fbpx
Wikipedia

Cybele Palace

Cibeles Palace (Spanish: Palacio de Cibeles), formally known as Palacio de Comunicaciones (Palace of Communications) and Palacio de Telecomunicaciones (Palace of Telecommunications) until 2011, is a complex composed of two buildings with white facades and is located in one of the historical centres of Madrid, Spain. Formerly the city's main post office and telegraph and telephone headquarters, it is now occupied by Madrid City Council, serving as the city hall, and the public cultural centre CentroCentro.

Cibeles Palace
Palacio de Cibeles
Cybele Palace, with the fountain of the same name in the foreground
Former namesPalacio de Comunicaciones
Palacio de Telecomunicaciones
General information
StatusCompleted
Architectural styleEclecticism
Neo-Plateresque
LocationMadrid, Spain
Coordinates40°25′08″N 3°41′32″W / 40.418906°N 3.692084°W / 40.418906; -3.692084
Current tenantsAyuntamiento de Madrid
Inaugurated1919
Height
ArchitecturalSpanish Property of Cultural Interest
Design and construction
Architect(s)Antonio Palacios
Joaquín Otamendi

Overview edit

The palace was built on one of the sides of the Plaza de Cibeles in the Los Jerónimos neighbourhood (district of Retiro) and occupies about 30,000 m2 of what were the old gardens of the Buen Retiro.[1] The choice of the site generated some controversy at the time for depriving Madrid of recreational space.[2] The first stone of the building was laid in 1907. The building was officially opened on 14 March 1919 and began operating as a modern distribution centre for post, telegraphs and telephones. Following some architectural changes to the building's exterior, such as the expansion of two floors and the street and pathway of Montalbán, it began to house municipal offices of the City of Madrid in 2007, moving its departments from the Casa de la Villa (House of the City) and the Casa de Cisneros, which were both located in the Plaza de la Villa. This renovation of the building from the early twenty-first century also included a cultural area called "CentroCentro".

The whole complex, from a Spanish architecture stance, is one of the first examples of Modernismo [es][dubious ] and most representative, to be built in the centre of Madrid,[3] with its Neoplateresque façade and Baroque Salamanca evocations.[4] The building was designed by the young Spanish architects Antonio Palacios and Joaquín Otamendi through a municipal competition to be the headquarters for the Society of Post and Telegraph of Spain.[5] Palacios and Otamendi were also the consultants for the Bilbao Bridge, Madrid Casino and the San Sebastian Bridge. The Cybele Palace was the beginning of the brilliant career in construction for both architects. The decorative motifs of the façade and interior were made by the romantic sculptor Ángel García Díaz, a regular collaborator of Antonio Palacios.[6] One of the design objectives was the construction of "a building for the public".

After their construction and due to the wear and tear of normal use, the buildings slowly started to show signs of the modifications made, which included alterations to improve the communication systems. Modifications were carried out in both buildings in the 1960s and were directed by Alejandro de la Sota. Antonio de Sala-Navarro and Reverter carried out further repairs and alterations between 1980 and 1992. The decline in the use of postal mail in the late twentieth century gradually reduced the functions of the complex, and, as a result, it began to lose its importance. In 1993 it was declared a Bien de Interés Cultural (Asset of Cultural Interest) and classified in the 'monument' category.[7] At the beginning of the 21st century it was incorporated into the municipal estate and became a cultural centre and seat of the City Council of Madrid.

History edit

 
The bullring at the Puerta de Alcalá, in an aerial painting of Madrid in 1854, drawn by the French engraver, lithographer and architect Alfred Guesdon. Buen Retiro Palace, the Puerta de Alcalá and the gardens of the Buen Retiro zone, which will become the site for the future Cybele Place, are also visible.[8]

Madrid was growing in population and size in the seventeenth century after the decision of Philip II of Spain to transform the city onto an administrative and political centre for the nation. The Calle de Alcalá initially began at Puerta del Sol and ended at Paseo del Prado (at the height of the Plaza de Cibeles). Madrid's population growth meant that postal communication during the reign of Fernando VI of Spain was promoted through the construction of the Real Casa de Correos (Royal House of Letters), which was allocated to the Spanish architect Ventura Rodríguez. After the crowning of the new monarch Charles III of Spain, Charles III reassigned the architect Jamie Marquet to the city.[9]

