to
Mr. Herman Van Rompuy
President of the European Council
Rue de la Loi, 175
B—1048 Brussels,
Belgium
attachments
172 suggestions for possible
Eurafrican Connections across
the Strait of Gibraltar
Dear Mr. Van Rompuy,
Last May, at the height of what has come to be known as the
"Arab Spring", and in the midst of a wave of tragic fatalities
among refugees attempting improvised crossings of the
Mediterranean Sea, this magazine published a call for ideas
entitled Project Heracles. It was inspired by an email exchange
between two of your fellow Belgians, philosophers Lieven De
Cauter and Dieter Lesage, on the social, cultural and political
implications of a bridge between Europe and Africa across the
Strait of Gibraltar. We challenged our readers from all over the
world to send us their suggestions as to how such a connection
might be realised.
Is it really a coincidence that this remains the last juncture
between the earth's great landmasses to have been consistently
deprived of any significant form of infrastructure? Continents
have been sliced apart at great expense, first at Suez to permit
the passage of vessels between Africa and Asia to Europe,
then in Panama, a site that marks—geographically if not
politically—the meeting point of North and South America
(which, revealingly, Europeans lump into a single continent
but Americans prefer to consider separate entities). Continents
have previously been sewn together by bridges. As you
well know, Asia and Europe are today united by not one but
two—the Bosphorus Bridge and Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge,
both spanning the Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul. According to
scientists, even the Bering Strait was once spanned by a land
bridge connecting Asia and America, which was how our
species first reached the Americas. As you can see, the history
of intercontinental movements is, in many ways, the history of
humankind itself.
"But," you may argue, "in terms of the engineering challenges
it poses, and its sheer cost, a bridge across the Strait of Gibraltar
is in a league of its own." That is true, but you shouldn't be
tempted to dismiss these precedents as unworthy terms of
comparison. When it was inaugurated in 1973, the Bosphorus
Bridge was a true marvel of engineering—the longest
suspension bridge span in the world outside the United
States. And, although we now take them for granted, the Suez
and Panama canals remain two of the most expensive and
ambitious construction projects ever undertaken.
We realise it is not an easy challenge we are setting you, and
to assist you in this Heraclean effort the readers of Domus
have assembled some ideas that might help expedite your
engagement with this infrastructural challenge. You might
be interested to hear that of the 170 or so proposals we have
received, only two opt for the European Council's preferred
typology of connection, the tunnel. Our readers, it would seem,
believe a project of this import is deserving of a more ambitious
infrastructural gesture, something of greater symbolic strength.
Most popular among our contributors is the idea of a poetic
(if somewhat predictable) recourse to geo-engineering: Africa
and Europe united by an archipelago of islands (a solution
propounded by no less than 21 participants, either floating
or permanently anchored to the seabed).
The second most popular strategy, one of considerably greater
originality and symbolic value in our opinion, proposes to link
innumerable boats, ships and watercraft of all kinds into a
new floating landmass. This clustered swarm of vessels of all sizes would stretch north-south between Ceuta and Gibraltar,
buoyantly spanning the Heraclean abyss. Surprisingly popular,
considering the purportedly rationalist inclinations of our
readership, was the suggestion that a miraculous parting of the
Mediterranean waters might provide a neat biblical solution to
this infrastructural dilemma. Without disrespect, one evident
problem with this option is the absence—anywhere on the
European stage—of a worthy modern-day equivalent of Moses
whose authority and leadership might suffice to stimulate such
a miracle.
There is one other typology of proposed connection that
impressed us with its symbolic value: the bridge-city. Of the six
such proposals received, one in particular struck us deeply in
that it was inspired by a text written in January 2004 by the late
Giancarlo De Carlo, one of the great urban theorists of our time,
and published in issue 866 of this magazine. The text was titled
Tortuosity and began with this passage:
"I think the notion of a Mediterranean city could have
an important influence on the construction of Europe and
the European city. It can be a positive influence because
it generates fertile contradictions."
The Offshore Bridge + Mediterranean City proposed by Andrea
Costa and Deborah Sanguineti is an eloquent expression of
Project Heracles's greatest ambition: to reframe this work of
infrastructure as something capable of transcending the
utilitarian dimension and thereby embody those ideals and
values—openness, equality, cultural enlightenment—which
purportedly represent the pillars upon which the European
project rests. A new city, a truly Mediterranean city in every
sense, could be the birthplace of a new era in the millennial
relationship between Africa and Europe. A city in which
migratory flows are not an unfortunate yet inevitable reality,
but rather the mainstay of its identity. As De Carlo reminds us:
"Migration has always been the vital essence of Mediterranean
cities. New cultures have continued to be included in daily life,
and they have fertilised and expressed themselves through
complex urban forms with richness and imagination."
Mr Van Rompuy, it is deplorable that Europe and Africa, two
continents linked by innumerable cultural ties and one of
the most significant migratory flows ever, are the only ones
which, despite their proximity, have remained physically
disconnected throughout human history. As you can see
from some of the works of architecture published in this
issue, the African continent is a place of innovation and
experimentation, from which we Europeans can learn.
We would therefore like to add our voices to those of Lieven
De Cauter and Dieter Lesage in asking you: what are you
waiting for to develop a plan for a hospitable entrance and
gateway to Europe on the Eurafrican border?
Hopefully yours,
Joseph Grima
Domus
An open letter to the President of the European Council
After surveying proposals for a Eurafrican bridge, a plea to marshal the Heraclean effort to complete the last great juncture between earth's landmasses.
View Article details
- Joseph Grima
- 06 July 2011
- Milan