The peri-urban Region of Madrid: Difference between revisions

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=== Analysis of use/users ===
=== Analysis of use/users ===
* How is the area/project/plan used and by whom?  
* How is the area/project/plan used and by whom?  
The project was thought to reinforce the district of Vallecas, adding a new peri-urban nucleum that will be habited estimatedly by 80 000  persons. The project will provide the habitants of the periphery with a huge green point. Also it attracts people from the city, from the urban area, to use also these green areas.
* Is the use changing? Are there any issues?
* Is the use changing? Are there any issues?
There are many leisure spots and activities possibilities, as well as workshop centres, and a Water and an Energy Museum, an observatory, and a “Relaxing house”
Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes
Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes



Revision as of 17:04, 2 July 2009

The peri-urban Region of Madrid, Spain by Itziar León

--> Back to Rural Landscapes Seminar Case Study List


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Projectimage.jpg
<googlemap version="0.9" lat="64.960766" lon="-18.918457" zoom="6" width="300" height="200">

http:// 64.947899, -19.196045 </googlemap>

Rationale: Why is this case study interesting?

  • Please summarise:- e.g. Design Innovation? Planning Exemplar? Theoretical Insights? Lessons learned from its failure? [It doesn’t have to have been successful]

The Region of Madrid is interesting because of his variety of hints in the landscape, which is very rich, and urban area. The demographic and periographic difference between the urban city and the rural surroundings is very striking, so there is a need to soften this contrast, to urbanize the rural and ruralize the urban.

  • Think about it from the view of another educator/student in a different country. Why should I use this case study in my teaching/education?

Madrid is also an example to show the need of urban and landscape planning. A few systems don't work properly and have to be improved, so many plannings are going to be realized in this area. Furthermore, the environmenal impact is also an issue that has to be cared about in Madrid and its surroundings. Getting to know the case of Madrid, educators and students will be able to concern about this.

Author's perspective

  • What theoretical or professional perspective do you bring to the case study? Please answer from your personal perspective.

I am studying architecture in Madrid, and have been living there my whole life, so i am closer to this case than to any other. Also, I am really interested in it because it is my living environment.

Landscape and/or urban context

  • Biogeography, cultural features, overall character, history and dynamics

The Community of Madrid is located at the center of the country, the Iberian peninsula, and the Central Plain. The province of Madrid contains the capital of Spain.

GEOGRAPHY

Province of Madrid occupies a surface area of approximately 8,028 km². More specifically, the exact position of Madrid is 3° 40´ of longitude west of Greenwich, England, and 40° 23´ north of the equator. Practically all of the Province is located between 600 and 1,000 m above sea level, with the highest point being Peñalara at 2,430 m and the lowest Alberche river in Villa del Prado at 430 m. Despite the existence of a large city of 5 million people, the Community of Madrid still retains some remarkably unspoiled and diverse habitats and landscapes. When looking at a map of the Province of Madrid, it can be seen that it is almost an equilateral triangle, in whose center would be the city. It seems that Madrid's geographic limits turn out to be those of nature: on the western side the "Sistema Central" (the Guadarrama mountain range), the south represents the desire to include (the Royal Site of) Aranjuez, and finally the eastern edge of the triangle comes from the rupture of the fluvial river basins. Madrid is home to mountain peaks rising above 2,000m, holm oak dehesas and low lying plains. The slopes of Guadarrama mountain range are cloaked in dense forests of Scots Pine and Pyrenean oak. The Lozoya Valley supports a large black (monk) vulture colony, and one of the last bastions of the Spanish Imperial Eagle in the world is found in the Park Regional del Suroeste in dehesa hills between the Gredos and Guadarrama ranges. The recent possible detection of the existence of Iberian lynx in the area between the Cofio and Alberche rivers is testament to the biodiversity of the area.

