Эскалатор постепенно опускает в темноту подземелья. Но тут хорошо
освещено и многолюдно. Садишься в первый подъехавший вагон. Поезд плавно
трогается с места. Ускоряющееся мелькание в окне и погружение в темноту
подземного тоннеля. В холодном, иногда мигающем свете вагона глаз
выхватывает лица странных и не очень сегодняшних попутчиков. Мелькание
беззвучной рекламы на мониторах, призывные надписи на стенах: Купи меня!
Позвони! DRINK ME! Возьми частные уроки! Торможение. Станция.
Вышли, зашли - смена декораций. Разгон, мелькание и вновь глаз
фокусируется на ярких образах: полный парень напротив с немного выглядывающим
волосатым пузом из-под розовой футболки с надписью “EAT ME”. – Что за
странные ощущения,- подумала Алиса. – Все удивительней и удивительней.
Калейдоскоп ярких образов и лиц. Какофония звуков. Свет и темнота.
Разгон и торможение. Но вот конечная остановка. Дальше никто не едет.
Все выходят… звенит будильник… вагон пустой. И я не помню свои сны
тоже.
воскресенье, 7 октября 2018 г.
воскресенье, 9 сентября 2018 г.
Мадрид архитектура периода Экономич развития
Spanish economic
development трек на GPSies
Some
examples of Fascist architecture, such as the
Spanish Air Force headquarters (inspired by El Escorial), the Nuevos
Ministerios by Secundino Zuazo and the skyscrapers of Plaza de España (Edificio España, Torre de Madrid), at the time the highest in Europe, were built.
With the
advent of democracy and Spanish economic development, skyscrapers appeared in
the city such as Torre Picasso,
designed by Minoru Yamasaki; Torres Blancas and Torre BBVA (both by Francisco
Javier Sáenz de Oiza) and in the 1990s, the Gate
of Europe, architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee. Moreover, in the
1990s construction was completed of the Cathedral of the Almudena. The National
Auditorium of Music is a work of 1988.
In the 21st
century, Madrid faces new challenges in its architecture. An old industrial warehouse
is the Interpretation Centre of New Technologies, and the CaixaForum Madrid (Herzog & de Meuron) was a former power
station.
CaixaForum Madrid
It was
constructed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron from 2001 to 2007,
which combined an old abandoned electrical station with new construction of
floors encased with oxidized cast-iron, which was meant to be of a similar
color and weight as the brick below. On the house next to it, there is a green
wall designed by French botanist Patrick Blanc. The red of the top floors
contrasts with the plants on the wall, which match the character of the
neighbouring Real Jardín Botánico.
Although
the CaixaForum is a contemporary building, it also exhibits retrospectives of
artists from earlier time periods and has evolved into one of the most visited
museums in Madrid
Edificio Mirador
Mirador is
a collection of mini neighbourhoods stacked vertically around a semi-public
sky-plaza. The building acts as a counterpoint against the massive uniformity
of the surrounding housing blocks. It frames the distant landscape of the
Guadarrama Mountains through a large ‘look out’ located 40 meters above the
ground. This also provides outdoor space and community garden for the occupants
of building, monumentalising public life and space.
Мадрид архитектура периода Модернизма
Modernization Madrid Трек на GPSies
From the
late 19th century until the Civil War, Madrid modernized and built new
neighborhoods and monuments, both in the capital and in neighboring towns. In
the mid-19th century the expansion of Madrid developed under the Plan Castro, resulting in the
neighborhoods of Salamanca, Argüelles and Chamberí. Arturo Soria conceived the linear city and built the first few
kilometers of the road that bears his name, which embodies the idea. Antonio Palacios build a series of
eclectic buildings inspired by the Viennese Secession. Some examples are the Palace of Communication (Palacio de
Comunicaciones), the Fine Arts Circle of
Madrid (Círculo de Bellas Artes) and the
Río de La Plata Bank (Instituto Cervantes).
Plan Castro
Ensanche
means "widening" in Spanish. It is used to name the development areas
of Spanish cities around the end of the 19th century, when the demographic
explosion and the Industrial Revolution prompted the tearing down of the old
city wall and the construction of neighborhoods under grid plans.
