Iran’s Global Petroleumscape

The Role of Oil in Shaping Khuzestan and Tehran

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

C.M. Hein (TU Delft - OLD History of Architecture & Urban Planning)

Mo Sedighi (TU Delft - OLD Woningbouw, TU Delft - Teachers of Practice)

Research Group
OLD History of Architecture & Urban Planning
Copyright
© 2017 C.M. Hein, S.M.A. Sedighi
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1080/13264826.2018.1379110
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Copyright
© 2017 C.M. Hein, S.M.A. Sedighi
Research Group
OLD History of Architecture & Urban Planning
Issue number
3
Volume number
21
Pages (from-to)
349-374
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Various constellations of oil actors—including corporations and nations—have shaped seemingly disconnected and geographically distant landscapes, cities, and buildings around the world over the last 150 years. Corporate, public, and popular media have publicized these cycles of spatializing oil. Together, construction and representation have created what is here collectively identified as a global palimpsestic petroleumscape. Based on archival research and a flourishing literature of secondary sources, this article applies the concept of the petroleumscape to two case studies in Iran and identifies two patterns of spatializing oil. First, in the southern region of Khuzestan, it tracks Iran’s modern transformation under the influence of British Petroleum (BP) (1901–1951), when oil and governmental interests built a complete support landscape. Then, in the capital Tehran, it investigates how US players helped shape the petroleumscape between 1953 and 1979, in line with US styles of consumption, car use, and urban development.