TY - GEN object ID - 128898944 TI - Misleading innocence : tracing what a bridge can do AU - Garutti, Francesco AU - Mihandoust, Shahab AU - Canadian Centre for Architecture. PY - 2014 PB - Montréal : Canadian Centre for Architecture, DB - UniCat KW - Bridges KW - Parkways KW - Highway planning KW - Architecture KW - Political aspects KW - History KW - Historiography. KW - Moses, Robert, UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:128898944 AB - "This film is part of a curatorial project carried out by Francesco Garutti while in residence as Emerging Curator 2013-2014 at the Canadian Centre for Architecture. The film explores the controversial story of the planning and politics of a series of overpasses on Long Island, commissioned in the 1920s and 1930s by the influential American public administrator Robert Moses. The story suggests that the bridges had been designed expressly to prevent the passage of buses, thereby only allowing people who could afford to own a car to access Long Island's leisure spaces. The questions that the story raises are timlier now than ever before. They engage with issues of secrecy and control, the morals of power and the effects of technology: What is the relationship between politics and artefacts? How and to what degree can a project's intentions be deliberately concealed? What are the deviously designed effects and the unplanned political consequences of the agency of the artefacts that surround us? The film explores these questions through interviews with four scholars who in the 1980s and 1990s debated possible interpretations of the case. The film alludes rather than explains, interweaving reportage with the abstraction of theories. It mixes the deafening sound of automobiles with the singing of the birds that live along the parkways of Long Island, which are now almost one hundred years old."--Container. ER -