heterotopias hygienism civil engineers urban expansion science and the city
During the Enlightenment, Madrid’s scientific institutions, such as the
Botanical Garden or the Natural History Museum, served the demands of court
ornamentation as well as colonial efficiency. They were landmarks of new urbanism
and new science. In the 19th century engineers and hygienists shifted their focus
from empire to city. The relevance of their know-how was now certified by their
capacity to solve the city’s problems. They had to bring water, design
urban expansion and fight epidemics. Once again the sites from which these new
actors reformed the city were heterotopias, symbols of the promised metropolis: new
monuments both by their architecture and their noble function as scientific
institutions. All these local concerns were to be set aside by a new scientific
community emerging in Madrid in the first decade of the 20th century. A group of
physicists, chemists and biologists in search of international recognition formed a
new scientific campus on the outskirts of the city. The rationalism of their
buildings was the best symbol of the new scientific culture of precision. The change
of architecture also meant a change of culture. Our aim is to recover a lost sense
of the city by placing ourselves at the beginning of the process of urban
production. We hope that such a focus will reveal the fundamental role of scientific
activity in the definition of urban spaces.