Urban Acupuntures – Madrid: A Tale of Two Cities

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URBAN ACu PunC tures

THIRD section


Madrid: A Tale of Two Cities Davide Tommaso Ferrando | architect and blogger

A critical analysis of the public spaces realized in Madrid during the last decade should not prescind from an observation of the disparity between how the central core of the city has been dealt with if compared to the less fortunate, newly built neighborhoods. A disparity which is not at all quantitative, as significant amounts of money have been invested both in the centre and in the outskirts of Madrid (at least until the explosion of the financial bubble in September 2008, an infamous date to which we should also add a small “tail” of public investments, known as “Plan España”, promoted by the Zapatero government

While the offer of leisure spaces was increasing (...) in the city center, the new neighborhoods were growing deprived of the essential (...) places and services. 80


in 2009 in order to drive the private sector through public works), but still a disparity – of method, instruments, goals and results. While, in fact, the offer of leisure spaces was rapidly increasing within the frame of the historic city, through the creation of a strategic network of pedestrianized streets and squares (among which I would like to mention the “shopping parkour” composed by the urban sequence Callao – Preciados – Sol – Gran Via – Fuencarral – Serrano), the new residential neighborhoods (Carabanchel, Sanchinarro, Las Tablas, Vallecas, etc.) were growing deprived of the essential network of places and services that are capable of generating minimal conditions of urban interaction. In this sense, it is paradigmatic that the most recurrent “public” feature of these new residential settlements is the shopping mall: a typology that, thanks to its hyper-dense offer of commercial services, usually ends up stealing the role of social attractor from the streets and squares of its neighborhood (the buildings of which, not incidentally, are mostly designed without spaces for commercial functions on the ground floor). As a foreseeable side-effect of such a short-sighted planning strategy, the streets of Madrid’s new residential neighborhoods are usually underused, if not deserted, as they lack those elements that make urban spaces worth living in. The only exception to the rule seems to be the Eco-boulevard in Vallecas (ecosistema urbano, 2007), whose climaticallycontrolled cylindrical pavilions, sequentially arranged along the central axis of what should soon become a tree-lined boulevard, give the inhabitants of the “ensanche” three unusual public structures open to programmatic reinterpretation: a solitary blessing in the middle of a desolate urban context. A completely different story characterizes the transformation of the central core of the city which, in recent years, has been the 81


ecosistema urbano: Eco-boulevard in Vallecas (copyright: Davide Tommaso Ferrando).

object of a variety of interventions of “urban acupuncture” – from the reuse or ex novo construction of a single building, to the refurbishment of a street or square, to the reorganization of an entire system of blocks – meant not only to improve the image (often degraded or uncertain) of some strategic places in Madrid, but also (and especially) to give their use back to the citizens. A common feature of all these projects is the establishment of a critical dialogue with the existing conditions: a dialogue that, instead of being resolved timidly or mimetically, is often approached by means of three different strategies, depending 82


on the case: collision with the new; declination of the past in contemporary terms; and celebration of the existing through minimal interventions. A good example of the first case is the requalification of the DalĂŹ Square (Francisco Mangado, 2005), a huge, empty space in the middle of the city, the exaggerated scale of which has been brought to a human dimension thanks to the insertion of eleven trapezoidal landscape surfaces in the middle of it, which create a picturesque sequence of smaller (and therefore easier to use) public areas. The geometrical reassessment of the whole complex has been obtained through a regular pattern of light strips

Francisco Mangado: DalĂŹ Square (copyright: Davide Tommaso Ferrando).


Estudio Andrada: IvĂĄn de Vargas library (copyright: Davide Tommaso Ferrando).

carved into the pavement, which cross the square transversely and envelope, when intercepted, the existing volumes of the underground parking entrances, transforming them into prisms of light. The Ivån de Vargas library (Estudio Andrada, 2010) belongs to the second case. It is a project that rises in extremely delicate conditions, as it faces the Baroque church of San Miguel and occupies the plot of the former residence of the Vargas family – a protected building realized in the 12th century and 84


partially demolished in 2002 for safety reasons. The design, without renouncing an expression of its own contemporaneity, takes advantage of the contextual conditions, reinterpreting the typological implant of the former building in its floorplan, slightly rotating its alignment in order to reveal a new view of the church from a nearby street, and opening itself towards the church through a big, windowed void elegantly carved into the main façade. To the third and last case belongs the transformation of one the wings of Madrid’s former slaughterhouse into a cultural centre (Arturo Franco, 2006): a project that shows how results of great

Arturo Franco: Matadero Madrid, former slaughterhouse restoration and reuse (copyright: Davide Tommaso Ferrando).


value can be achieved with an extremely reduced budget (around 120 euros/sqm). Here, the poetic strength of the design comes from the inspired mise en scène of the historic stratification of the hosting building – an abandoned warehouse, partially degraded. Reduced to a minimal number of interventions, the project underlines the raw materiality of the Matadero through a delicate contrast with the new elements, which become the supporting actors of a diachronic narrative centered on the memory of the original building. In this way, the project doesn’t just give back the spaces of the Matadero to the citizenry: it also reveals its history to them.

Arturo Franco: Matadero Madrid, main hall (copyright: Davide Tommaso Ferrando).


It therefore seems clear, even with such a shortage of examples, how that of Madrid is, at least today, a tale of two cities: the central one, diverse and pulsing, which offers a progressively larger amount of its places to the creative use of both citizens and tourists; and the peripheral one, repetitive and marginal, which seems to have been planned just to gravitate around the former, if not around the interests of a few private investors.

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