CLIMATE

The region of Madrid has a temperate Continental Mediterranean climate with cold winters with temperatures sometimes dropping below 0 °C . There are about two to three light snowfalls each year. Summer tends to be hot with temperatures that consistently surpass 30 ° - 40º C. Due to Madrid's high altitude and dry climate, nightly temperatures tend to be cooler, leading to a lower average in the summer months. Average Precipitation levels are below 500 mm, evenly distributed throughout the year, with peaks in autumn and spring Water supply: Madrid derives almost 50 percent of its water supply from dams and reservoirs built on the Lozoya River.

DEMOGRAPHICS

It has an estimated population of 6.2 million (2008) mostly concentrated at the metropolitan area of Madrid. Population density is 779.36 hab/km²,much higher than the national average of 91.3 hab/km². Population density varies with the community itself; the municipality of Madrid has a density of 5,160.57 hab/km², whereas the Sierra Norte has a population density of less than 9.9 hab/km². The great majority of the population lives in the capital and its metropolitan area. Its inhabitants are mainly concentrated in the capital (also highest resident population) and in a series of municipalitiesas opposed to in rural areas with low population density. Its citizens have diverse origins, and Madrid is the province with the highest number of residents born outside its territory and with the largest foreign population (13.32%). It is a focus of attraction for those migrating for reasons of employment. Population growth in Madrid is mainly due to the arrival of foreigners

HISTORY

The territory of the Community of Madrid has been populated since the Lower Paleolithic, mainly in the valleys between the rivers of Manzanares, Jarama, and Henares, where several archaeological findings have been made. During the Roman Empire, the region was part of the Citerior Tarraconese province. It was crossed by two important Roman roads, the via xxiv-xxix and via xxvand and contained some important conurbations. During the period of the Visigothic Kingdom, the region lost its importance. The population was scattered amongst several small towns. The center of the peninsula was one of the least-populated regions of the Al-Andalus until the 11th century when it became important and a strategic military post. The Muslim governors created a defensive system of fortresses and towers all across the region with which they tried to stop the advance of the Christian Kingdoms of the north. The fortress of Mayrit (Madrid) was built somewhere between 860 and 880 AD. In 1083, king Alfonso VI of Castile conquered the city of Madrid. A long process of Christian repopulation took place over the course of four centuries. In 1561, King Phillip II made Madrid the capital of the empire. The surrounding territories became economically subordinated to the town itself. But it was not a unified region. During the eighteenth century, the town of Madrid was transformed through several grandiose buildings and monuments as well as through the creation of many social, economical, and cultural institutions. In the 20th century finally was the creation of the autonomous Community of Madrid.


Illustration: Map; sketches; short descriptive analyses

Cultural/social/political context

  • Brief explanation of culture, political economy, legal framework

ECONOMY

The income per capita in Spain is €31,110 in 2008, significantly above the national average. The strengths of the economy of the community are its low unemployment rate, its high investment in research, its relatively high development, and the added-value services. Its weaknesses include the low penetration of broadband and new technologies of information and an unequal male to female occupation. The service, construction, and industry sectors are prominent in Madrid’s commercial productive structure. Madrid’s active businesses consists of trade, construction, wholesale trade, hospitality, property activities, land transport, and pipeline transport, also publishing and graphic arts, manufacture of metal products, manufacture of furniture and other manufacturing industries, wearing apparel and fur industry, and food product industry. Transport includes air, rail and metro. There is an important educational issue, due to the number of universities.

Illustration: Bullet points, image, background notes

History

  • How did the area/project/plan at the focus of the case study evolve?

GAVIA PARK, VALLECAS EXPANSION,MADRID

The city council of Madrid proposed in 2003 an expansion of Madrid in the South, in the district of Vallecas, in order to add a green point to the periphery of Madrid. Toyo Ito, with the collaboration with Dario Gazapo, won the competition.


Illustration: Table or time line

Spatial analysis of area/project/plan

  • What are the main structural features?

The project occupies 394.000 square metres of green area, forming an “ecological corridor”. The central issue is the water. The main idea was to create a landscape of artificial lakes and water flows fed with recycled water of the Gavia River.

