Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/25626
Title: Challenging Disregard: The Case of the Telecommunication Center in Skopje
Authors: Ivanovska Deskova, Ana
Deskov, Vladimir
Ivanovski, Jovan 
Keywords: modernist heritage; endangered heritage; preservation; renewal; Brutalism
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: "Ion Mincu" University Press, Bucharest
Source: Deskova, Ana Ivanovska, Vladimir Deskov, and Jovan Ivanovski. “Challenging Disregard: The Case of the Telecommunication Center in Skopje.” studies in History and Theory of Architecture, no. 7 (2019): 205-219. https://sita.uauim.ro/article/
Journal: Studies in History and Theory of Architecture
Abstract: In 1963, Skopje suffered a catastrophic earthquake that left the city reduced to rubble. The post-earthquake renewal led by the UN propelled unprecedented international solidarity. Previously unknown, this peripheral city became a field of global cooperation and a laboratory for testing the latest urban and architectural paradigms. The process that, at its highest intensity, lasted less than 20 years resulted in the most powerful segment of Skopje’s recent architectural history. During the past decades, Skopje underwent another transformation. The changes in the political, economic and cultural context led towards a generalized neglect of the recent architectural heritage, on the one hand, and on the other hand, towards a process of dramatic spatial remodeling. By focusing on the example of the iconic Telecommunication Center designed by architect Janko Konstantinov, this paper intends to show how architectural preservation can sometimes assume the form of individual activism. Harboring an obsolete program and suffering systematical neglect, the Telecommunication Center can definitely be ascribed to the category of endangered heritage. This begs the question of how one can act when the social and aesthetic values of heritage are under attack; when the institutions are not only ignorant, but are at times in favor of this violent erasure of personal and collective history? How to demonstrate that a building is significant enough to be considered heritage? In a context that is strongly politically and ideologically driven, through a process of “experimental preservation,” the authors of this paper used the Telecommunication Center as a trigger for the larger revaluation process of modernist heritage.
Description: Published in issue 7 /2019 - Seasoned Modernism, Prudent Perspectives on an Unwary Past
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/25626
DOI: 10.54508/sITA
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Architecture: Journal Articles

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