View allAll Photos Tagged edificio

 

Jurado del concurso Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize (MCHAP), integrado por reconocidos profesionales de Londres, Estados Unidos, México y Chile, luego de visitar campus Piura, dio a conocer a los finalistas del premio de arquitectura más importante del continente.

EDIFICIO MORODER - GÓMEZ, 1961

Pza. de Tetuán 6

Arquitecto:

Miguel Fisac Serna.

A comienzos de la década de 1960, en el momento más fértil de su trayectoria profesional, Miguel Fisac redacta dos importantes proyectos para la ciudad de Valencia, uno escolar y otro residencial. El primero, el Instituto Benlliure (un ejemplo de serenidad constructiva y claridad funcional, increíblemente demolido en 1998), y el segundo, el edificio Moroder (una manera contemporánea y distinta de construir edificios de viviendas en la ciudad histórica). En ambos casos Fisac, un arquitecto muy capacitado para la invención, perfecciona piezas de ladrillo y prefabricados de hormigón que ya había utilizado con anterioridad en Valladolid (Instituto Núñez de Arce) y Calahorra (Escuela Apostólica de Misioneros del Espíritu Santo). En la plaza de Tetuán, el edificio define un primer cuerpo que recupera la alineación y altura de sus vecinos (6 plantas) para, tras retirarse sutilmente y delinear un cuidado jardín, adelantar un segundo y elevado cuerpo (10 plantas) que provoca un nuevo diálogo con la histórica torre-campanario del convento de Santo Domingo. Dos núcleos de acceso, conectados en planta baja a través de un espacioso vestíbulo, posibilitan la existencia de dos diferentes viviendas por planta, una de gran dimensión y múltiples dependencias que se ubica en el bloque más bajo, y otra de superficie menor en el más alto. El edificio, muy bien conservado, desarrolla ideas en torno a la composición, prefabricación, industrialización y seriación totalmente novedosas en la ciudad.

Texto extraido de la "Guia de Arquitectura de Valencia" CTAV 2007.

centro de la ciudad de medellín, Antioquia

Manzana de oficinas comprendida entre las calles Raimundo Fernández Villaverde, Orense, General Perón y el Paseo de la Castellana que alberga uno de los centros de negocios y oficinas más importantes de Madrid.

Análoga color

©Carolina Ponce de León E.

Edificio Bacardi, Havana, Cuba

Edifício Ramos de Azevedo

D720_845

26/08/2013 : Bilbao, Eduardo Victoria de Lecea pasealekua: edificio Artklass (Rob Krier, Marc y Nada Breitman, IA+B Arkitektura, 2011)

Medellin - Colombia

Edificio Colteger - inspirado en la pelicula 2012

Colorflash Holga Rollo 120

Foto Renata Carvalho/helicopteroCBN - o Edifício Copan (1966) e ao lado o Edifício Itália (1965).

El área técnica de COMSA ha desarrollado un sistema inteligente que calcula la ruta más rápida y óptima para la desocupación de inmuebles e instalaciones en situaciones de emergencia por incendio.

 

Jurado del concurso Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize (MCHAP), integrado por reconocidos profesionales de Londres, Estados Unidos, México y Chile, luego de visitar campus Piura, dio a conocer a los finalistas del premio de arquitectura más importante del continente.

Edificio de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Educación.

1932, an Art Deco masterpiece apartment building in Havana, Cuba

Edificio Portal Álamos, Calle Valparaíso, Viña

now: Seguros Catalana de Occidente

before: Banco Coca

architects: Rafael de La-Hoz Arderius , Gerardo Olivares James : 1975 - 1983

212.145.146.10/biblioteca/fondos/ingra/index.htm?tip50/MA...

 

Pº de Recoletos - Madrid

30 November 2012

camera: Sony DSC H90

camera: Sony DSC H90

DSC03844

Toda esa calle son edificios casi identicos...

Edificio "Torre Mayor" Ciudad de México

Passeio no centro do Rio de Janeiro, abril de 2023.

San Juan, PR

Listed: 10/13/2004

 

Edifido Victory Garden, built in 1936 is significant locally under Criterion C for the area of architecture as outstanding Spanish Revival building in the Municipality of San Juan, representative of apartment buildings, results of the rise in urban development in the area and excellent example of the work of the renowned Puerto Rican architect Pedro de Castro.

 

The Spanish Revival, an eclectic architecture style, had its heyday in the last decades of the XIX century and the first decades of the XX century. It was the style in vogue to build significant institutional and private edifices and numerous magnificent residences for a wealthy class in Puerto Rico. It was a style that looked at Spain as a cultural paradigm with its Moorish, Renaissance and Mediterranean influence, and to the style of the missions in California. It became so popular in Puerto Rico, California and Florida in that period. "Its employ in the architectural practice in United States and Puerto Rico respond to several factors: a taste for the exotic; a search for cultural roots; evoked by such places as the Universidad de Alcald de Henares; an accommodation to regional climatic conditions; and last, the historicist wave that swept over Western architecture at the beginning of the twentieth century”.

