Città e Storia -
2012/
2
ISBN 978-88-8368-137-0
Cristina Renzoni

Austerità e urbanistica: questione ambientale e crisi energetica tra anni Sessanta e Settanta

Pag. 313-
329
, DOI 10.17426/89559
COD: A1024A Categoria:

6,00 

Keywords:

Following the exacerbation of the Arab-Israeli conflict, the Italian government enacted a series of urgent measures of energetic austerity: between December 1973 and April 1974 Italian citizens faced the need to change their everyday lifestyles and leisure activities, through a collective revision of ways of life that had been consolidated during the previous fifteen years. The oil crisis pushed Italian society to rethink the categories of “need” and “well-being”, in connection with an international debate that focused on the links between economic growth, energetic requirements and models of development. The discussion on the limits of individual behaviour was brought to an acceleration, problematizing individual well-being as a result of the expansion of Italian economy and democracy but also as a consumption of common resources. Cities became one of the places in which the public opinion, as well as several experts and professionals, observed the implications of austerity. Images related to the experience of pedestrian cities catalysed the attention and remained strongly impressed in collective memories for a long time. These images, as well as the emergence of environmental issues, had a strong impact on urban planning and other forms of urban governance. Nevertheless, it should be stressed that the changes occurring in these fields were also prepared by some debates that Italian planning culture had elaborated since the previous decade. 

Following the exacerbation of the Arab-Israeli conflict, the Italian government enacted a series of urgent measures of energetic austerity: between December 1973 and April 1974 Italian citizens faced the need to change their everyday lifestyles and leisure activities, through a collective revision of ways of life that had been consolidated during the previous fifteen years. The oil crisis pushed Italian society to rethink the categories of “need” and “well-being”, in connection with an international debate that focused on the links between economic growth, energetic requirements and models of development. The discussion on the limits of individual behaviour was brought to an acceleration, problematizing individual well-being as a result of the expansion of Italian economy and democracy but also as a consumption of common resources. Cities became one of the places in which the public opinion, as well as several experts and professionals, observed the implications of austerity. Images related to the experience of pedestrian cities catalysed the attention and remained strongly impressed in collective memories for a long time. These images, as well as the emergence of environmental issues, had a strong impact on urban planning and other forms of urban governance. Nevertheless, it should be stressed that the changes occurring in these fields were also prepared by some debates that Italian planning culture had elaborated since the previous decade.