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Architecture of Casablanca

The architecture of Casablanca is diverse and historically significant. Casablanca, Morocco's economic capital, has a rich urban history and is home to many notable buildings in a variety of styles. Throughout the 20th century, architecture and urban development in Casablanca evolved in a way that was simultaneously specific to the city's contexts, and consonant with international ideas.

Traditional Moroccan
of the ḍarīh'' of Sidi Belyout. Casablanca retains many authentic examples of traditional Moroccan architecture, particularly within the city walls of the historic Medina of Ad-Dār Al-Bayḍāʾ. There are a number of aḍriħa (mausolea) including those of Sidi Allal al-Qairawani and Sidi Belyout. Casablanca was one of a number of cities—including Essaouira, Marrakesh, and Rabat—that were revitalized after the earthquake of 1755, by Sultan Mohammed ben Abdallah—who Abdallah Laroui called "the architect of modern Morocco." The Sqala bastion and the two oldest mosques in the city, the Mosque of the Makhzen and the Ould el-Hamra Mosque, were built during Sultan Muhammad Ben Abdallah's renovations to the city. In 1886, Élisée Reclus described Casablanca as a "European coastal settlement" and "desolate and extremely unhealthy." In his 1900 map of the city, Dr. Frédéric Weisgerber identified three main parts: the medina, the mellah, and the Tnaker (huts). Casablanca hosted a kissaria, fonduqs, and a fresh produce market along the Wadi Bouskoura stream, at what is now the United Nations Square. The medina was largely destroyed in the French bombardment of 1907, though several important buildings remain. == Colonial architecture ==
Colonial architecture
The oldest European structure in Casablanca was an abandoned prison allegedly built by the Portuguese, arcades of which now decorate the Arab League Park. The Church of San Buenaventura (now the Buenaventura Cultural Center) was built in the medina by the Spanish community of Casablanca in 1890. French Protectorate Throughout the decades of the French Protectorate (1912–1956), the urban development of Casablanca was "first and foremost driven by [French] economic interests." The city was designed with automotive traffic and eventual industrial complexes—such as the port and railroad lines—in mind. Lyautey's urban strategy in Morocco, shaped by a pragmatist regard toward colonized populations gained through his military experience in Indochina and Madagascar, was to construct and to leave virtually untouched, even to subject them to a kind of Orientalist preservation.|alt=|left Casablanca became a laboratory for the principles of , including a trenchant division and complete disassociation between the medina and the . For the colonial administration, the Moroccan medina was at once a breeding ground of disease to be contained, an antiquity of the past with Oriental charm to be preserved, and a refuge for would-be insurgents to be squelched. The main streets radiated southeast from the port, the medina, and the Souq Kbir ( grand market) which became and is now United Nations Square. This square linked the medina, the mellah, and the . Hippolyte Joseph Delaporte designed the first two major buildings to mark the square: the Paris-Maroc stores (1914) and the Hotel Excelsior (1918). and Claude Farrère said of the latter that "meetings of stock exchange, finance, and commerce took place exclusively in the four cafés surrounding it." The Central Market (1917) by Pierre Bousquet was built at the site of the Casablanca Fair of 1915. In 1917, Casablanca became the second city in the world, after New York's 1916 Zoning Resolution, to adopt a comprehensive urban plan. File:Georges Buan, plan showing the subdivisions of Casablanca, in Léon Guigues, "Guide de l'Exposition Franco-Marocaine" (Casablanca 1915).jpg|Georges Buan's plan appearing in the guide for the Casablanca Fair of 1915 File:Henri Prost, preliminary layout of roads 1917.jpg|Prost's road plan for his 1917 extension and development plan File:Henri Prost, Development and extension plan of 1917.jpg|A map