Architecture in Global Socialism: Eastern Europe, West Africa, and the Middle East in the Cold War (Princeton University Press, 2020)

Henri Lefebvre on Space. Architecture, Urban Research, and the Production of Theory (University of Minnesota Press, 2011)

Toward an Architecture of Enjoyment by Henri Lefebvre (University of Minnesota Press, 2011)

Team 10 East. Revisionist Architecture in Real Existing Modernism (Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw/ University of Chicago Press, 2014)

Postmodernism Is Almost All Right. Polish Architecture after Socialist Globalization (Warsaw: Fundacja Bęc-Zmiana, 2012)

Urban Revolution Now. Henri Lefebvre in Social Research and Architecture (Ashgate/ Routledge, 2014)

Architecture in Global Socialism: Eastern Europe, West Africa, and the Middle East in the Cold War

Princeton University Press, 2020

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In the course of the Cold War, architects, planners, and construction companies from socialist Eastern Europe engaged in a vibrant collaboration with those in West Africa and the Middle East in order to bring modernization to the developing world. 

Architecture in Global Socialism shows how their collaboration reshaped five cities in the Global South: Accra, Lagos, Baghdad, Abu Dhabi, and Kuwait City. The book describes how local authorities and professionals in these cities drew on Soviet prefabrication systems, Hungarian and Polish planning methods, Yugoslav and Bulgarian construction materials, Romanian and East German standard designs, and manual laborers from across Eastern Europe. It explores how the socialist development path was adapted to tropical conditions in Ghana in the 1960s, and how Eastern European architectural traditions were given new life in 1970s Nigeria. It looks at how the differences between socialist foreign trade and the emerging global construction market were exploited in the Middle East in the closing decades of the Cold War. The book demonstrates how these and other practices of global cooperation by socialist countries—or socialist worldmaking—left their enduring mark on urban landscapes in the postcolonial world.

Featuring an extensive collection of previously unpublished images, Architecture in Global Socialism draws on original archival research on four continents and a wealth of in-depth interviews. It presents a new understanding of global urbanization and its architecture through the lens of socialist internationalism, challenging long-held notions about modernization and development in the Global South.

Praise:

Architecture in Global Socialism is a major contribution. This is a brilliantly original book that fundamentally recasts our understanding of architecture in a worldwide frame. It will become a canonical reference point for scholars and students of postwar global architecture.”—Neil Brenner, professor of urban theory, Harvard University

“An indispensable resource for scholars that goes beyond architecture and urban planning to engage with broader historical and political issues.”—Jean-Louis Cohen, author of Architecture in Uniform and The Future of Architecture Since 1889

AWARDS AND RECOGNITIONS

Winner of the Alice Davis Hitchcock Medallion, Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain (2020)

Winner of the President’s Award for Research in History and Theory, Royal Institute of British Architects (2020)

Winner of the First Book Prize, International Planning History Society (2022)

Highly commended for the inaugural Architectural Book of the Year Award, History Category (2023)

One of the Financial Times’ Summer Books of 2020: Architecture

REVIEWS IN ENGLISH

Owen Hatherley, The Guardian, January 3, 2020

Fabrizio Gallanti, Abitare, 24 July 2020

John Hill, Archidose, October 22, 2020

Ben Tosland, Architectural Histories 8(1):7, 2020, 1–8

Holly Bushman, Art Margins, October 10, 2020

Alicja Gzowska, View. Theories and Practices of Visual Culture 26, 2020

Hannah Neate, Eurasian Geography and Economics, September 13, 2020

Edwin Heathcote, Financial Times, 27 June, 2020

Kimberly Zarecor, Journal of Architectural Education, December 18, 2020

Florian Urban, Planning Perspectives, June 4, 2020

Alexander Adams, The Critic, 21 August, 2020

Nick Leech, The National (Abu Dhabi), March 5, 2020

Clarence Hatton-Proulx, Urban History 47(4), 2020

Katarína Smatanová, A&U, 3-4 (2020)

