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| Issue 88-90 III-VI 2003 25
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Synopses Building Madrid. In approximately
ten years from now, the territory that comprises the municipal area of the Spanish capital
will be completely full: the growth of the city, extraordinary in the last years, has gone
wild, spurred on by its economic muscle, by the extension and improvement of its network
of infrastructures and by the eagerness of its real-estate developers. But in the chaotic
horizon of this large metropolis, the candidacy to the 2012 Olympic Games emerges as an
optimistic promise of regeneration, the very last chance to restore the balance of its
worn out urban ecosystem as well as a unique opportunity for signature architecture with
an international label. |
Contents
Ricardo Aroca |
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| Cover Story
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Architecture
Social and Signature. New Residential Types Corporate Homes. Work Headquarters A Birds-Eye View. Urban Landscapes Departures and Arrivals. The Axes of Transport |
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| Views and Reviews
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Art / Culture
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| Attitudes Towards Art. Jorge Oteiza, whose legacy is exhibited by his Foundation in Navarra after the death of the artist, and Alexander Calder, with a vast retrospective in Bilbao and Madrid, represent opposite creative moods. | Javier San Martín Jorge Oteiza, 1908-2003 Juan Antonio Ramírez Calder at Bilbaos Guggenheim |
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| Summarizing Acts. The minimal
accommodations of heroic modernity and some episodes of Madrids housing during the
20th century arouse nostalgia on entering the 21st, exhaustive up to now in
historiographic reviews. |
Fochos Cartoon Ábalos & Herreros Various Authors Books |
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| Recent projects
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Technique /
Design
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| To close, Luis Fernández-Galiano writes on the anonymous and formless city produced by political and economic interests, following the institutional dispute brought about by the recent regional elections in Madrid. | English Summary Building Madrid Luis Fernández-Galiano Junk Urbanism |
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Luis Fernández-Galiano Third European city in population, behind the colossal conurbations of London and Paris, and second city of the continent in building activity, behind the Berlin rebuilt to face the demand of its recovered capital status, the Madrid of global vocation that aspires to the 2012 Olympic Games in competition with eight other cities of the world is an overworked engine whose loud tachycardia could be a sign either of vitality or of doping. Before the astonishment of the self-absorbed Barcelona citizens, who have expressed their diagnosis in two journalistic essays by their former major (Madrid is leaving, Madrid is gone), this city on steroids flaunts its chemical muscles to play in an urban league which is more demanding than the calm European emulation where Maragall was able to place himself as reference and paradigm. Madrid has chosen to enter the top division, but it is yet to be seen if its endless energy will be good in the long run for urban health. Forced to pass the technical inspection required by an olympic candidacy, until 2005 Madrid will undergo a thorough check-up that may be useful to limit the excess use of real estate drugs. Just as sport federations try to control the abuse of stimulants, the emphasis of the IOC on the projects respect for the environment may have the positive effect of bringing down the construction fever that perforates the ground and pierces with cranes the sky of Madrid. But Vicente Verdú has explained that after the tragic capitalism of production and the trivial capitalism of consumption, this capitalism of fiction is essentially tricky, and it could happen that the effort to pass the olympic exams with sustainability à la Sydney may end up being mere make-up to dress up the city with ecological cosmetics. The new major Ruiz-Gallardón begins his term of office with a cement bubble, and we must trust his balancing talent to keep it floating in the thin air of this feverish city. |
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