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:
Agricultural heritage represents a unique fusion of natural and cultural elements, encompassing both tangible and intangible aspects that reflect the historical bond between humanity and the land focused on food production. Recognising its significance is vital, as it not only preserves tradition and expertise but also fosters sustainability and environmental resilience. While significant initiatives like Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS) are in place to safeguard remarkable agricultural areas with unique heritage values, frameworks for recognising the historic significance of non-outstanding agricultural areas are not sufficiently consolidated. Nonetheless, it is equally important to acknowledge the heritage value of agricultural systems that, while lacking exceptional features, succeed in preserving traditional techniques and processes, thereby conserving cultural landscapes and gastronomic identities. For this reason, this paper introduces a methodology for assessing the time depth of agricultural elements such as roads, livestock routes, agricultural plots, rural buildings and land use using historical cartography. By mapping historically significant features in farming areas, this method might be useful for recognising agricultural heritage and integrate it into spatial decision-making, ensuring the preservation of its cultural and environmental values. The method’s application is presented in a case study of floodplains and irrigation areas near Aranjuez.
Vista del Real Sitio de Aranjuez. Anónimo, c. 1640. Museo del Prado
To acknowledge the heritage value of agricultural systems, we assess the time depth of agricultural elements such as roads, livestock routes, agricultural plots, rural buildings and land use using historical cartography. By mapping historically significant features in farming areas, this method might be useful for recognising agricultural heritage and integrate it into spatial decision-making, ensuring the preservation of its cultural and environmental values.
Today, organisations such as the Association of Producers of the Aranjuez Garden are working to restore quality horticulture through initiatives like creating a quality brand for the Aranjuez orchards or adopting a multidimensional territorial model that incorporates functions such as tourism, education, recreation, and therapy alongside productive functions. Additionally, a Strategy for the Development of the Historic Gardens of Aranjuez was developed for the period 2015–2018, involving the Association and other public and private entities in Aranjuez. The Strategy notably focuses on agriculture through the lens of the cultivated products, highlighting these as the core identity and cultural value of agricultural practices. However, agriculture is a complex system that also includes the landscape’s structure and elements which result from farming activities. Beyond the heritage value of the orchards, this study also highlights the historical significance of farm buildings and livestock paths in the area.