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Freddy Mamani (architect)

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Bolivian architect (born 1971) For the Bolivian politician, see Freddy Mamani. In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Mamani and the second or maternal family name is Silvestre.

Freddy Mamani
Mamani in 2015
BornFreddy Mamani Silvestre
(1971-11-01) 1 November 1971 (age 53)
Catavi, La Paz, Bolivia
OccupationArchitect
PracticeNeo-Andean

Freddy Mamani Silvestre (born 1 November 1971) is a Bolivian self-taught architect noted for his development of the Neo-Andean architectural style. His work is most associated with the city of El Alto and with the new social class of upwardly mobile indigenous Bolivians.

Biography

Mamani was born in Catavi; his father was a bricklayer. They moved to El Alto while Freddy was at the age of six. He also followed his father's profession as a bricklayer. He had dreams of becoming an architect, but his work schedule would not permit him to attend whatever classes available in his local universities. Eventually, he instead received his degrees in civil construction and engineering from the Universidad Mayor de San Andres and Universidad Boliviana de Informática respectively.

Work

Regarding Mamani's architectural style, Italian architect Elisabetta Andreoli, author of "Andean Architecture of Bolivia", once explained that "some of the forms have been taken out of Andean art. The Tiwanacotas used a language of civilization in their forms: textiles, ceramics, and architectural ruins. Mamani uses the Andean cross, the diagonal juxtaposition of the planes, the duplicity, the repetition, the circle, which makes all this a stylisation theme, that is its source."

  • Neo-Andean architecture Neo-Andean architecture

References

  1. Valencia, Nicolas (25 November 2017). "Why Freddy Mamani is Leading A New Andean Architecture". ArchDaily. ISSN 0719-8884. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  2. Elisabetta Andreoli (13 July 2015). "'We have money and can build in a way that represents us'". Architectural Review. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  3. Wainwright, Oliver (23 October 2018). "Party palaces and funky funhouses: Freddy Mamani's maverick buildings". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  4. "Freddy Mamani's New Andean Architecture adds colour to Bolivian city". Dezeen. 7 February 2019. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  5. ^ Rebolledo, Mauricio Becerra (18 September 2024). "Freddy Mamani, padre de la arquitectura neoandina: "En nuestra sangre están los colores"". El Ciudadano (in Spanish).
  6. Valencia, Nicolas (25 November 2017). "Why Freddy Mamani is Leading A New Andean Architecture". ArchDaily. ISSN 0719-8884. Retrieved 19 February 2022.

Further reading

  • La arquitectura de Freddy Mamani Silvestre by Elisabetta Andreoli and Ligia D'Andrea (La Paz: El Alto, 2013)


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