Susana Torre: Feminism and Architecture



Recorded March 18, 2014

On March 18, 2014, architect, critic, and educator Susana Torre presented the keynote address for Feminism and Architecture: Intergenerational Conversations, a program co-organized by The Architectural League and Parsons The New School for Design. Torre was the curator of the 1977 League exhibition Women in American Architecture: A Historic and Contemporary Perspective, and editor of an accompanying book of the same name.

In this lecture, Torre outlines the powerful and multifaceted — yet often ignored — influence that feminism has had on the fields of architecture and urban planning. She examines six themes to demonstrate the ways in which feminist ideas have contributed to change in these disciplines and how these contributions have been unacknowledged or misinterpreted: the design of domestic space; the changed structure of the suburb; the development of new building types, the redefinition of old ones, and the design of new construction norms and details; the engraving of collective memory in the American city; the radical revision of our attitudes towards the preservation, rather than the conquest, of nature, and the emergence of sustainable design as an ecological practice; and women’s culture and identity as a legitimate design paradigm.

From this historical perspective, Torre goes on to challenge persistent stereotypes of gender distinctions and detail some of the entrenched institutional values that continue to hinder change in the workplace today. Calling on the design community at large to do more to retain and promote the advancement of women in the profession, she concludes by identifying strategies for action and imploring the audience to encourage discourse on feminism and architecture with renewed vigor: “… [T]here is no conclusion — there never is — and … whatever agenda we propose to implement is valid for a few years only. … We now need to formulate the questions for the next stage of its evolution.”

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