The building served as the Casa de Correos (Post Office) until the construction of the new "Palacio de Comunicaciones". The location in the heart of the city resulted in road congestion and slow communication. The widening alterations to Puerta del Sol in 1856 led to the Casa de Correos finally hosting the Ministry of the Interior. The preliminary draft was approved by the minister of Public Works, Claudio Moyano, for the expansion on 19 July 1860; following the proposal project of the architect and engineer Carlos María de Castro to expand the old city limits. During Spain's restoration period, the Paseo del Prado and Recoletos continued being the preferred location for prestigious institutions and organisations, as well as mansions. Examples include, Buenavista Palace (the Army General Headquarters), which was designed by the architect Juan Pedro de Arnal in 1776 for the Dukes of Alba and the Palacio del Marqués de Linares (Palace of Linares), which is currently the Casa de América.

One of the distinguishing elements of the surroundings was the installation of the Fountain of Cybele in 1794, designed by Ventura Rodríguez. The Plaza de Cibeles was originally called Plaza de Madrid, which was renamed as the Plaza de Castelar.[10] The gardens of the Buen Retiro stretched to the Paseo del Prado.[1] The so-called gardens of San Juan seemed to be the site for the construction of the new building. The architect José Grases Riera had previously carried out studies for the remodelling of the area and had one of them published.[11] The unveilings of the gardens of the Buen Retiro in 1876 and the Hipódromo de la Castellana two years later led to the traffic moving to the junction of the Calle de Alcalá and the Paseo del Prado. This led to the disappearance of the Real Pósito and the construction of the Palacio de Linares between 1873 and 1900. The Alcañices Palace or the Duke of Sexto were demolished to make way for the building of the Bank of Spain.

On 4 April 1910 the works commenced to demolish and build the north–south road axis of Gran Vía. This new larger road axis aimed to displace the role of the east–west axis featuring the roads Mayor-Alcalá, which had previously been predicted by architect Silvestre Pérez in 1810, during the Bonapartist reign.[12]

The building: a long process edit

 
A view of one of the glass domes from the inside

The building took twelve years to complete. During this time, it was subjected to delays, superstitions, and various disputes. The project was approved in 1905 with construction commencing in 1907. The official opening was in 1919. After the approval of the design, the construction was interrupted and slowed down for a few years due to resistance and political struggles in the period. There were political instability and interests at that time that gave rise to the transfer of municipal sites. The Chamber of Commerce in Madrid requested cancellation of the project and called for a new competition. The construction came to a halt for two years during the time the Liberal Party was in government. The construction processes for the new post office began with the arrival of the Conservative Party. During these processes, J. Otamendi tackled two other projects in the capital. In 1908 he began the Hospital of Maudes in the neighbourhood of Cuatro Caminos and in 1910 the headquarters for the Banco Español del Río de la Plata in the neighbourhood of Alcalá.

 
View of the building's transept

The work officially commenced on 12 September 1907.[13] The works were awarded to the Toran and Harguindey Society. The engineer Ángel Chueca Sainz was in charge of calculating the new building's metal structures, Chueca Sainz was the father of the distinguished architect Fernando Chueca Goitia. The construction started quickly and the people gave it the humorous name 'Nuestra Señora de las Comunicaciones' (Our Lady of Communications) because of its monumental character and size. In 1916 it first opened its doors to the Public Postal Savings Bank (Caja Postal de Ahorros) despite the building not being completed until 1918.[13] The construction materials required quickly brought the el Paseo del Prado to a standstill as between one thousand five hundred and two thousand tons of iron, seven thousand cubic meters of stone and a huge quantity of bricks were required. Groups of artists and artisans were organised by the sculptor Ángel García. Among them were the ceramist Daniel Zuloaga, who suspended his involvement and Manuel Ramos Rejano, from the Sevillian ceramists, sculpted the interior decoration.

By 1916, many of the finished façade elements were visible to passers-by from the street below. The media announced that Francos Rodríguez (as Director General of Communication) and Santiago Alba (as Minister of the Interior) were to visit the construction. Interior building works were concluding between 1916 and 1918. The cost of the building was at the time twelve million pesetas, almost three times the initial amount proposed.

