TY - GEN
T1 - Modern slaughterhouses
T2 - 16th International Docomomo Conference Tokyo Japan 2020+1
AU - Wang, Yi Wen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Inheritable Resilience: Sharing Values of Global Modernities - 16th International Docomomo Conference Tokyo Japan 2020+1 Proceedings.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This paper traces the ideas, built and unbuilt projects of public slaughterhouses that had effectively reformed traditional private shambles and led to the creation of a new building type. The emergence of the modern slaughterhouse was entangled with the enlightenment rationality to exercise control and reform, which is manifested in the spatial configurations of the then newly developed institutional building types, such as prisons, asylums and slaughterhouses. This paper delineates the two contextual factors that contributed to the rise of modern slaughterhouses: the invention of the production line and slaughter machinery and the subsequent development of modernist proposals for public abattoirs. It then examines the spatial configuration of slaughterhouses and the development of ideas from a two-dimensional production line to a three-dimensional configuration that used gravity to engineer mass animal slaughter. Various ideas for a modern prototype for efficient, hygienic and humane animal slaughter were successively developed along with the early 20th century nascent modernist movement and facilitated by cross-national exchange. The paper concludes with a call for a responsive attitude toward the reuse of slaughterhouse, which serves new social functions for contemporary users to reflect upon the uncomfortable social and physical spaces that exist within societies.
AB - This paper traces the ideas, built and unbuilt projects of public slaughterhouses that had effectively reformed traditional private shambles and led to the creation of a new building type. The emergence of the modern slaughterhouse was entangled with the enlightenment rationality to exercise control and reform, which is manifested in the spatial configurations of the then newly developed institutional building types, such as prisons, asylums and slaughterhouses. This paper delineates the two contextual factors that contributed to the rise of modern slaughterhouses: the invention of the production line and slaughter machinery and the subsequent development of modernist proposals for public abattoirs. It then examines the spatial configuration of slaughterhouses and the development of ideas from a two-dimensional production line to a three-dimensional configuration that used gravity to engineer mass animal slaughter. Various ideas for a modern prototype for efficient, hygienic and humane animal slaughter were successively developed along with the early 20th century nascent modernist movement and facilitated by cross-national exchange. The paper concludes with a call for a responsive attitude toward the reuse of slaughterhouse, which serves new social functions for contemporary users to reflect upon the uncomfortable social and physical spaces that exist within societies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85119100382&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference Proceeding
AN - SCOPUS:85119100382
T3 - Inheritable Resilience: Sharing Values of Global Modernities - 16th International Docomomo Conference Tokyo Japan 2020+1 Proceedings
SP - 1406
EP - 1411
BT - 16th International Docomomo Conference Tokyo Japan 2020+1 Proceedings - Inheritable Resilience
A2 - Tostoes, Ana
A2 - Yamana, Yoshiyuki
PB - Docomomo
Y2 - 29 August 2021 through 2 September 2021
ER -