The program
of city extensions in Spain began simultaneously in 1860 with the plans for
Barcelona by Ildefons Cerdà and Madrid by Carlos María de Castro,[1] influenced
by Haussmann's transformation of Paris from 1852 (and, in turn, have been said
to have influenced Haussmann's later projects). Those ensanches extended cities
beyond their traditional limits by demolishing city walls, transforming
riverbanks and subdividing the extramuros – rural land outside the city walls.
Ensanches were generally based on principles articulated by Cerdà.[2] These
included reserving significant open space by requiring mid-block open space and
whole block parks. The height of buildings was set by reference to the width of
the adjacent street. Many of these requirements were modified, and the building
volumes increased, by later amendments beginning in 1864 (Madrid).
Palacio de Cibeles
Like the
eighteenth century fountain in front of it, the palace has become an emblematic
monument of the city. However, since 2007 it no longer serves its original
function. There is a post office in part of the building, but Correos
headquarters has moved to Campo de las Naciones and the Postal and Telegraphic
Museum to Aravaca. Now it is the seat of the Madrid City Council. The mail
sorting office has been converted to serve as the council chamber.
Círculo de Bellas Artes
is a
private, non-profit, cultural organization that was founded in 1880. It has
played a major role of international scope in the field of cultural creation and
diffusion.
The CBA is
a major multidisciplinary centre with one of the most active cultural
programmes in Madrid. It has exhibition rooms, a cinema, a theatre, concert
halls, lecture halls, artists’ workshops, a library, a cafeteria, a shop and
many other facilities. Every day it puts on activities to do with the visual
arts, music, film, the stage, literature, science, philosophy and poetry.
The
building which houses the Círculo de Bellas Artes was designed by the architect
Antonio Palacios and constructed in 1926. It is an emblematic building and from
its rooftop you can enjoy some of the best views of Spain’s capital city.
Edificio
de Las Cariátides (Caryatid Building Instituto Cervantes)
is a
building by Spanish architect Antonio Palacios. The building was later the head
office of the Central Bank and later of the Santander Bank. As of 2006 it is
the headquarters of the Instituto Cervantes.
Alcalá
street, one of the oldest streets in Madrid, which ends at the Puerta del Sol,
at the beginning of the 20th century, points to a relevant financial center in
the city. The demolitions of the Nueva Gran Vía in 1911 already indicate the
beginnings of important urban transformations in the capital. The collaboration
of two young architects Antonio Palacios and Joaquín Otamendi, initiated in
1904, already has several previous successes. The success of both engineers
begins when winning adepts after winning in the municipal public contest of the
Palace of Communications. It is noteworthy that the architecture of Madrid is
dominated at the beginning of the 20th century by the existence of banks and
churches. This building is a novelty that is the first office to be built in
Madrid. These types of buildings are typical in American cities like Boston and
Chicago or in England.
Palacio de Cristal
is a glass
and metal structure located in Madrid's Buen Retiro Park. It was built in 1887
on the occasion of the Exposition of the Philippines, held in the same year,
then a Spanish colonial possession. The architect was Ricardo Velázquez Bosco.
The Palacio
de Cristal, in the shape of a Greek cross, is made almost entirely of glass set
in an iron framework on a brick base, which is decorated with ceramics. Its
cupola makes the structure over 22 metres high. When it was erected, glass and
iron construction on a large scale was already to be seen in Madrid at Delicias
station (1880), the work of a French architect. However the curved architecture
of the Palacio de Cristal is more comparable to the techniques pioneered by the
British architects Joseph Paxton (who was responsible for London's Crystal
Palace) and Decimus Burton (who was responsible for the Palm House at Kew
Gardens).
The
cast-iron frame was manufactured in Bilbao. The structure was designed in a way
that would allow it to be re-erected on another site (as happened to the
equivalent building in London). However, the building has remained on the
original site, next to a lake, and has been restored to its original
appearance. It is no longer used as a greenhouse, and is currently used for art
exhibits.
Bank of Spain
Originally
named the Banco Nacional de San Carlos,
it was founded in 1782 by Charles III, to stabilize government finances through
its state bonds (vales reales). Although it aided the state, the bank was
initially owned privately by stockholders. Its assets included those of
"Spanish capitalists, French rentiers, and surprisingly, several
treasuries of Indian communities in New Spain" (colonial Mexico). Its
first director was French banker François Cabarrus, known in Spain as Francisco
Cabarrús.
