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Historical Archive which, thanks to its documental richness, provides a large amount of valuable –and in some cases unpublished– graphic documentation.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

La Selva Marítima: three approaches to the coast

  • 1 dia 
per Aitor Romero Ortega

The sub-region of La Selva Marítima is an eclectic transitional territory on the border between the provinces of Barcelona and Girona. Made up of three very different towns, in less than 20 km it synthesises the architectural and urbanistic footprint of tourism in Catalonia and the Mediterranean, and is traversed by such conflicting cultural categories as holidaymakers, artistic or political refugees, tourists, seasonal workers and immigrants.

It is from this perspective, with its different anthropological layers, that the following itinerary is proposed, beginning in Blanes, still emotionally the last town in the Maresme. A former summer resort for the bourgeoisie fleeing Barcelona, such as Joaquim Ruyra, Joan Maragall and Teresa, imagined by Juan Marsé in his well-known novel, Blanes was also an important port of departure for the ‘Indianos’, who left an important cultural and architectural mark on their return. Similarly, from the 1950s onwards, it was a city that welcomed newcomers from all over the peninsula and then from all over the world, such as the Chilean writer Roberto Bolaño, a model of the Latin American lumpen artist whom, years after his death, the city wanted to honour by naming its auditorium after him.

Lloret de Mar, on the other hand, as Bolaño himself said, can only be compared to Flaubert’s Carthage, because it built itself and burned the plans, as is often the case with this type of town doomed to mass tourism and grown under the crazy urbanism of the boom at the end of the Francoist era. Some of its most representative architectural works, almost science fiction hallucinations, are a good example of this.

Tossa de Mar is possibly, spiritually, the first village on the Costa Brava. Located in a cul-de-sac between the sea and the Cadiretes massif, it certainly contributed to its being an idyllic refuge for European intellectuals and artists fleeing a continent in flames during the first half of the 20th century. The list is long: Marc Chagall, Georges Bataille, Francis Picabia, André Masson, Jean Metzinger, Olga Sacharoff and Nancy Johnstone, among others. Their passage has even left a significant mark on the architecture of the village, as in the case of the forgotten Ca l’Acerbi, which the Italian refugee Guissepe Acerbi commissioned to the German architect Otto Boelitz, built according to the aesthetic precepts of the Bauhaus.

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