We are mapping a heritage ecology of the metropolis of Madrid presented through theories, histories and designs.
We are mapping a heritage ecology of the metropolis of Madrid presented through theories, histories and designs.
No European metropolis can be planned through binary theories that separates city from countryside, culture from nature, past from future. The perspective of ecology has overcome these unproductive divisions and open the territorial design agenda to new questions. Metropolises are now complex urban-rural gradients endowed with multifunctional landscapes with truly hybrid natural-cultural values. These values emerge in the ecological interconnection of environmental, social and economic trends. In this context, we believe that heritage can be a partner for ecologising our territory in a new metropolitan agenda. To look at this opportunity, we are mapping the Metropolitan Region of Madrid, the ensemble of its everyday landscapes, as well as its unique and degraded landscapes. Using large spatial databases and our own fieldwork in three mapping work packages (MWP), critical mapping allows us to represent theories, histories and designs in an interconnected heritage ecology. At the same time, we will expand the discussion with colleagues researching other European metropolises.
MAPPING INFRASTRUCTURES AND NATURECULTURE VALUES
Conceived as territorial supply and regulation networks, metropolitan infrastructures hide histories. Infrastructure is originally planned and designed, but its current form is often the result of aggregations over time – it needs repairs, extensions or partial replacements, and is rarely completely replaced. Infrastructures often leave spatial traces that explain the functions and shape of our landscapes. Therefore, green, blue or transport infrastructures can become a heritage ecology that project the past into the present and the future. We believe that the natural-cultural values of infrastructures can help us to understand the complexity of our metropolitan landscape, as well as to achieve future quality landscapes.
MAPPING CULTURAL ASSETS AND PROTECTED LANDSCAPES
While natural heritage policies often exclude a real attention to cultural features, cultural heritage policies dismiss nature. Both have led to a spatial configuration of protected and seeming isolated patches. But on the one hand, the landscape of natural parks is the result of traditional human use of resources. On the other hand, historic sites had a strong sense of place and became fundamental patches of territorial structuring in an environmental sense. Based on ecological theories of heritage, we believe that protected patches contribute more to the quality of life if we can integrate them into heritage territorial systems. To this end, new imaginaries of conservation must be envisioned.
MAPPING AGROECOLOGY AND SUPPLY CHANNELS
In our metropolitan territory, a concentric urban-rural gradient is crossed by a geographical gradient that goes from the Sierra de Guadarrama in the northwest to the plain of the Tagus River in the southeast. Here, agricultural draws diversified and sometimes rare patterns. Farming intermingles with the villages and modern urbanization further away from the capital, but also tries to penetrate the capital itself. Moreover, agriculture is present in historical places and is sometimes related to our scientific and technological heritage. We understand agriculture as a vector of patrimonialisation and social and environmental innovation, capable of providing new forms of public spaces and landscapes.
Research team:
Integral and sustainable planning in cultural landscapes inscribed on the World Heritage List is one of the major contemporary challenges in urban heritage management. Cultural landscapes represent the continuous interaction between nature and culture, a collective construction that evolves over time. In this context, the Landscape of Light is a unique example shaped by more than five centuries of urban, scientific, artistic and social transformations. Its recent inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2021 highlights its Outstanding Universal Value (OUV), resulting from the harmonious integration of art, science and nature.
Delimitation of the Landscape of Light, World Heritage Site.
Pablo also reflects on the structural and management problems derived from the coexistence of multiple administrations, regulations and actors. The maintenance of the ensemble has historically depended on isolated interventions carried out without a guiding framework or shared vision. This fragmentation has generated a gradual loss of visual and functional coherence, evident in the disparity of urban materials, the deterioration of heritage elements and the absence of a unified narrative.
Pablo’s work proposes the formulation of a Master Plan as a comprehensive management tool that would coordinate policies, resources and strategies among the various institutions. The goal is to ensure the preservation of the property’s Outstanding Universal Value and guarantee its long-term sustainability. It seeks to understand the landscape as a dynamic and living system, consolidating a shared image for the whole ensemble. He addresses the challenges posed by the site’s inclusion on the World Heritage List, analyzing the administrative, territorial and symbolic complexity of the area. He also outlines the current management structure, identifying existing gaps, especially regarding inter-institutional coordination and the lack of an overarching vision for the landscape.
Catalogue of Protected Buildings from the Madrid City Council Geoportal and map of the main public monuments and fountains created by the author.
To diagnose the state of conservation, he divides the area into sectors that include monumental buildings, sculptural elements, urban furniture, fences, gardens and environmental systems. He also considers factors such as climate change, acoustic and air pollution, waste management, tourism pressure and safety. This helps identify inequalities in the conservation and treatment of the different sectors.
Diagram of Sector 1, Calle de Alcalá, prepared by the author, and analysis of differences in urban furniture.
The Landscape of Light has strengths, such as its historical value, rich heritage and central urban location, as well as opportunities like international visibility, citizen participation and heritage education.
The plan would include intervention criteria for all future works and actions. Among its priorities are reducing vehicle traffic along the Prado axis, improving pedestrian accessibility, efficient water and vegetation management, renewal of urban furniture, enhancement of lost or forgotten elements and public awareness. The approach does not aim to freeze the landscape but to ensure its controlled and sustainable evolution.
Pablo’s goal is for this landscape to continue fulfilling its original function: to be a place of encounter between nature, culture and the citizens.