Inauguration and beginning edit

After twelve years of construction, the building was officially opened at midday on 14 March 1919, with the name 'Catedral de las Comunicaciones' (Cathedral of Communications). The royal couple, Alfonso XIII and his wife Victoria Eugenie, attended the celebration accompanied by members of the government. Their visit lasted two hours. The palace was at the time a symbol of national progress, modernity and the ideas of regenerationism that were taking root in the media and in some of the intellectuals of the age. The palace became the hub of communications in Madrid at the beginning of the twentieth century. After just one year, the palace became the international headquarters of the Universal Postal Union (UPU). One of the first responsibilities of the palace was to deal with postal traffic. Palm trees were planted in the Plaza de Cánovas during the 1920s.

In 1927 saw the construction of the rear half of the Bank of Spain (Banco de España), which is situated on Calle Alaclá, demolishing the Casas-Palacio (known as Santamarca) for its completion. The Plaza de Cibeles was the main location for various political celebrations, such as the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic on 14 April 1931, when the flag of the Second Republic was raised on the façade of the Palacio de Comunicaciones.[14] The first remodelling was undertaken, adding two further floors to the management building.

Despite the important location, the building did not suffer major damage from the bombings that devastated Madrid during the Spanish Civil War. During the Siege of Madrid, the building came under gun fire. The bullet holes can still be seen today on the building's white façade. The bullet holes were caused by the military-like actions at the end of the Civil War (at the beginning of March 1939), as a consequence of Segismundo Casado's revolt against Juan Negerín's government.[15] The constitution of the National Defence Council placed a, artillery battery in the Plaza de Cibeles. The building was involved in a battle on 8 and 9 March when communist troops succeeded in taking the Palacio de Comunicaciones within a few hours, while Casado's troops were resisting in the Naval Office (Ministerio de la Marina), the War Office and the Bank of Spain. Much later it would be confirmed as the beginning of the street Gran Vía (The Great Way).[16]

Decline in its use as a postal centre and reuse edit

Telegraph services continued increasing in Spain until 1987. During this period the building underwent some restorations and a whitening of its façade in 1994. Since this date, the building's use had started to decline until 2005 when it became a purely residential service; with less than five hundred users. In 1996 the architect Belén Isla Ayuso was in charge of the first restoration of the façade.[17]

The Palacio de Comunicaciones' transformation began in 2003 after the Collaboration Protocol between the City Council of Madrid and the Treasury Department to optimise the use of certain buildings in Madrid. The needs of the city hall and municipal administration had outgrown their traditional seat, the Casa de la Villa and Casa de Cisneros, both of which are located in the Plaza de la Villa.

Therefore, the city council was relocated to the much grander but underused building on Plaza de Cibeles. The first municipal bodies, including the office of the mayor, were moved in 2007; the city council held its first session in the palace in 2011.

