A Service de l’Urbanisme was created in 1932
in Syria, and Michel Écochard, its future director and at that time advisory
architect to the Syrian government, learnt directly on the job about the discipline
of urban layouts, with the historian Jean Sauvaget helping him to broaden his
horizons beyond his initial training as an architect. Écochard had mainly been
involved in the investigation of Roman monuments and Islamic architecture, along
with other French archaeologists and architects such as Claude Le Coeur, primarily
focusing on the remnants of ancient water networks and the restoration of
monuments. He developed some plans for the extension of Damascus, notably the
layout of the town entrance along the Route de Beyrouth. Proposed new districts,
whose outlines are developed by Danger, would be marked by streets fringed with
trees, broad intersections, public gardens and small individual buildings of
four or five storeys. As Danger drew up plans for new suburbs, ignoring
traditional urban patterns, he avoided the old city, considering it to be a
‘backward place for the indigenous Arabs’, which led to its neglect.
Danger,
working with Écochard, proposed a road system radiating from the city centre and expanding outward the urban perimeter,
creating a ring road around the old city to ease the congestion problems in the
centre of the city (just west of the old city) and in principle enabling easy
access across the town. Danger’s and Écochard’s framework for urban management was based on a
modern functional zoning of the city, and so the master plan faced resistance
from a city which had developed organically for the past thousand years.
Source: Aga Khan Trust for Culture