of the development and extension plan published in France-Maroc. Hubous In 1916, four years after the official establishment of the French protectorate, Prost and Albert Laprade designed a —now known as the Hubous—a new medina near the sultan's palace to the east of the new center. Bousbir '', a Yoshiwara-inspired colonial brothel district. Albert Laprade first set up a rectangular area with an orthogonal street layout, while and Edmond Brion manipulated traditional Moroccan forms employed in the Hubous. It was a walled-off enclosure containing 175 residences, 8 cafés, and a dispensary, with regulated movement uniquely through a guarded gate. Up to 700 women—Muslims and Jews—lived in this veritable "prison." The colonists marketed the to tourists with Orientalist imagery until it was shut down in 1954. == Art Nouveau, Art Deco, and Neo-Moorish ==
Art Nouveau, Art Deco, and Neo-Moorish
Interwar period In addition to Henri Prost, Albert Laprade, Marius Boyer, , and Edmond Brion were some of the early planners and architects of the city. The development of the was fueled by investment by diverse patrons, including the Makhzani former minister of State Holdings Omar Tazi, the Jewish businessman Haim Bendahan, and the southern Amazigh pasha of Marrakesh Thami El Glaoui.'''' Jewish patrons constructed the overwhelming majority of the tallest buildings in Casablanca during the interwar period.'' They came from a Gibraltarian Jewish family that moved to Algeria, where they were trained as surveyors. The Arab League Park (formerly called Parc Lyautey) is the city's largest public park. On its edge is the Sacred Heart Church of Casablanca. It is no longer in use for religious purposes, but it is open to visitors and is a splendid example of Neo-Gothic architecture. File:مبنى بأسلوب استعماري فرنسي شارع الحسن الثان.jpeg|A building in French colonial style on Hassan II Blvd. File:وجه مزخرف بأسلوب الفن الجديد على مبني في الدار البيضاء.jpg|Art Nouveau decorative detail. File:المجازر القديمة الدار البيضاء 00 59 26 950000.jpeg|The Old Abattoirs in Hay Mohammadi, renovated by Henri Prost in 1922. File:باب من الحديد المطاع مع طاووسين زخرفيين.jpg|Wrought iron decorating a door. Marius BoyerMarius Boyer, 85 rue Colbert, 1929. File:الفن الزخرفي المزلج في الدار البيضاء.jpg|Art Deco blended with reinterpreted Moroccan decorative elements. The French government described Casablanca as a "laboratory of urbanism." Morocco's permanent delegation to UNESCO submitted a nomination file to get Casablanca's 20th century architecture classified as a World Heritage Site. Casamémoire is an organization that has been working to protect and promote this architectural heritage since 1995. == Modernism and Brutalism ==
Modernism and Brutalism
's 1930s , meant to receive the company's laborers and simulate a traditional neighborhood. Streamline Moderne, or paquebot style, with the aesthetic of ocean liners is present in the Bendahan Building, Villas Paquet, the Liberty Building, and others. Edmond Brion's Bendahan Building, completed in 1935, was an early example. Casablanca was an early site of Americanization due to the allied landing during Operation Torch in 1942. Ecochard's Plan Michel Écochard, director of urban development from 1946 to 1953, changed Casablanca's urban plan from Prost's radio-concentric system to a linear system, with expanded industrial zones stretching east through Aïn Sebaâ toward Fedala. There was a focus on managing the city's rapid, rural exodus-driven urbanization through the development of social housing projects. Georges Candilis and Michel Ecochard, the presenters, argued against the doctrine that architects must consider local culture and climate in their designs. This generated great debate among modernist architects around the world and eventually provoked a schism. Ecochard's collective of Modernist architects was called (GAMMA), and initially included the architects George Candillis, Alexis Josic and Shadrach Woods. In the early 1950s, Écochard commissioned GAMMA to design housing that provided a "culturally specific living tissue" for laborers and migrants from the