Almudena Cathedra
is a Catholic church in neo-Gothic style with neo-Romanesque cloister. When the capital of Spain was transferred from
Toledo to Madrid in 1561, the seat of the Church in Spain remained in Toledo
and the new capital had no cathedral. Plans to build a cathedral in Madrid
dedicated to the Virgin of Almudena were discussed as early as the 16th century
but even though Spain built more than 40 cities in the new world during that
century and plenty of cathedrals, the cost of expanding and keeping the Empire
came first and the construction of Madrid's cathedral was postponed. Making the
cathedral the largest that the world had ever seen was then a priority, all
other main Spanish cities had centuries old cathedrals, Madrid also has old
churches but the construction of Almudena only began in 1879.
The
cathedral seems to have been built on the site of a medieval mosque that was
destroyed in 1083 when Alfonso VI reconquered Madrid.
Francisco
de Cubas, the Marquis of Cubas, designed and directed the construction in a
Gothic revival style. Construction ceased completely during the Spanish Civil
War, and the project was abandoned until 1950, when Fernando Chueca Goitia (es)
adapted the plans of de Cubas to a baroque exterior to match the grey and white
façade of the Palacio Real, which stands directly opposite. The cathedral was
not completed until 1993, when it was consecrated by Pope John Paul II. On May
22, 2004, the marriage of King Felipe VI, then crown prince, to Letizia Ortiz
Rocasolano took place at the cathedral.
The
Neo-Gothic interior is uniquely modern, with chapels and statues of
contemporary artists, in heretogeneous styles, from historical revivals to
"pop-art" decor. The Blessed Sacrament Chapel features mosaic from
known artist Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik.
The
Neo-Romanesque crypt houses a 16th-century image of the Virgen de la Almudena.
Nearby along the Calle Mayor excavations have unearthed remains of Moorish and
medieval city walls.
Atocha railway station
At this
site, Madrid's first railway station was inaugurated on 9 February 1851 under
the name Estación de Mediodía (Atocha-Mediodía is now the name of an area of
the Arganzuela district, and means south in old Spanish).
After the
building was largely destroyed by fire, it was rebuilt and reopened in 1892.
The architect for the replacement, in a wrought
iron renewal style was Alberto de Palacio Elissagne, who collaborated with
Gustave Eiffel. Wrought iron is an iron alloy with a very low carbon (less than
0.08%) content in contrast to cast iron (2.1% to 4%). It is a semi-fused mass
of iron with fibrous slag inclusions (up to 2% by weight), which gives it a
"grain" resembling wood that is visible when it is etched or bent to
the point of failure. The Eiffel tower is constructed from puddled iron, a form
of wrought iron.
The name Atocha has become attached to the
station because of the nearby basilica dedicated to Our Lady of Atocha. The
train platforms were partly covered by a roof in the form of inverted hull with
a height of approximately 27 meters and length of 157 meters. The steel and
glass roof spreads between two brick flanking (граничащих) buildings.
This
complex of railway tracks expanded through the years. In 1985, a project of
complete remodeling began, based on designs by Rafael Moneo. In 1992, the
original building was taken out of service as a terminal, and converted into a
concourse with shops, cafés, and a nightclub. Like the Orsay Museum in Paris,
the concourse has been given a new function, this time a stunning 4,000 m2 covered
tropical garden.
A modern
terminal was also designed by Moneo, and built in adjacent land to serve both
the new AVE trains and local commuter lines. The main lines end in the new
terminal; commuter train platforms are located underground, at the ingress to a
rail tunnel extending northward under the Paseo de la Castellana. The station
is served by two Madrid Metro stations, Atocha and Atocha Renfe. The latter was
added when the new terminal building was constructed and is directly linked to
the railway station.
On 11 March
2004, packed arriving commuter trains were bombed in a series of coordinated
bombings, killing 191 people and wounding 1,800. The official investigation by
the Spanish Judiciary determined the attacks were directed by a terrorist cell.