 

Victory Garden building is representative of the apartment buildings constructed during the building boom of the 30's, as part of the urban development of Santurce. Also, it is an excellent representative of the efforts to design functional apartment houses in Puerto Rico, integrating the beauty of the Spanish Revival style of the time.

 

The building's design efficiently recognizes the different programmatic needs for commercial spaces on the first floor and more private housing units on the upper floors. It also recognizes its proximity to a nice view of the Condado Lagoon, as every unit has a balcony towards it. At the same time, housing units - and the whole building - acknowledge the presence of Ponce de Leon Avenue - the city as such - on the opposite site. The design takes full advantage of the sloping topography on the site as the difference in level from the front of the building to the back wall allows for some covered parking space to develop under the main structure without occupying any of the scarce lot space behind the structure. The building's four-story bulk is cleverly handled to play down its scale to merge better with the surrounding structures along the street. The design indulges successfully in a play of solids and voids featuring outdoor covered balconies and uncovered terraces along the edge zones on both sides, to imply a step down in volume one story to the one below, all done in a subtle, almost unnoticeable manner. The mature design displayed on the general aspects of the building and site design is further made evident in the unit design.

 

Besides the exquisite handling of architectural composition in massing and elevation, the design excels for its quality in the use of architectural details and ornament pertinent to the Spanish Revival Style, one particularly mastered by De Castro. The careful composition of ornaments and moldings penetrates the building. The flooring in every room of the units displays a contained geometric pattern in hydraulic cement mosaic tile, a feature based on a long lasting Island tradition.

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Historic Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands Travel Itinerary

Mandante Inmobiliaria BB&C Ltda.

Ubicación San Guillermo 412, Cº

Placeres Valparaíso

Superficie 1032,59 m²

Fecha 2004

Equipo Profesional :

Arquitecto Konrad Klötzer Peters

Ing. Calculista Jorge Carvallo S.

Constructor Bruno Costa Sanguinetti

 

San Juan, PR

Listed: 10/13/2004

 

Edifido Victory Garden, built in 1936 is significant locally under Criterion C for the area of architecture as outstanding Spanish Revival building in the Municipality of San Juan, representative of apartment buildings, results of the rise in urban development in the area and excellent example of the work of the renowned Puerto Rican architect Pedro de Castro.

 

The Spanish Revival, an eclectic architecture style, had its heyday in the last decades of the XIX century and the first decades of the XX century. It was the style in vogue to build significant institutional and private edifices and numerous magnificent residences for a wealthy class in Puerto Rico. It was a style that looked at Spain as a cultural paradigm with its Moorish, Renaissance and Mediterranean influence, and to the style of the missions in California. It became so popular in Puerto Rico, California and Florida in that period. "Its employ in the architectural practice in United States and Puerto Rico respond to several factors: a taste for the exotic; a search for cultural roots; evoked by such places as the Universidad de Alcald de Henares; an accommodation to regional climatic conditions; and last, the historicist wave that swept over Western architecture at the beginning of the twentieth century”.

 

Victory Garden building is representative of the apartment buildings constructed during the building boom of the 30's, as part of the urban development of Santurce. Also, it is an excellent representative of the efforts to design functional apartment houses in Puerto Rico, integrating the beauty of the Spanish Revival style of the time.

 

The building's design efficiently recognizes the different programmatic needs for commercial spaces on the first floor and more private housing units on the upper floors. It also recognizes its proximity to a nice view of the Condado Lagoon, as every unit has a balcony towards it. At the same time, housing units - and the whole building - acknowledge the presence of Ponce de Leon Avenue - the city as such - on the opposite site. The design takes full advantage of the sloping topography on the site as the difference in level from the front of the building to the back wall allows for some covered parking space to develop under the main structure without occupying any of the scarce lot space behind the structure. The building's four-story bulk is cleverly handled to play down its scale to merge better with the surrounding structures along the street. The design indulges successfully in a play of solids and voids featuring outdoor covered balconies and uncovered terraces along the edge zones on both sides, to imply a step down in volume one story to the one below, all done in a subtle, almost unnoticeable manner. The mature design displayed on the general aspects of the building and site design is further made evident in the unit design.

 

Besides the exquisite handling of architectural composition in massing and elevation, the design excels for its quality in the use of architectural details and ornament pertinent to the Spanish Revival Style, one particularly mastered by De Castro. The careful composition of ornaments and moldings penetrates the building. The flooring in every room of the units displays a contained geometric pattern in hydraulic cement mosaic tile, a feature based on a long lasting Island tradition.

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Historic Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands Travel Itinerary

Mercurio coronando el antiguo edificio del BBVA en la Gran Vía Bilbaína.

Arquitecto: Pedro Guimón, 1922

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