Heritagescapes

We are mapping a heritage ecology of the metropolis of Madrid presented through theories, histories and designs.

A Critical Mapping of the Metropolitan Cultural Landscape: Future Heritages

Research project developed by the Cultural Landscape Research Group GIPC of the Madrid School of Architecture at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, with the participation of the ADAPTA Research Group at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. 
Grant PID2022-140500NB-I00 funded by: 

The Frontline Around Madrid: Comparison Between Battle Maps and War Remnants Density Maps of the Spanish Civil War in Madrid

Nicolás Mariné

Curating Heritage. On the Future of the Past in the Everyday Landscape of the Metropolis of Madrid

Rodrigo de la O and Eduardo de Nó

Everyday heritage: Representation and landscape in the region of Madrid

David Escudero and Diego Toribio

Architecture and landscapes for agricultural research in Madrid: documenting scientific and technological heritage

Rodrigo de la O and Eduardo de Nó

Are We What We Eat? A Heritage Perspective on the Agri-food Landscapes of the Madrid Region

David Escudero, Beatriz Pereira

Water to Feed Madrid: 18 km of Orchards and Nurseries Along the Course of the Canalillo

Carmen Toribio

Gardens of yesterday and today, their persistence in the City of Madrid: Comparative study of the Transformation of Private Gardens in Madrid

Lucía Gamboa Sánchez Blanco

Vestige, Signal and Onset of an Event: Sundays at the Rastro

Marina Gil Escalada

Reclaiming the City Through Its River: The Case of the Manzanares

Claudia Rivera Lario

Domestic Architecture in the Sierra de Guadarrama: 20th Century

Guillermo García Prieto

Industrial Madrid: evolution and permanences Around Atocha

Marta Abadín García

Devices of the Real, Collective Devices

Carlo Udina Rodríguez

Between the Playful and the Working-Class: An Atlas of Goya’s Madrid

Juan Castro Sánchez

Towards a Master Plan for the Landscape of Light: Paseo del Prado and Buen Retiro, Landscape of Arts and Sciences

Pablo Jaque Valdés

From water to landscape: the transformation of the Royal Site of Aranjuez through Hydraulic Engineering

Carlos Corisa Andarias

From the kitchen to the landscape. Architectures of Cocido in Madrid.

Beatriz Pereira

Among productive landscapes: the former El Águila brewery in Villaverde, Madrid.

Diego Sacristán

Adaptive reuse and heritage practice: Origins, meanings and strategies

Graziella Trovato

Unveiling Madrid’s Visual Imagery: An Ongoing Attempt

David Escudero

Navigating the Meaques Stream in the Casa de Campo

Clara Cernou

The water footprints of enlightened Madrid and the hydraulic legacy of Juan de Villanueva

Eugenia Abejón

Transhumance Landscapes and Nature-Based Tourism

Cecilia Arnaiz and Marifé Schmitz

Castle of Villaviciosa de Odón: A Scientific Heritage of Forestry Research and Education

Eduardo de Nó

Heritage Networks in Villaverde’s Industrial Landscape

Rafael Guerrero

Ecology of the Royal Sites: The Livestock Trails of El Escorial

Eva Calderón

Co-Design in Urban Framing

Finca formativa "Huerto El Pozo"

The GIPC

Rethinking Public Spaces through Urban Farming

Concha Lapayese, Francisco Arques y Diego Martín-Sánchez

Unveiling Agricultural Heritage

Marina López-Sánchez

Historic Nurseries: A Cultural and Natural Legacy in Transformation

Carmen Toribio

Hydraulic Heterotopias: The Image of Technique

Carmen Toribio

Surrounding the Non-Urbanized Villa de Vallecas

Marina López-Sánchez

Curating Heritage Ecologies

Domestic Architecture in the Sierra de Guadarrama: 20th Century

MWP-II
MAPPING CULTURAL ASSETS AND
PROTECTED LANDSCAPES
Info

Supervised by Nicolás Mariné, Guillermo García reflects on the relationship between the landscape of the Sierra de Guadarrama and the domestic architecture that emerged there during the 20th century.

The Sierra de Guadarrama is a territory of enormous environmental and cultural value, which for centuries shaped ways of life based on livestock farming, forestry and self-construction. Guillermo combines territorial and typological analysis to understand how the geographical, climatic and material conditions of the place have shaped the domestic architecture of the Madrid mountain range.

The 20th century brought radical change: improvements in infrastructure, the rise of tourism and the boom in second homes transformed both the landscape and local ways of life. Municipalities such as Cercedilla, Navacerrada or Los Molinos shifted from self-sufficient rural economies to leisure and holiday nuclei, generating a new residential architecture often detached from the surroundings and from traditional building techniques

Panoramic drawings from the case studies, prepared by the author.

Panoramic drawings from the case studies, prepared by the author.

Guillermo develops a comparative analysis between traditional and contemporary domestic architecture, highlighting the formal and landscape ruptures that accompanied modernization. Through photographs, panoramas and graphic surveys, he analyzes the visual relationship between houses and the mountains, as well as the connection with the Carretera de la Coruña, which emphasizes the importance of the automobile during this period.

Cartography, typological analysis and fieldwork generate an atlas that records different ways in which dwellings relate to terrain, orientation and vegetation. Windows, terraces and thresholds are understood as devices of observation linking what is built with what is contemplated. The constructions rest on the topography with great precision, a strategy that reduces visual and climatic impact while integrating the house into the landscape.

Site plans of the architectures, prepared by the author.

Site plans of the architectures, prepared by the author.

The author analyzes how the houses orient themselves toward valleys or hillsides, opening apertures that frame views of the mountains. A south or southeast orientation makes it possible to capture winter sunlight while also looking out toward the meadows and slopes where everyday life once took place.

The author invites a reflection on the continuity between architecture and landscape. The architects of the 20th century sought to materialize the desire of Madrid’s inhabitants to have a second residence in this setting. The Sierra de Guadarrama is not a scenic backdrop but a landscape. An essential component of dwelling, a presence that drives variations in design strategies and continually influences architecture.

Panoramic drawings from the case studies, prepared by the author.
Site plans of the architectures, prepared by the author.