Palace of Longoria
is an Art
Nouveau palace that the politician and financier Francisco Javier González
Longoria ordered to be built in the district of Chueca, at the corner of
Fernando VI and Pelayo streets, in the city of Madrid, Spain. Together with the
House of Gallardo (Spanish: Casa Gallardo) in the Plaza de España, it is
Madrid's most notable example of modernist architecture. Longoria contracted the Catalán architect José
Grases Riera to design and build it in 1902. The Palace is currently the headquarters of the Spanish General Society
of Authors and Editors SGAE.
House of Gallardo
Las Ventas
is a famous
bullring. This bullring was designed by the architect José Espeliú in the
Neo-Mudéjar (Moorish) style with ceramic incrustations. The seats are situated
in ten "tendidos". The price of the seats depends upon how close they
are to the arena and whether they are in the sun or the shade (the latter being
more expensive). The bullfighting season starts in March and ends in October;
bullfights are held every day during the San Isidro Fiesta, and every Sunday or
holiday during the season. Bullfights start at 6 or 7pm and last for two to
three hours.
Market of San Miguel
is a
covered market originally built in 1916, it was purchased by private investors
in 2003 who renovated the iron structure and reopened it in 2009. The market is
not a traditional grocery market but a gourmet tapas market, with over 30
different vendors selling a wide variety of freshly prepared tapas, hams, olives,
baked goods and other foods. Beer, wine and champagne are also
available.
Delicias Railway Station (Museo del Ferrocarril)
is one of
the largest historic railroad collections in Europe. It is housed in a
redundant railway station called Madrid-Delicias in the barrio (соседство или
часть муниципалитета) of Delicias.
The
building is not to be confused with the station opened in 1996 by Cercanías
Madrid called Delicias.
The station
was opened in March 1880 by King Alfonso XII and Queen Maria Cristina. It was
commissioned by a short-lived railway company, the Compañía de los Caminos de
Hierro de Ciudad Real a Badajoz, which had recently opened a line from Ciudad
Real to the capital. One reason for the choice of Delicias as the site of the terminus (конечная или начальная станция) was the proximity of an existing
line, the Ferrocarril de contorno de Madrid, which served industrial areas of
Madrid.
In the year
the station was opened, the railway company was absorbed by a larger rival,
MZA. MZA had the use of Atocha station, and did not need Delicias station, and
transferred it to a third company, the Compañía de los Ferrocarriles de Madrid
a Cáceres y Portugal. An international service to Portugal was developed, but
the station never achieved a high volume of passengers, and it closed to
passenger traffic in 1969.
As a terminus, the station had separate
facilities for arriving and departing passengers. However, the most impressive
feature is the iron-framed train shed covered by a single-span roof. The building was designed by a French engineer,
Émile Cachelièvre. It has been suggested that he was influenced by Henri de
Dion's Galerie des Machines, one of the metallic buildings erected for the
Exposition Universelle (1878) in Paris.
Gran Vía
(literally
"Great Way") is an ornate and upscale
shopping street located in central Madrid.
Today the street is known as the Spanish Broadway, and it is one of the streets
with the most nightlife in Europe. It is known as the street that never
sleeps.
In the mid
19th century, Madrid's urban planners decided that a new thoroughfare had to be
created, connecting the Calle de Alcalá with the Plaza de España. The project
required many buildings in the centre of the city to be demolished, earning it
the name of 'an axe blow on the map'. Decades after the first plans were made,
construction still hadn't started and the media ridiculed the project,
cynically calling it the 'Gran Vía' or 'Great Way' or 'Big Way'. Finally in 1904
it was approved and construction started in 1910. The last part of the street
was completed in 1929.
The new
road created opportunities for architects, who had the ability to create large
buildings in the latest architectural styles. The Metropolis building is
built in French style and the Edificio Grassy is eclectic, while Telefónica
Building is art deco, with baroque ornaments. The Carrión (or Capitol)
Building is expressionist, and the Palace of the Press, another example of art
deco.
***
The Civil
War severely damaged the city including University City, which was one of the
most beautiful architectural complexes of the time. Subsequently, unscrupulous
mayors[citation needed] would destroy the old town and the Ensanche, in a city
which until the war was a good example of urban planning and architecture.
Numerous blocks of flats with no value were built.
