Lucio Costa

Lucio Marçal Ferreira Ribeiro Lima Costa
Born 27 February 1902(1902-02-27)
Toulon, France
Died 13 June 1998(1998-06-13) (aged 96)
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Nationality Brazilian
Work
Practice Lucio Costa
Buildings Gustavo Capanema Palace
Projects Pilot Plan of Brasília

Lucio Costa (27 February 1902 - 13 June 1998) was a Brazilian architect and urban planner.

Career

Costa was born in Toulon, France. Educated at the Royal Grammar School, Newcastle upon Tyne, England and in Montreux until 1916, he graduated as an architect in 1924 from the School of Fine Art (Escola Nacional de Belas Artes) in Rio de Janeiro. After some early works in the eclectic manner, he adopted Modernism in 1929. In 1930 Costa established a partnership with Russian-born Brazilian architect Gregori Warchavchik, and became the Manager of the School of Fine Art. Even though he found students eager to be taught in the "new style," his ruthless administration won him the opposition of the faculty and student body, and Costa eventually had to resign after a year in office. He joined the newly-created SPHAN (Service of National Historic and Artistic Heritage) in 1937 under Rodrigo Melo Franco de Andrade. He remained at the Heritage Service until retirement, acceding to the top post of director, where he was followed by his granddaughter Maria Elisa Costa. During his tenure as regional and then national director, he became involved in numerous controversial decisions (see Controversies).

Costa became a figure associated with reconciling traditional Brazilian forms and construction techniques with international modernism, particularly the work of Le Corbusier. His works include the Brazilian pavilion at the New York World's Fair of 1939 (designed with Oscar Niemeyer), the Parque Guinle residential complex in Rio of 1948, and the Hotel do Park São Clemente in Nova Friburgo of 1948. Among his major works are also the Ministry of Education and Health, in Rio (1936–43), designed with Le Corbusier, Oscar Niemeyer, and Roberto Burle Marx, among others, and the Pilot Plan of Brasília, a competition winner designed in 1957 and mostly built in 1958-1960.

Controversies

During his long tenure as regional, and then later, national chief of the Brazilian Heritage Service, Lucio Costa pushed for systematic documentation of existing architectural and urbanistic heritage, although his critics allege that he let his personal preferences and political opinions interfere with the bases of his decisions . In 1975, he created a public scandal by refusing to sign the landmarking act of Palácio Monroe, the former seat of the Brazilian Senate built in 1906. The building was slated for demolition because of the construction of the subway but, in the face of public and media outcry, the construction company shifted the line to preserve the building. This effort, however, was in vain, since landmark status was denied and a developer razed the building shortly thereafter. Costa favored the heritage of the Portuguese colonization over that of any other time or ethnic group (except over Modernism). Because of this attitude, inculcated also on younger preservationists thanks to Costa's influence in the architecture schools, much of 19th- and early 20th-century architecture, including the architecture of German, Japanese and Italian immigrants, was lost to urban renewal in the 1960s and 1970s.

In 1936, when the competition to design the new Ministry of Education and Health was held, the winner was an eclectic design by architect Arquimedes Memória. Costa used his political connections within the government to scrap the competition result and instead form a new design team headed by himself and Le Corbusier, with among other members the Roberto Brothers and a young architect who had been Costa's intern, called Oscar Niemeyer. There ensued a disagreement, dragging on for years, between Costa and Le Corbusier over who had really been the lead designer on the project.

He died in Rio de Janeiro in 1998.

Brasilia

Lucio Costa is best known for his urban plan for the new capital of Brasília, located in Brazil's hinterland, having won the job in a 1957 public competition. Costa's Plano Piloto (Pilot Plan) for Brasilia is in the shape of an irregular cross, suggesting an airplane or dragonfly. Costa's own Parque Guinle project was the model for Brasilia's many residential tower-in-a-park superblocks, and Costa specified even the color of the bus drivers' uniforms: dark grey and with a cap.

Although named as an UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987, the city is notorious for its windswept emptiness and anti-pedestrian layout. Some streets are badly lit because the height and spacing of light standards were not changed with the advent of mercury-vapor bulbs, and World Heritage Site designation has prevented remediation.

Costa was responsible for the layout, and Oscar Niemeyer responsible for many of the landmark buildings, and there were disputes between the two afterwards as an article in the landmarking decree specifically exempted works from both of them from review by the Heritage Service. Nevertheless, Brasília is also famous for Costa's "utopian" project; although not fully accomplished, it has produced a city of considerable quality of life, in which the citizens live in wooded areas with sporting and leisure structure (the "superquadras") flanked by small commercial areas, bookstores and cafés; the city is famous for its gastronomy and the relative efficiency of transit.

Even these positive features, however, have sparked controversy, well expressed in the nickname "ilha da fantasia" ("fantasy island"), indicating the sharp contrast between the city and the surrounding regions, marked by poverty and disorganization.