during the Cold War period. Among the outcomes of construction aid were cultural and technical exchanges between the donor and recipient countries. This essay examines the typical construction aid projects gifted by the Chinese Communist government and professionals to developing countries in Asia and African during the era of Chairman Mao Zedong, with a focus on key Asian examples. The remarkably high percentage of national income spent by Maoist China on construction aid might have increased the burden upon the lives of ordinary Chinese people, yet they gave Chinese architects rare opportunities to practice Modernism in overseas environments. The strength of the technical forces of the Chinese Communist state, and the wisdom of Chinese designers, were notably crystallized through a series of conference halls and stadiums built across Asia. These construction aid projects informed similar designs back in China, which led in turn to further innovations that could then again be exported abroad. Altogether it represents an important non-Western strand within Modernist architecture of the twentieth century.https://ajar.arena-architecture.eu/articles/147Construction aiddeveloping countriesChinese architectureCold War
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wei Chang
Charlie Xue
Guanghui Ding
spellingShingle Wei Chang
Charlie Xue
Guanghui Ding
Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976
ARENA Journal of Architectural Research
Construction aid
developing countries
Chinese architecture
Cold War
author_facet Wei Chang
Charlie Xue
Guanghui Ding
author_sort Wei Chang
title Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976
title_short Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976
title_full Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976
title_fullStr Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976
title_full_unstemmed Architecture of Diplomacy: Chinese Construction Aid in Asia, 1950–1976
title_sort architecture of diplomacy: chinese construction aid in asia, 1950–1976
publisher Ubiquity Press
series ARENA Journal of Architectural Research
issn 2397-0820
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Construction aid was a physical tool – and indeed a key tactical manoeuvre – of international diplomacy that became especially obvious during the Cold War period. Among the outcomes of construction aid were cultural and technical exchanges between the donor and recipient countries. This essay examines the typical construction aid projects gifted by the Chinese Communist government and professionals to developing countries in Asia and African during the era of Chairman Mao Zedong, with a focus on key Asian examples. The remarkably high percentage of national income spent by Maoist China on construction aid might have increased the burden upon the lives of ordinary Chinese people, yet they gave Chinese architects rare opportunities to practice Modernism in overseas environments. The strength of the technical forces of the Chinese Communist state, and the wisdom of Chinese designers, were notably crystallized through a series of conference halls and stadiums built across Asia. These construction aid projects informed similar designs back in China, which led in turn to further innovations that could then again be exported abroad. Altogether it represents an important non-Western strand within Modernist architecture of the twentieth century.
topic Construction aid
developing countries
Chinese architecture
Cold War
url https://ajar.arena-architecture.eu/articles/147
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