Мадрид архитектура периода Бурбонов
Мадрид Бурбоны Трек на GPSies
The arrival
of the Bourbons marked a new era in the city. The burning of the Alcazar of
Madrid served as an excuse for the first Bourbon, Philip V of Spain to build a
palace on its foundations, a palace more in line with the French taste. Filippo
Juvarra, an architect specializing in the construction of royal palaces, was
chosen to design the new palace. His design was inspired by Bernini's design
rejected for the Louvre Palace in Paris. Juvarra died before the work began,
and the project was substantially modified by his disciple Giovainni Battista
Sacchetti. Philip V tried to complete the vision of urbanization of Madrid
initiated by King Philip II, which included a bridge spanning a large ravine,
linking The Royal Alcázar to the southern part of town. Philip V would never
see the bridge even begin and neither would several of his successors. It
wasn't built until the 19th century and is called the Segovia Viaduct. Other buildings of the time were the St. Michael's Basilica and the Church of Santa Bárbara.
Segovia Viaduct
The Segovia
Viaduct is a viaduct in the La Latina neighborhood in Madrid, Spain. Throughout
the centuries the area has been a major crossroad. The bridge's main function
has been to facilitate access between the town and the Royal Palace of Madrid.
A later version was built in 1934 to replace the previous iron one erected in
1874. The present one is the result of many restorations in order for its
structure to accommodate the growing traffic demand. It spans Segovia Street, 25
meters below, from which it takes its name, although it is popularly known as
"El Viaducto". Throughout its history, it had been a common site for
suicide in Madrid until 1998.
Segovia
Street lies in the basin at least partially formed by the old San Pedro Creek.
In the Middle Ages, this ravine was one of the most important routes of entry
into Madrid and connected the town with the old road to Segovia, which started
on the other side of the Manzanares River. The Bridge of Segovia (1582-1584)
succeeded in crossing the Manzanares, attributed to the architect Juan de
Herrera, which replaced the original, built in the first half of the fourteenth
century by Alfonso XI of Castile. Abundant in fresh water, the area in the wash
of the basin of San Pedro enjoyed many orchards and was called El Pozacho,
which was named after a waterwheel or similar hydraulic device which may have
existed there.[2] In an illustration by Anton van den Wyngaerde in 1562, the
grade of the ravine is clearly seen.
Bailén
Street ended abruptly at the edge of this ravine, forcing pedestrians to make
the difficult descent and ascent to reach the area of the Royal Alcázar of
Madrid. Access to and from what would become Segovia Street was gained by
intricate arteries through various paths traversing the slopes.
Upon
establishing the Royal Court in Madrid in 1561, King Philip II began to promote
urban expansion. This conceptualization required an extension of Bailén Street
crossing above and bridging the gap perpendicularly over this ravine, thus
joining the Royal Palace area with Vistillas to the south and beyond.
Only a
small part of the project to extend Bailén materialized until the Bourbons.
Some houses and establishments were demolished, including the original
cathedral of Madrid, in order to level the field, creating a gateway to the
city. This street was called Calle Real Nueva, and eventually became modern
Segovia Street. After two shelved attempts, the viaduct was finally completed
in 1874, undergoing two complete reconstructions since then.
Basilica of St. Michael
s a baroque
Roman Catholic church and minor basilica in central Madrid, Spain. It is
located in San Justo Street, adjacent to the Archbishop's Palace. It is the
church of the Apostolic Nunciature to the
Kingdom of Spain of the Holy See
and is now administrated by the priests of Opus
Dei. Among the wood sculptures housed in the interior is the "Cristo
de la Fe y del Perdón", by Luis Salvador Carmona.
Opus Dei, formally known as The Prelature of the Holy
Cross and Opus Dei (Latin: Praelatura Sanctae Crucis et Operis Dei), is an
institution of the Roman Catholic Church which teaches that everyone is called
to holiness and that ordinary life is a path to sanctity. The majority of its
membership are lay people; the remainder are secular priests under the
governance of a prelate elected by specific members and appointed by the Pope.
Opus Dei is Latin for "Work of God"; hence the organization is often
referred to by members and supporters as the Work.
