Intro

About

In this first stage, the catalogue focuses on the modern and contemporary architecture designed and built between 1832 –year of construction of the first industrial chimney in Barcelona that we establish as the beginning of modernity– until today.

The project is born to make the architecture more accessible both to professionals and to the citizens through a website that is going to be updated and extended. Contemporary works of greater general interest will be incorporated, always with a necessary historical perspective, while gradually adding works from our past, with the ambitious objective of understanding a greater documented period.

The collection feeds from multiple sources, mainly from the generosity of architectural and photographic studios, as well as the large amount of excellent historical and reference editorial projects, such as architectural guides, magazines, monographs and other publications. It also takes into consideration all the reference sources from the various branches and associated entities with the COAC and other collaborating entities related to the architectural and design fields, in its maximum spectrum.

Special mention should be made of the incorporation of vast documentation from the COAC Historical Archive which, thanks to its documental richness, provides a large amount of valuable –and in some cases unpublished– graphic documentation.

The rigour and criteria for selection of the works has been stablished by a Documental Commission, formed by the COAC’s Culture Spokesperson, the director of the COAC Historical Archive, the directors of the COAC Digital Archive, and professionals and other external experts from all the territorial sections that look after to offer a transversal view of the current and past architectural landscape around the territory.

The determination of this project is to become the largest digital collection about Catalan architecture; a key tool of exemplar information and documentation about architecture, which turns into a local and international referent, for the way to explain and show the architectural heritage of a territory.

Aureli Mora i Omar Ornaque
Directors arquitecturacatalana.cat

credits

About us

Project by:

Created by:

Directors:

2019-2026 Aureli Mora i Omar Ornaque

Documental Commission:

2019-2026 Ramon Faura Carolina B. Garcia Eduard Callís Francesc Rafat Pau Albert Antoni López Daufí Joan Falgueras Mercè Bosch Jaume Farreny Anton Pàmies Juan Manuel Zaguirre Josep Ferrando Gemma Ferré Inés de Rivera Fernando Marzá Moisés Puente Aureli Mora Omar Ornaque

Collaborators:

2019-2026 Lluis Andreu Sergi Ballester Marianela Pla Maria Jesús Quintero Lucía M. Villodres Montse Viu

External Collaborators:

2019-2026 Helena Cepeda Inès Martinel

With the support of:

Generalitat de Catalunya. Departament de Cultura

Collaborating Entities:

ArquinFAD

 

Fundació Mies van der Rohe

 

Fundación DOCOMOMO Ibérico

 

Basílica de la Sagrada Família

 

Museu del Disseny de Barcelona

 

Fomento

 

AMB

 

EINA Centre Universitari de Disseny i Art de Barcelona

 

IEFC

 

Fundació Domènench Montaner.

 

ETSAB

Design & Development:

edittio Nubilum

Giráldez / López Íñigo / Subías: ‘desarrollismo’ and modernity

  • Mig dia 

The proposals of the firm formed by Guillermo Giráldez, Pedro López Íñigo and Xavier Subías are part of the more internationalist strand of the modern architectural movement, which, at the time they graduated as architects in the early 1950s, was beginning to show signs of exhaustion with the critical emergence of Team X at the CIAM (International Congress of Modern Architecture) in 1953. However, in Spain at the time, where the teaching and construction of architecture was based on fully academic and classicist proposals, the internationalism that this young Barcelona studio wanted to emulate was still groundbreaking.

This coincided with an opportunity that was out of reach for other contemporary architects interested in the direction of new architecture in Barcelona: in 1952, Pedro López Íñigo became municipal architect and in 1954 he joined the Municipal Housing Board, which he led from the outset. The work of the Franco administration, which at that time was beginning to open up economically with the 1959 National Stabilisation Plan, required alternative and rapidly constructed plans in order to quickly accommodate the migration from the countryside to the city, which was about to overwhelm Barcelona and lead to shanty towns on its outskirts.

López Iñigo’s position allowed his office to take charge of many of these preliminary studies and partial plans, which in turn led to the construction of some of his buildings. Influenced by the Interbau exhibition held in Berlin in 1957, where the great masters of the modern movement contributed new ideas in the field of housing and the city, Montbau was the first result as an autonomous neighbourhood created from scratch. In the following years, new examples were built in different locations around the city, where similar formulas continued to be applied, despite the doubts that were beginning to arise regarding neighbourhood creation, density and integration. The shadow of a dormitory town loomed over the classic, consolidated Cerdà grid.

At the same time, for the same reasons of migration and the demographic boom, educational centres and universities had to increase their capacity with extensions or new buildings, and even entire university campuses. In these cases, both the functionalist proposals and their constructive, aesthetic and economic results fitted in with a society that wanted to leave behind the hardships of the dictatorship. However, the long-awaited arrival of democracy meant, due to the change in the rules of the game—and, therefore, also of its main players—a decline in relevant commissions and the slow decline of the influence of this studio, which, in just twenty years, had designed entire neighbourhoods.

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