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HOST:
MIT Joint Program in City Design and Development

SERIES:
The Resilient City: Trauma, Recovery and Remembrance




More videos in this series


Cities and Resurrection: Jerusalem and Us
Julian Beinart MAR ‘56
September 11, 2002
5:30 PM

LOCATION:
Room 1-190

EVENT SPONSORS:
MIT Joint Program in City Design and Development
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
School of Architecture and Planning






   
Cities and Resurrection: Jerusalem and Us

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SPEAKER:
Julian Beinart MAR ‘56
Professor of Architecture at MIT


ABOUT THE LECTURE:
The presentation is a case study of Jerusalem, the most destroyed and rebuilt city in history, and a major site for the three great monotheistic religions which are now adhered to by more than half the religious population of the world. Basic ideas of loss and restitution are briefly examined in the stories and laws of the Jewish, Christian and Moslem texts, as well as in some writing in psychiatry, and in the eschatologies arising from Jerusalem in particular. Some of these are then applied to four case studies of major shrines in Jerusalem: the built and imagined Temples of the Jews, destroyed and never rebuilt; the Christian Church of the Holy Sepulchre, frequently destroyed but constantly rebuilt; the Moslem buildings on the Haram-al-Sharif, threatened but never destroyed by human hands; and the Hurva synagogue, twice destroyed, and as of yet not rebuilt but involving important design proposals by famous architects over the past 25 years. Finally twelve general principles of the resilience of buildings are put forward, derived from both the religious and architectural evidence of Jerusalem.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER:
Julian Beinart is Professor of Architecture at MIT, where he teaches classes on the theory of city form as well as urban design studios. His recent writings have focused on a new plan for Chandigarh, proposed at the fiftieth anniversary of the city; the Olympic Games and city form; the form of urban grids; the application of economic instruments to cities in the nineteenth century; and image construction in pre-modern cities. He practices as an architect and urban designer in many parts of the world, including Jerusalem. He is currently collaborating with architect Charles Correa on the design of the new Brain and Cognitive Sciences Center at MIT. Beinart holds the BArch from the University of Cape Town, an MArch from MIT, and an MCP from Yale University.

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The information on this page was accurate as of the day the video was added to MIT World. This video was added to MIT World on 2002-09-26.

       

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