Opus Dei
was founded in Spain in 1928 by Catholic saint and priest Josemaría Escrivá and
was given final Catholic Church approval in 1950 by Pope Pius XII. About 70% of
Opus Dei members live in their private homes, leading traditional Catholic
family lives with secular careers, while the other 30% are celibate, of whom
the majority live in Opus Dei centers. Aside from their personal charity and
social work, Opus Dei members organize training in Catholic spirituality
applied to daily life; members are involved in running universities, university
residences, schools, publishing houses, hospitals, and technical and
agricultural training centers.
A central
feature of Opus Dei's theology is its focus on the lives of the ordinary
Catholics who are neither priests nor monks. Opus Dei emphasizes the "universal
call to holiness": the belief that everyone should aspire to be a saint,
as per Jesus' commandment to "Love God with all your heart" (Matthew
22:37) and "Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect." (Matthew
5:48) Opus Dei also teaches that sanctity is within the reach of everyone, not
just a few special individuals, given Jesus' teaching that his demands are
"easy" and "light," as his divine assistance is assured.
Church
of Santa Barbara
is a
Catholic church, built in Neoclassic style, in central Madrid. It is one of a
number of Spanish churches dedicated to St Barbara.
The
exterior is noted for the statues of St. Francis de Sales and St Jeanne de
Chantal, founders of the Order, sculpted by Alfonso Giraldo Vergaz. In the
interior, are the burial tombs of Ferdinand VI and his wife. These were
commissioned by Charles III of Spain and completed by the architect Francisco
Sabatini and the sculptor Francisco Gutiérrez. In addition, it holds the tomb
of the general Leopoldo O´Donnell, first duke of Tetuán, work of Jeronimo
Suñol.
***
King
Charles III of Spain was more interested in beautifying the city. He was an
enlightened monarch and endeavored to convert Madrid into one of the great
European capitals.[citation needed] He pushed forward the construction of the
Prado Museum (designed by Juan de Villanueva). The building was originally
intended to serve as a Natural Science Museum. Charles III was also responsible
for design of the Puerta de Alcalá, the Royal Observatory (Juan de Villanueva),
the Royal Botanic Gardens, the Basilica of San Francisco el Grande (Francesco
Sabatini), the Casa de Correos in Puerta del Sol, the Real Casa de la Aduana
(Francesco Sabatini) and the General Hospital by Sabatini (now houses the Reina
Sofia Museum and Royal Conservatory of Music). The Paseo del Prado, surrounded
by gardens and decorated with neoclassical statues inspired by mythological
gods, is an example of urban planning. The Duke of Berwick ordered Ventura
Rodríguez the construction of the Liria Palace.
Puerta de Alcalá
is a
Neo-classical monument in the Plaza de la Independencia in Madrid, Spain. It is
regarded as the first modern post-Roman triumphal arch built in Europe, older
than the similar monuments Arc de Triomphe in Paris and Brandenburg Gate in
Berlin.
It was a
gate of the former Walls of Philip IV. It stands near the city center and
several meters away from the main entrance to the Parque del Buen Retiro. The
square is bisected by Alcalá Street, although the street does not cross through
the monument, and it is the origin of the Alfonso XII, Serrano and Olózaga
streets. Its name originates from the old path from Madrid to the nearby town
of Alcalá de Henares.
Madrid in
the late 18th century still looked like a somewhat drab borough(однообразный,
скучный город), surrounded by medieval walls. Around the year 1774, king
Charles III commissioned Francesco Sabatini to construct a monumental gate in
the city wall through which an expanded road to the city of Alcalá was to pass,
replacing an older, smaller, gate that stood nearby. It was inaugurated in
1778.
Royal Observatory of Madrid
The
observatory was designed by Juan de Villanueva, architect to Charles III of
Spain, It represents one of the highlights of Spanish neoclassical
architecture. Its domed lantern (фонарь) was conceived as a classical circular temple.
Shortly
after construction, the observatory was equipped with a 25-foot reflecting
telescope by William Herschel. The instrument was dismantled in the Peninsular
War and only partially survived. It has been reconstructed in recent
years.
Madrid is
affected by light pollution and is not a good location for optical astronomy.
Conditions are much better in other parts of Spanish territory, notably the
Canary Islands, the second-best location for optical and infrared astronomy in
the Northern Hemisphere, after Mauna Kea Observatory, Hawaii.
