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Click
on images at left for larger color views. Thanks to Eric
M. for the head's up. [Google Earth link]
A 19th-century earthquake destroyed a large section of the
Nazarí wall in Granada, Spain. This void was intact until
only last year when Antonio
Jiménez Torrecillas's design for an intervention in the
wall was completed. Visible
from Granada's most famous locale, the Alhambra,
the new intervention is a skilled balance of old and new,
stitching together something long neglected.
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While local and national heritage
regulations gave the architect the freedom to design an addition
that is easily identifiable
as such, they also dictated that the new wall be capable of
demolition in the future without damaging the original construction.
With the old foundation still in place, this required designing
special foundations that kept
the old ones and designing a wall that is stable but also
demountable. The architect chose granite slabs to accomplish
the last, dry stacking them in a manner that creates interest
both inside and out. |
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Two small openings on either
side of the 40 meter (130 foot) wall allow access from
one side of the wall to the other, via a narrow passageway
between the two stacked granite walls. This surprising gap
was influenced by "old military fortifications, the spirit
of secret passageways and night patrols." Torrecillas
wanted visitors "to negotiate a world of light and darkness
that is a part of the myth of underground Granada." Combined
with the numerous apertures in the two walls, this space captures
something of that essence without immediately recalling any
specific historical form. |
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The intervention in Nazarí wall
is but one piece of the larger design. It also includes the
preservation of the landscape surrounding the area -- seen
as a buffer for continued urban development -- and the restoration
of the nearby chapel of San Miguel Alto. Lastly, site work
includes paving refurbishment and a new staircase parallel
to the wall itself. This last, along with the access through
the new wall, points to how the wall -- long seen as something
that separates -- here connects places and times.
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Nazarí Wall Intervention in Granada, Spain by Antonio Jiménez Torrecillas |
2007.03.26 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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