La Pagoda, officially known as Laboratorios Jorba, was a building in Madrid designed by Spanish architect Miguel Fisac. It was located near the Avenida de América and served as the headquarters of Laboratorios Jorba, a pharmaceutical company.[1] The popular name of the building refers to the visible structure's resemblance to a pagoda, with each floor rotated 45º from the lower one and joined with a hyperboloid ruled surface.[2] It was controversially demolished in 1999, despite being widely recognised as one of the city's architectural icons.[3]
Laboratorios Jorba | |
---|---|
La Pagoda | |
General information | |
Location | Madrid, Spain |
Country | Spain |
Construction started | 1965 |
Completed | 1967 |
Demolished | 1999 |
Client | Laboratorios JORBA |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Miguel Fisac |
References
edit- ^ Miguel Fisac, (1969), Laboratorios Jorba, Nueva forma : arquitectura, urbanismo, diseño, ambiente, arte, ISSN 0029-5825, Nº 41, 1969 , pág. 58
- ^ Diego Peris Sánchez, 2015, Miguel Fisac: Arquitecturas para la investigación y la industria, Madrid, Bubok. ISBN eBook en PDF: 978-84-686-6189-6. ISBN Libro en papel:978-84-686-6188-9
- ^ Ricardo Aroca, (1999), Una muerte sin anunciar. Crónica de la destrucción de los laboratorios Jorba, Arquitectura Viva, Madrid, nº 67, pág. 112
Further reading
edit- Balters, Sofia (3 September 2011). "AD Classics: The Pagoda / Miguel Fisac". ArchDaily. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
- Copertone, Carlos; Eguiluz, Patxi (2015). "The Short Life and Long History of The Pagoda". MAS Context. 25–26.