Royal
Basilica of San Francisco el Grande
The
basilica was designed in a Neoclassic style in the second half of the 18th
century, based on a design by Francisco Cabezas, developed by Antonio Pló, and
completed by Francesco Sabatini. The church contains paintings by Zurbarán and
Francisco Goya. The temple once functioned as the National pantheon and
enshrined the remains of famous artists and politicians.
Puerta del Sol
The Puerta
del Sol originated as one of the gates in the city wall that surrounded Madrid
in the 15th century. Outside the wall, medieval suburbs began to grow around
the Christian Wall of the 12th century. The name of the gate came from the
rising sun which decorated the entry, since the gate was oriented to the east.
Between the
17th and 19th centuries, the area was an important meeting place: as the goal
for the couriers coming from abroad and other parts of Spain to the Post
Office, it was visited by those eager for the latest news. The stairs to the
Saint Philip church at the square were known as the Gradas de San Felipe, and
were among the most prolific mentideros de la Corte (this Spanish idiom sounds
as "lie-spreaders of the Court", but it is related with the verb
mentar, "to say about someone", not mentir, "to lie", so it
is more appropriately translated as "places of the City where people
gossip").
The House
of the Post Office was built by French architect Jacques Marquet between 1766
and 1768. The building was the headquarters of the Ministry of Interior and
State Security during the Francisco Franco dictatorship. It is currently the
seat of the Presidency of the Madrid Community.
This is the
centre (Km 0) of the radial network of Spanish roads. The kilómetro cero is a
plaque on the ground directly north of the Post Office serving as the symbolic
center of Spain. In addition to signalling the basis of numbering in the
Spanish road system, the symbolic nature of the plaza ensures that it is the
site of many rallies and protests, particularly against violence and war. Sol
has seen protests against the terrorism perpetrated the March 11th attacks on
commuter trains, and Spain's involvement in the Iraq War.
The square
also contains the famous clock whose bells mark the traditional eating of the
Twelve Grapes and the beginning of a new year. The New Year's celebration has
been broadcast live on national television since 31 December 1962. The Twelve
Grapes (Sp. Las doce uvas de la suerte, "The twelve grapes of luck")
is a Spanish tradition that dates back from at least 1895[2] but became
established in 1909. In December of that year, some alicantese vine growers
popularized this custom to better sell huge amounts of grapes from an excellent
harvest.
The tradition consists of eating a grape with
each bell strike at midnight of December 31. According to the tradition, that leads
to a year of prosperity. In some areas, it is believed that the tradition wards
away witches and general evil, although this "magic" is treated like
an old heritage, and in modern days it's viewed as a cultural tradition to
welcome the new year.
Real Casa de la
Aduana
The Real
Casa de la Aduana (Spanish: Real Casa de la Aduana means royal customs house)
is the headquarters of Spain's Ministry of Economy, Industry and
Competitiveness and Ministry of the Treasury and Public Function. It is located
on Madrid's longest street, the Calle de Alcalá. The eighteenth-century
building has been modified over the years.
Paseo del Prado
is one of
the main boulevards and the oldest historical urban in Madrid. The Paseo del
Prado boulevard includes several monuments and enclosures that are of
historical and artistic interest, erected in the eighteenth century for the
Hall of Prado urban project. Numerous ornamental and landscaping grounds were
constructed for this project. The highlights of this project include the
Villanueva Building, headquarters of the Prado Museum, the Royal Botanical
Gardens and the sculptural water fountains of Neptune, Cibeles and Apollo.
A
controversial project of thorough reform and revitalization of the Paseo del
Prado and the Paseo de Recoletos, known as Plan
Especial Recoletos-Prado and authored by an international team of
architects led by Álvaro Siza, was approved by the city council on 23 June
2005, but as of December 2010 its environmental impact study is still underway
and reconstruction has not been initiated.
Liria Palace
is a
neoclassical palace in Madrid and the Madrid residence of the Dukes of Alba.
Built
around 1770 to a design by the architect Ventura Rodríguez, it was commissioned
by James Fitz-James Stuart, 3rd Duke of Berwick, who was also the 3rd Duke of
Liria (hence the name of the palace). In the early 19th century it passed to
the inheritance of the House of Alba. Eugénie de Montijo, last empress consort
of the French, died here in exile in 1920.
