Ministry of the Air

Ministry of the Air
Madrid Ejercito del Aire.jpg
General information
LocationArgüelles, Madrid
AddressPlaza de la Moncloa
CountrySpain
Construction started1943
Completed1958
Design and construction
ArchitectLuis Gutiérrez Soto

The Ministry of the Air (Spanish: Ministerio del Aire, named after the institution it formerly hosted, the Ministry of the Air Force), also known in Spanish as the Cuartel General del Ejército del Aire (after its current purpose) is a building in Madrid, Spain.

History

Once the Spanish Civil War had ended with the Francoist faction's victory and after the requirement of a smallholding for the construction of the Ministry of the Air Force's headquarters in 1939 filed by Juan Vigón, the plot of land on where the Modelo Prison lied was chosen and ceded as building site.[1]

In order to present the project, the architect, Luis Gutiérrez Soto, traveled to Rome and Berlin to study buildings with a similar purpose, elaborating an initial draft reminiscent of Paul Ludwig Troost and Albert Speer's works.[2] His project was reworked several times, discarding the neoclassicist elements, and ultimately, pandering to the imperial historicism sought by the Francoist regime, it adopted the herrerian elements,[3] inspired by El Escorial.[4] The building was intended to be part of a wider effort to create the image of an "Imperial Madrid". Nonetheless the delusions of grandeur vis-à-vis the so-called "Imperial Cornice" caught up with reality and the scarcity during the Post-War and most of the individual projects ended up either filed, unfinished or mutilated, with the single clear success being precisely the Ministry of the Air.[5]

The formal beginning of the construction (undertaken by Huarte y Compañía) took place on 10 December 1943.[6] Although building works did not fully end until 1958, parts of the building were already in use in 1954.[7]

References

Citations
  1. ^ Portela Sandoval 2002, p. 346.
  2. ^ Portela Sandoval 2002, p. 350.
  3. ^ Portela Sandoval 2002, p. 350–353.
  4. ^ Fanjul, Sergio C. (1 November 2016). "El Madrid de Franco". El País.
  5. ^ Box 2012, pp. 170–172.
  6. ^ Portela Sandoval 2002, p. 354.
  7. ^ Portela Sandoval 2002, p. 359.
Bibliography

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