Nadi Abusaada, Arab Urbanism (2020)

CTBUH Journal, 2 (2020)

Paweł Wargan, Strelka Magazine, October 9, 2020

Gerry Hassan, Scottish Review, December 16, 2020

Tammy Gaber, American Journal of Islam and Society 38:1-2 (2021)

Vladimir Kulić, Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review 32:2 (2021)

David Rifkind, The Art Bulletin, 103:1 (2021), 154-6

Victor Petrov, H-Net, May 9, 2021

Ayala Levin, Journal of the Society of Architectural Histoirans, 80:2 (2021)

Marcus Colla, German History 39:4 (2021), 651–2

Duanfang Lu, Fabrications 31:2 (2021)

Johan Lagae, H-Soz-Kult, October 1, 2021

Gábor Tolnai, Hungarian Geographical Bulletin 71:1 (2022), 87-90

Franklin Obeng-Odoom, Housing Studies, June 2, 2022

Hannah le Roux, The Journal of African History 1-2 (2022)

Tim Livsey, International Journal of African Historical Studies 55:1 (2022)

Iulia Statica, Architectural History 65 (2022)

Juliana Maxim, Journal of Urban History 49:2 (2023), 450-6

Federico Camerin, Contemporary European History (2023), 1-8

REVIEWS IN GERMAN

Gregor Harbusch, BauNetz, September 16, 2020

Christian Welzbacher, Kunstbuchanzeiger, October 23, 2020

Jakob Marcks, Centre: Journal for Interdisciplinary Studies of Central Europe in the 19th and 20th Centuries 2, 2020

REVIEWS IN ITALIAN

Alessandro de Magistris, Casabella 10 (914), 2020

Luka Skansi, Studi e ricerche di storia dell’architettura 4, 2021

REVIEWS IN FRENCH

Jérôme Bazin, Histoire@Politique: Revue scientifique du Centre d’histoire de Sciences Po, 1-4 (40), 2020

REVIEWS IN SPANISH

Antonella Pataro, Arq.txt, August 29, 2021

Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago, Revista EURE – Revista De Estudios Urbano Regionales 48:145 (2022)

REVIEWS IN POLISH

Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu, Szum 31 (2020), 80-99

Tomasz Fudala, Architektura Murator 4 (2021), 16

REVIEWS IN JAPANESE

Kengo Hayashi, Medium, October 9, 2020

REVIEWS IN CHINESE

Jia Min, Ji Si, 澎湃 The Paper, June 1, 2020

Ye Lui, 时代建筑 Time+Architecture 6 (2022)

REVIEWS IN CROATIAN

Mojca Smode Cvitanović, Život umjetnosti 107 (2020), 172–5

REVIEWS IN CZECH

Pavel Kalina, Paměť a dějiny 2 (2021), 131-3

REVIEWS IN NORWEGIAN

Hans Henrik Fafner, Ny Tid, 25 November 2021

Henri Lefebvre on Space. Architecture, Urban Research, and the Production of Theory 

University of Minnesota Press, 2011

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This book offers a uniquely contextual appreciation of Henri Lefebvre’s idea that space is a social product. It explicitly confronts both the philosophical and the empirical foundations of Lefebvre’s oeuvre, especially his direct involvement in the fields of urban development, planning, and architecture.

Countering the prevailing view, which reduces Lefebvre’s theory of space to a projection of his philosophical positions, this book argues that Lefebvre’s work grew out of his empirical research on everyday practices of dwelling in postwar France and his exchanges with architects and planners. The book focuses on the interaction between architecture, urbanism, sociology, and philosophy that occurred in France in the 1960s and 1970s, marked by a shift in the processes of urbanization at all scales, from the neighborhood to the global level. Lefebvre’s thinking was central to this encounter, which informed both his theory of space and the concept of urbanization becoming worldwide.