Built
around 1770 to a design by the architect Ventura Rodríguez, it was commissioned
by James Fitz-James Stuart, 3rd Duke of Berwick, who was also the 3rd Duke of
Liria (hence the name of the palace). In the early 19th century it passed to
the inheritance of the House of Alba. Eugénie de Montijo, last empress consort
of the French, died here in exile in 1920.
All but the
facades were destroyed during the Spanish Civil War.[1] It was subsequently
rebuilt by Jacobo Fitz-James Stuart, 17th Duke of Alba and his daughter
Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, 18th Duchess of Alba who was head of the House of
Alba from 1955 to 2014. The British architect Edwin Lutyens had been
commissioned by the 17th Duke to provide designs for the interior, and the
reconstruction, although it took place after the architect´s death, made use of
them.
The palace
contains a remarkable private collection of European art. It is necessary to
apply to visit the Liria Palace to see its art collection in situ, a
process which normally involves being placed on a waiting list.
***
Subsequently,
the Peninsular War, the loss of colonies in the Americas, and the continuing
coups (гос. перевороты) prevented the city from developing interesting
architecture (Royal Theatre,the National Library of Spain, the Palace of the
Senate and the Congress). In the slums (трущобы) of Madrid during this time, a kind of
substandard house was developed that today has a special historical charm: an
example is the corralas (House of Sombrerete), which currently still exist in
the neighborhood of Lavapiés.
House of Sombrerete
Teatro Real
Founded by King Ferdinand VII in 1818, and after thirty-two years of
planning and construction, a Royal Order on 7 May 1850 decreed the immediate
completion of the "Teatro de Oriente" and the building works were
finished within five months. The Opera House, located just in front of the
Palacio Real, the official residence of the Queen who ordered the construction
of the theatre, Isabel II, was finally inaugurated on 19 November 1850, with
Donizetti's La Favorite. In 1863, Giuseppe Verdi visited the theatre for the
Spanish premiere of his La Forza del Destino. In 1925, the Ballets Russes of
Diaghilev performed in the theatre with the presence of Nijinsky and
Stravinsky.
From 1867 it housed the Madrid Royal Conservatory until 1925 when a Royal
Order of 6 December called for eviction owing to the damage that the
construction of the Metro de Madrid had caused to the building. Despite its
closure, the government always contemplated the possibility of restoring it,
ordering numerous projects, such as the architect Urdanpilleta Flórez, who
raised a pharaonic remodeling of the building. However, financial difficulties
prevented the completion of these projects and led to a simple restoration,
sponsored by the Juan March Institute, and carried out first by the architect
Manuel Gonzalez Valcárcel, and later by architects Miguel Verdú Belmonte and
Francisco Rodriguez Partearroyo.
The theatre reopened in 1966 as a concert hall as well as the main
concert venue for the Spanish National Orchestra and the RTVE Symphony
Orchestra. The reopening was celebrated with a concert of the Spanish National
Orchestra conducted by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, and the Orfeón Donostiarra.
In 1969, the 14th Eurovision Song Contest was held at the theatre, featuring an
onstage metal sculpture created by surrealist Spanish artist Salvador Dalí.
Biblioteca Nacional de España
The library was founded by King Philip V in 1712 as the Palace Public
Library (Biblioteca Pública de Palacio). The Royal Letters Patent that he
granted, the predecessor of the current legal deposit requirement, made it
mandatory for printers to submit a copy of every book printed in Spain to the
library. In 1836, the library's status as Crown property was revoked and
ownership was transferred to the Ministry of Governance (Ministerio de la
Gobernación). At the same time, it was renamed the Biblioteca Nacional.
During the 19th century, confiscations, purchases and donations enabled
the Biblioteca Nacional to acquire the majority of the antique and valuable
books that it currently holds. During the Spanish Civil War close to 500,000
volumes were collected by the Confiscation Committee (Junta de Incautación) and
stored in the Biblioteca Nacional to safeguard works of art and books held
until then in religious establishments, palaces and private houses. During the
20th century numerous modifications were made to the building to adapt its
rooms and repositories to its constantly expanding collections.
The Madrid premises are shared with the National Archaeological Museum.
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