Architecture Classics: Torres del Parque / Rogelio Salmona
By Rogelio Salmona
By Rogelio Salmona
The great architect Luis Barragán, at 80 years of age, and after almost 10 years of inactivity, carried out his last work on a plot of land measuring 10×36 meters, between party walls in Mexico City. A work that reflects the influence of Mexican culture and painters Diego Rivera and Frida Kalho, where the most interesting thing, according to Barragán, was the challenge of the enormous jacaranda tree that had to be maintained, and the pool requested by the owner as part of the program.
Built in 1948, this Mexican modern house, designed by Luis Barragán, is recognized for its international significance. The house-studio, inhabited by the architect himself until 1988, incorporates principles of the vernacular architecture of the region in its design, including the use of striking colors. Barragán has been one of the most influential Mexican architects, and his house is one of the most visited places in Mexico City.
La Purísima Church is a catholic temple located in the center of the city of Monterrey, Mexico, designed by the Mexican architect Enrique de la Mora Palomar, who won the National Architecture Award in 1946 thanks to this emblematic work. The construction of the temple began in 1939, with Archbishop Guillermo Trischler as its main promoter. Inexplicably, the building was located where there was previously a temple, also dedicated to “La Purísima”, of neoclassical style, which had to be demolished.
Recognised as a landmark in modern Latin American architecture and one of its main references worldwide, the ECLAC (Economic Commission for Latin America, part of the United Nations) headquarters were designed by the Chilean architect Emilio Duhart and inaugurated on the 29th August 1966 in Santiago, Chile.
Recognised as a landmark in modern Latin American architecture and one of its main references worldwide, the ECLAC (Economic Commission for Latin America, part of the United Nations) headquarters were designed by the Chilean architect Emilio Duhart and inaugurated on the 29th August 1966 in Santiago, Chile.
The Benedictine monastery chapel of Santa María de las Condes, visible from different points in the eastern part of Santiago, Chile, is a white volume, located halfway up the slopes of Los Piques hill.
In the context of the ambitious project Satellite City in the outskirts of Mexico City, led by architect Mario Pani in the mid-20th century, Luis Barragán received from Pani the commission to make a fountain in 1958 that would serve as a distinctive motif of the entrance through the main road access to the master plan.
In this project, I tried to highlight two aspects above the others: First, questioning what a housing apartment is, and how it works. Second, solving the structure
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