Oct

13

Sarah Lynn Lopez: Construction Labor and Cantera Stone in Mexico and the US

Date

Thu

,

Oct 13

Time

6:00 pm

-

7:30 pm

How

Hybrid

Type

Talk

Location

Sciame Auditorium (Room 107) 141 Convent Avenue, New York, NY 10031

Partner(s)

The City College of New York, The Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture

"Architectural History Is Migrant History" tracks the development over the last fifty years of a binational construction industry that has emerged around the excavation (in Mexico), transportation, distribution, and installation (in the U.S.) of cantera stone. Cantera literally means “quarry,” but the Spanish word is used in Mexico to describe a specific brittle rock used to build colonial churches and civic infrastructure. More recently, a network of Mexican quarrymen, stonemasons, homebuilders, architects, and businessmen have refined a cantera market that caters to a Mexican and Mexican American clientele in the American Southwest. "Architectural History Is Migrant History" recasts Mexican construction-related labor by tracking the development of a meaningful and sophisticated industry that has reshaped design norms and building trades in two countries from the shadows of a formal American economy.

Date

Thu

,

Oct 13

Time

6:00 pm

-

7:30 pm

How

Hybrid

Type

Talk

Location

Sciame Auditorium (Room 107) 141 Convent Avenue, New York, NY 10031

Partner(s)

The City College of New York, The Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture

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