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How Brasília’s urban design affects citizen behavior during political violence

My friend Allan sent me an article about the city of Brasília, and how its architecture affected the recent insurrection (Ryan wrote the best overview about what happened that I’ve seen). I have long been fascinated with Brasília, every since I researched it for a product management article called Usable yet Useless: Why Every Business Needs Product Discovery:

A “shiny citadel” from far away, as The Guardian once wrote, up close Brasília has “degraded into a violent, crime-ridden sprawl of cacophonous traffic jams. The real Brazil has spilled into its utopian vision.”

This problem echoes across today’s web landscape as well, where the needs of ordinary users spill constantly into designers’ utopian vision.

So I read In Brasília, Modernist Architecture Met Political Violence with great interest:

Brasília’s so-called Monumental Axis, or Eixo Monumental, isn’t a walkable touristic path dotted by free museums. Instead, it is an otherworldly landscape of red earth, open grass and enormous roadways, an anti-pedestrian landscape best viewed from the air. So vast are its voids that the sheer scale of the space may have helped temper the energies of the crowds.

The city’s design had specific consequences for the political unrest:

More than 60 years later, Brasília’s real-world shortcomings are well known: Its population far outgrew what its designers imagined, with most residents living in satellite developments that sprawl far from Costa’s planned central district. Many politicians commute via plane, making the city more a symbolic site than a place where one finds gatherings of politicians. President Lula was not in Brasília at the time of the riot, nor were legislators of Brazil’s National Congress, which is in recess: The protesters attacked mostly empty buildings.

This is a really interesting look at how urban design affects the behavior of citizens.