countryside. Sémiramis, (Honeycomb), and Carrières Centrales were some of the first examples of this Vernacular Modernism. Ecochard's 8x8 meter model, designed to address Casablanca's issues with overpopulation and rural exodus, was pioneering in the architecture of collective housing. , a private villa in Anfa Superieur. Elie Azagury, the first Moroccan modernist architect, led GAMMA after Morocco regained its independence in 1956. He and colleagues such as Jean-François Zevaco were also involved in designing experimental private villas in neighborhoods in western Casablanca such as Anfa and Ain Diab with inspiration from Richard Neutra and Oscar Niemeyer. This generation of independence architects were inspired by the schools of Le Corbusier, Richard Neutra, Walter Gropius, Oscar Niemeyer, and others. Schools As access to education was tightly controlled under the French Protectorate, the educational system in Morocco became a focal point. Mourad Ben Embarek designed the Mohammed V International Airport and the Atlas Tower. File:مشروع إسكان سيدي عثمان في الدار البيضاء.jpg|Vernacular modernism in GAMMA's Sidi Othmane Housing Development in Sidi Othmane, by and Jean Hentsch (c. 1952). File:Prayer space - mosque Assuna, Casablanca, Morocco.jpg|View from within the prayer hall of Jean-François Zevaco's 1966 Assuna Mosque, inspired by Niemeyer's 1943 Igreja da Pampulha. File:إقامة الزرقطوني.jpg|El Mehdi Laraki's 1980s Zerktouni Residence in Maarif. File:ملعب العربي ابن مبارك في الدار البيضاء 09.jpg|Larbi Benbarek Stadium by Abdelkader Bensalem and Domenico Basciano (1989). == Neoliberal architecture ==
Neoliberal architecture
Koenraad Bogaert discusses recent urban projects in Casablanca in their relationship to the politics of Neoliberalism. Villes Sans Bidonvilles is a UN-Habitat program established in the aftermath of the 2003 Casablanca bombings for the resettlement of slum-dwellers. It works with organizations such as Al Omrane, Idmaj Sakan, Dyar Al Mansour, and the . Casa Marina, Anfa Park, and Casanearshore, are business parks for offshoring. Morphosis Architects designed the Casablanca Finance City Tower, with its textured aluminum facade. The French architecture firm is involved in this project as well as the Zenata "eco cité". == Notable buildings and structures ==
Notable buildings and structures
Government and municipal building in Casablanca. As the economic capital of Morocco, Casablanca is home to many government and municipal buildings. These buildings include but are not limited to: • Palace of Justice (, ) • Wilaya Building (, ), designed by Marius BoyerThe Post Office (مكتب البريد, ) • Bank al-Maghreb (بنك المغرب) • Old Abattoirs Religious buildings Casablanca is home to many religious buildings as part of its diverse heritage. Synagogues Ettedgui SynagogueBeth-El Synagogue Mosques Hassan II Mosque, designed by Michel PinseauAl-Quds Mosque, formerly a Neo-Gothic church called • Sunna Mosque, designed by Jean-François ZevacoAl-Mohammadi Mosque, designed by Edmond Brion and Churches Church of San BuenaventuraChurch of the Sacred Heart (1930–1953), designed by Paul Tournon • Casablanca Tit Mellil AirportMohammed V International Airport Cinemas and theaters Cinema RialtoCinema LynxCiname EmpireCinema ABCCinema VoxGrand Theatre of Casablanca • (1922–1984) 1932 Neo-Mauresque Maret Building. Residential buildings Apartment buildings Maret BuildingLiberty BuildingIMCAMA Building (1928) designed by Albert Greslin. • Assayag Building Private villas Villa ZevacoVilla CamembertVilla SuissaVilla AzaguryVilla Moqri Sports Mohammed V Athletic ComplexLarbi Benbarek Stadium • • • Orthlieb Pool (demolished) Skyscrapers Liberty BuildingAtlas TowerHabous TowerNovotelSofitelTwin CenterCasablanca Finance City Tower == Preservation of architectural heritage ==
Preservation of architectural heritage
Casamémoire is an organization dedicated to the promotion and protection of Casablanca's architectural heritage. MAMMA. is dedicated to the appreciation and protection of Casablanca's Modernist and Brutalist architecture. == See also ==
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