The Borges Cloisters

Item

Title
The Borges Cloisters
Description
The 20th-century Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges is best known for his fantastical stories of labyrinths and libraries, but his early poetry evokes the sacredness of ordinary urban spaces in his native Buenos Aires: patios, for instance, that are “the slope / down which the sky flows into the house.” The monastic cloister operates analogously. As the heart of the monastic polis, it synthesizes street, public square, and paradise garden, situating the daily rhythms of life “at the crossway of the stars.” It embodies a deep story of hope.

The cloister therefore offers an ideal typology for the urgent ecological task of urban rewilding: the practice of reawakening latent ecosystems in their sacred complexity. Less a means of exclusion than of inviting the soul to turn inward, the cloister can become a rich space for reconnecting cities with the land to which they belong. The unique perimeter walk, in particular, forms a contemplative and social space between inside and out, blurring “culture” and “nature.”

This thesis reimagines part of the Austin State Hospital’s languishing campus in Austin, Texas — the city where Borges writes he “discovered America” in 1963 and which he found reminiscent of Buenos Aires — as a communal urban village structured around cloisters of varied shape, size, and ecology: a monastic mat urbanism where architecture, city, and landscape entwine. The Borges Cloisters are spaces of discovery and refuge, of cultivation and symbiosis, of death and new life, inviting residents and guests into renewed relationship with the earth family.
Creator
Colombo, Gabriel Miller
Subject
city
cloister
ecology
rewilding
spirituality
urbanism
Architecture
Landscape architecture
Urban planning
Contributor
Lee, Mark
Date
2023-10-24T03:58:24Z
2023
2023-10-23
2023-05
2023-10-24T03:58:24Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Colombo, Gabriel Miller. 2023. The Borges Cloisters. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
30526721
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37377298
00-0002-5772-6166
Language
en