  • How has it been shaped? Were there any critical decisions?

techniques. The project is a nerves-shaped water and vegetation system, which shape and method is inspired in those of the trees. The topography is based on a sequence of linked hills The water areas occupy one third of the whole extension. It presents a variety of vegetal atmospheres, with different treatments of the vegetation depending on its relation and distance to the water flow, as well as on the valley orientation (sun or shadow). The users will find a forest of a number of 2000 trees, wetlands, orchards, gardens, meadows..

The park is divided into 6 thematic areas. In the first one, “Watertree”, an experimental recycling system is built. The closed cycle goes from the Gavia Reservoir through the Watertree, and looses water just through evaporation. The second area is the Viewpoint Hill, the main access with views over the whole park. Also a tower rises drom the entrance, next to a museum with a worshop and a garden, which explains the water system. The third area, the Cherry Valley contains the Gavia Reservoir, built following Japanese “Suhama” techniques: formation of beaches and shores with stones. Also, there are the Lime Tree, the Pine and the Holm oak Tree Hill, tree tree types totally compatible with Madrid’s climate and terrain. The limitation of the park also inspired in the Japanese Ha-Ha, presenting a vegetal bushes barrier instead of a fence.


Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Analysis of program/function

  • What are the main functional characteristics?

The problem that the project is based on, is that the Gavia River is completely polluted. Toyo Ito designed a autonomic system of structures with a natural anaerobic treatment method, so that the water cleans and purifies itself while it flows, without machinery. The technique that Ito uses is the “Water Tree”, the water of the Gavia River, is 80% recycled and used for this park, equipping this green zone with a system of canals, lakes. In this way, all the green areas, even those with more need, would be irrigated enough. Microclimates are formed because of these water layers.

  • How have they been expressed or incorporated?

The water of the sewage treatment plant of the Gavia is pumped to the first high level of a complex of plains and terraces. From there the water flows along canals, lockgates, gravel and sand heaps, down to the valley, where it is gathered in deposits. This wather is completely purified, and is used for the vegetation in lower terraces, flowing through the wetlands until the Gavia river. In this way the river, which is previously polluted and with a weak bed, gets recycled and restored.

Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Analysis of design/planning process

  • How was the area/project/plan formulated and implemented?

I don't have any information about the formulation

  • Were there any important consultations/collaborations?

Toyo Ito, the southcorean-japanese architect was the leader of a collaboration with a spanish architectue office under Dario Gazapo.

Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Analysis of use/users

  • How is the area/project/plan used and by whom?

The project was thought to reinforce the district of Vallecas, adding a new peri-urban nucleum that will be habited estimatedly by 80 000 persons. The project will provide the habitants of the periphery with a huge green point. Also it attracts people from the city, from the urban area, to use also these green areas.

  • Is the use changing? Are there any issues?

There are many leisure spots and activities possibilities, as well as workshop centres, and a Water and an Energy Museum, an observatory, and a “Relaxing house”

Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Cross-cutting questions

How may landscape architecture contribute to the integration of different user groups in the urban fringe?

  • Integration in an urban area
  • Quality of life in rur-urban areas
  • Flexibility of life styles

How can the transformation process be connected with the landscape sub-typologies?

  • where does rural start?
  • Rur-urban
  • Dynamics flows between urban and peri-urban areas
  • Monitoring land-use change

How may landscape planning contribute to quality improvement?

  • Aesthetic quality
  • Environmental quality
  • Social quality

Can the maintenance and development of agricultural land-use in urban fringes be a strategy of a greenbelt?

  • Agriculture in the urban fringe
  • Agriculture as a green infrastructure element
  • Green infrastructure
  • Creating green links for wholeness
  • Greenbelt, agriculture as a part of it

Future development directions

  • How is the area/project/plan evolving?
  • Are there any future goals?

Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Peer reviews or critique

  • Has the area/ project/plan been reviewed by academic or professional reviewers?
  • What were their main evaluations?

Pleas add references, quotes...

Points of success and limitations

  • What do you see as the main points of success and limitations of the area/project/plan?

Illustration: Summary table

What can be generalized from this case study?

  • Are there any important theoretical insights?

Short statement plus background notes

Which research questions does it generate?

Short statement plus background notes

Image Gallery

References

Please add literature, documentations and weblinks


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