The book offers a deeper and clearer understanding of Lefebvre’s thought and its implications for the present day. At a time when cities are increasingly important to our political, spatial, and architectural world, this reassessment proposes a new empirical and practical, interpretation of Lefebvre’s ideas on urbanism.

Praise:
“Henri Lefebvre’s diverse contributions to sociospatial and urban theory have inspired considerable commentary in recent years.  Łukasz Stanek’s brilliant, erudite book takes the discussion to a new level of philosophical sophistication while also grounding Lefebvre’s work in relation to a series of concrete engagements with architecture and urbanism in postwar France.  This is a pathbreaking work, indispensable for anyone concerned to understand Lefebvre’s powerful contemporary resonance as an urban thinker.” —Neil Brenner, Univresity of Chicago 

“This book is a strong and important reassessment of the theories and writings of Lefebvre. As cities are becoming more and more an essential part of our political, spatial, and architectural world, Lukasz Stanek launches a type of new generational take on Lefebvre, one that is both more contextual and more speculative.” —Mark Jarzombek, MIT

Toward an Architecture of Enjoyment
by Henri Lefebvre 

University of Minnesota Press, 2014

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Edited by Łukasz Stanek, translated by Robert Bononno

The relationship between bodily pleasure, space, and architecture—from one of the twentieth century’s most important urban theorists.

Praise:

“Henri Lefebvre’s diverse contributions to sociospatial and urban theory have inspired considerable commentary in recent years.  Lukasz Stanek’s brilliant, erudite book takes the discussion to a new level of philosophical sophistication while also grounding Lefebvre’s work in relation to a series of concrete engagements with architecture and urbanism in postwar France.  This is a pathbreaking work, indispensable for anyone concerned to understand Lefebvre’s powerful contemporary resonance as an urban thinker.” —Neil Brenner, New York University

“This book is a strong and important reassessment of the theories and writings of Lefebvre. As cities are becoming more and more an essential part of our political, spatial, and architectural world, Lukasz Stanek launches a type of new generational take on Lefebvre, one that is both more contextual and more speculative.” —Mark Jarzombek, MIT

Team 10 East. Revisionist Architecture in Real Existing Modernism

Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw/ distributed by University of Chicago Press, 2014.

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Edited by Łukasz Stanek

This volume coins the term “Team 10 East” as a conceptual tool to discuss the work of Team 10 members and fellow travelers from state-socialist countries—such as Oskar Hansen of Poland, Charles Polónyi of Hungary, and Radovan Nikšic of Yugoslavia. The book’s contributors approach these individuals from a comparative perspective on socialist modernism in Central and Eastern Europe and discuss the relationship between modernism and modernization across the Iron Curtain. Team 10 East addresses “revisionism” in state-socialist architecture and politics, showing how architects appropriated, critiqued, and developed postwar modernist architecture and functionalist urbanism both from within and beyond the confines of a Europe split by the Cold War.

Postmodernism Is Almost All Right. Polish Architecture after Socialist Globalization

Warsaw: Fundacja Bęc-Zmiana, 2012

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Text by Łukasz Stanek, archival research and interviews: Piotr Bujas, Alicja Gzowska, Aleksandra Kędziorek, Łukasz Stanek

This catalogue of the exhibition Postmodernism Is Almost All Right interrogates the generational experience of Polish architects in the Middle East and North Africa during the 1970s and 1980s, and the impact of this experience on the production of Polish cities after socialism.

Design: Jayme Yen

Urban Revolution Now. Henri Lefebvre in Social Research and Architecture

Ashgate/ Routledge, 2014

Edited by Łukasz Stanek, Christian Schmid, and Ákos Moravánszky

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This edited volume reconsiders worldwide urbanization processes in the 20th century by means of concepts such as “urban revolution,” “everyday life,” “production of space,” “rhythmanalysis,” and the “right to the city.” It results from two conferences at Delft University of Technology (2008) and ETH Zurich (2009).