@inbook{3511545e9f3a4123ae84bd8e20af3943,
title = "Crossing Urban and Transport Expertise to Pave Lisbon{\textquoteright}s Future Urban Sprawl (1930s–1940s)",
abstract = "The construction of the coastal road from Lisbon to Cascais, promoted by the public works program of the Portuguese nationalistic Centennial Commemorations (1940), was one of the “old aspirations of the capital of the Empire”: it structured urban sprawl in the area to the west of Lisbon, as part of urban planning of Lisbon and its neighbouring regions; it materialized an agenda for the promotion of tourism, the “great facade of nationality,” and finally, it contributed to the propaganda of the work of the Estado Novo (New State) dictatorship and its makers. This chapter follows how the expertise of foreign urban planners inspired by the garden-city model and of Portuguese road engineers influenced by the recent European motorways (built in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany) were brought together and interchanged to plan the “new Lisbon” designed along the axis of the river mouth of Tagus and to foster new (auto)mobilities. The implantation of this road in the riverside area, starting in Bel{\'e}m, one of the most emblematic spaces of the nationality celebrations and of the empire reinforced the imperial mystique of the dictatorship, by materializing the “work of historical continuity of the Estado Novo” that the Centennial Commemorations intended to celebrate.",
author = "Sousa, {M. Lu{\'i}sa}",
note = "Funding Information: A previous version of this article was presented at the Sixth National Meeting for the History of Science and Technology, held in FCT/UNL, Monte de Caparica (Portugal) in July 2018, as part of the panel “New State, Cidade Nova? Ci{\^e}ncia, cidade e fascismo em Lisboa, 1933–1945,” organised by Jaume Valentines-{\'A}lvarez and Jaume Sastre-Juan. I thank the comments of the moderator Marta Macedo , the organisers, the other participants, Carlos Godinho and Cl{\'a}udia Castelo, and the audience. This work has also been presented at the research project VISLIS{\textquoteright}s workshops, and I thank the invited commentators and participants for their comments and suggestions. This work has also benefited from the careful editing and comments of this volume{\textquoteright}s editors, Ana Sim{\~o}es and Maria Paula Diogo, for which I am grateful. I also thank Celia Miralles for her comments to a previous version of this article. Part of the research for this chapter was funded by the Funda{\c c}{\~a}o para a Ci{\^e}ncia e a Tecnologia (Foundation for Science and Technology, Portugal) with the postdoctoral fellowship awarded to Lu{\'i}sa Sousa (SFRH/PD/93517/2013) (until December 2018), and through UID/HIS/00286/2019 and UID/00286/2020 UIDP/00286/2020.",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1163/9789004513440_007",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-90-04-51624-3",
series = "Cultural Dynamics of Science",
publisher = "Brill",
pages = "120–144",
editor = "Ana Sim{\~o}es and Diogo, {Maria Paula}",
booktitle = "Science, Technology and Medicine in the Making of Lisbon (1840-1940)",
address = "Netherlands",
}