Activities per year
Abstract
Learning from las Cuencas research project, awarded with the EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards 2015, provides a new perspective of industrial cultural landscapes. Despite being focused on a local environment, the coal mining area of the Cuencas Mineras Centrales of Asturias, among its interests is to create a universal architectural story.
The mining areas, after undergoing an intense process of industrialisation, have changed considerably over a brief period of time. In just a few decades, what were once natural valleys with basically rural economic and social structures came to host busy urban agglomerations of unexpected density in their very heart. This heretical urban configuration is equally the result of the impact of economic interests in a specific space and in a relatively short lapse of time.
Consequently, the co-existence of natural, rural, industrial and urban landscapes came about in a totally uncontrolled and unplanned fashion. The fuzzy limits between the different landscapes foreclose the possibility of identifying their areas of influence. The Cuencas are perceived as a mesh of opposing yet interconnected identities. This has given rise to incredibly heterodox building patterns that contain the conflict on which they are erected embedded in their genetic code. These are hybrid architectures, mutating artefacts which, despite the invisibility of their inevitable marginality, can offer really interesting lessons in architecture today.
The mining areas, after undergoing an intense process of industrialisation, have changed considerably over a brief period of time. In just a few decades, what were once natural valleys with basically rural economic and social structures came to host busy urban agglomerations of unexpected density in their very heart. This heretical urban configuration is equally the result of the impact of economic interests in a specific space and in a relatively short lapse of time.
Consequently, the co-existence of natural, rural, industrial and urban landscapes came about in a totally uncontrolled and unplanned fashion. The fuzzy limits between the different landscapes foreclose the possibility of identifying their areas of influence. The Cuencas are perceived as a mesh of opposing yet interconnected identities. This has given rise to incredibly heterodox building patterns that contain the conflict on which they are erected embedded in their genetic code. These are hybrid architectures, mutating artefacts which, despite the invisibility of their inevitable marginality, can offer really interesting lessons in architecture today.
Translated title of the contribution | Learning from las Cuencas: Towards Highlighting the Cultural Landscapes of the Coalfields |
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Original language | Spanish |
Title of host publication | Hispania Nostra : Re-conociendo la patrimonio español en Europa |
Number of pages | 1 |
Place of Publication | Madrid |
Publisher | Agencia Española de Cooperacion Internacional para el Desarrollo - AECID |
Publication date | 2016 |
Pages | 245 |
Chapter | Publicaciones |
Publication status | Published - 2016 |
Keywords
- Natural
- Rural
- Industrial
- Urban
- Landscape
- Heritage
Artistic research
- Yes
Activities
- 2 Organisation and participation in conference
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Landscape Archaeology Conference
Nacho Ruiz Allen (Participant)
22 Aug 2016 → 25 Aug 2016Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Organisation and participation in conference
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Interpret Europe Conference
Nacho Ruiz Allen (Participant)
21 May 2016 → 24 May 2016Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Organisation and participation in conference
Prizes
-
EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards 2015
Allen, Nacho Ruiz (Recipient), 21 Mar 2016
Prize: Prizes