The Casa de la Villa is still owned by the municipality and is used for receptions and other formal events.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ariza, Carmen (1990). «Los jardines del Buen Retiro de Madrid». Lunwerg (Ayuntamiento de Madrid) II.
  2. ^ Pérez Rojas, Francisco Javier. «Arquitectura madrileña de la primera mitad del siglo XX : Palacios, Otamendi, Arbós, Anasagasti». Exposición celebrada en el Museo Municipal de Madrid, en marzo de 1987 (Madrid: Ayuntamiento de Madrid). ISBN 8450559227
  3. ^ Isla Ayuso, Belén (2000). «Palacio de Comunicaciones: intervención en una de las muestras del modernismo madrileño». Restauración & Rehabilitación: Revista Internacional del Patrimonio Histórico (44): 34-45. ISSN 1134-4571.
  4. ^ Pérez Rojas, Francisco Javier (1985). «Antonio Palacios y la arquitectura de su época». Villa de Madrid (Madrid: Ayuntamiento de Madrid) (38): 3-20.
  5. ^ Bahamonde Magro, Ángel (2000). Correos y Telégrafos, ed. El Palacio de Comunicaciones: un siglo de historia de Correos y Telégrafos (primera edición). Madrid. ISBN 84-7782-758-3.
  6. ^ Arévalo Cartagena, Juan Manuel (2004). «Un escultor para arquitectos: la obra de Ángel García». Goya: Revista de Arte (301-302): 289-306. ISSN 0017-2715.
  7. ^ REAL DECRETO 892/1993, de 4 de junio, por el que se declara bien de interés cultural con categoría de Monumento, el edificio denominado Palacio de Comunicaciones, de Madrid.
  8. ^ Grabado de Alfred Guesdon (Nantes, 1808-1876) realizado hacia 1854 y publicado en la revista «La Illustration, Journal Universel de París».
  9. ^ Virginia Tovar Martín (2008), «La Puerta del Sol y sus monumentos (siglos XVI y XVII)», Madrid, Ayuntamiento y el I.E.M. (folleto)
  10. ^ Acuerdo Municipal de Madrid de 14 de diciembre de 1900.
  11. ^ Grases Riera, José (1905). El Parque de Madrid. Los Jardines del Buen Retiro. El Salón del Prado (primera ed.). Madrid: Fortanet.
  12. ^ Sambricio, Carlos (1975). "Sivestre, Pérez. Un arquitecto de la Ilustración". Catálogo de Exposición. San Sebastián: Colegio de Arquitectos Vasco-Navarro.
  13. ^ a b Soledad, Búrdalo (2001). "Diez décadas prodigiosas: el Palacio de Comunicaciones de Madrid, símbolo de la evolución de correos en el último siglo". Revista de los Ministerios de Fomento y Medio Ambiente (494). ISSN 1136-6141.
  14. ^ Martínez Rus, Ana (2002). Madrid siglo XX (ed.). Proclamación de la República: La fiesta popular del 14 de julio (primera ed.). Ayuntamiento de Madrid. p. 245.
  15. ^ Montero Barrado, Severiano (2001). "Arqueología de la guerra civil en Madrid". Historia y Comunicación Social (6). Madrid: 97–122. ISSN 1137-0734.
  16. ^ Santiago Amón, (1977), Programa de TV «Trazos», recorrido por la Gran Vía
  17. ^ Isla Ayuso, Belén (2000). "Palacio de Comunicaciones: intervención en una de las muestras del modernismo madrileño". Restauración & Rehabilitación: Revista Internacional del Patrimonio Histórico (44): 34–45. ISSN 1134-4571.

cybele, palace, cibeles, palace, spanish, palacio, cibeles, formally, known, palacio, comunicaciones, palace, communications, palacio, telecomunicaciones, palace, telecommunications, until, 2011, complex, composed, buildings, with, white, facades, located, his. Cibeles Palace Spanish Palacio de Cibeles formally known as Palacio de Comunicaciones Palace of Communications and Palacio de Telecomunicaciones Palace of Telecommunications until 2011 is a complex composed of two buildings with white facades and is located in one of the historical centres of Madrid Spain Formerly the city s main post office and telegraph and telephone headquarters it is now occupied by Madrid City Council serving as the city hall and the public cultural centre CentroCentro Cibeles PalacePalacio de CibelesCybele Palace with the fountain of the same name in the foregroundFormer namesPalacio de ComunicacionesPalacio de TelecomunicacionesGeneral informationStatusCompletedArchitectural styleEclecticismNeo PlateresqueLocationMadrid SpainCoordinates40 25 08 N 3 41 32 W 40 418906 N 3 692084 W 40 418906 3 692084Current tenantsAyuntamiento de MadridInaugurated1919HeightArchitecturalSpanish Property of Cultural InterestDesign and constructionArchitect s Antonio PalaciosJoaquin Otamendi Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 The building a long process 2 2 Inauguration and beginning 2 3 Decline in its use as a postal centre and reuse 3 ReferencesOverview editThe palace was built on one of the sides of the Plaza de Cibeles in the Los Jeronimos neighbourhood district of Retiro and occupies about 30 000 m2 of what were the old gardens of the Buen Retiro 1 The choice of the site generated some controversy at the time for depriving Madrid of recreational space 2 The first stone of the building was laid in 1907 The building was officially opened on 14 March 1919 and began operating as a modern distribution centre for post telegraphs and telephones Following some architectural changes to the building s exterior such as the expansion of two floors and the street and pathway of Montalban it began to house municipal offices of the City of Madrid in 2007 moving its departments from the Casa de la Villa House of the City and the Casa de Cisneros which were both located in the Plaza de la Villa This renovation of the building from the early twenty first century also included a cultural area called CentroCentro The whole complex from a Spanish architecture stance is one of the first examples of Modernismo es dubious discuss and most representative to be built in the centre of Madrid 3 with its Neoplateresque facade and Baroque Salamanca evocations 4 The building was designed by the young Spanish architects Antonio Palacios and Joaquin Otamendi through a municipal competition to be the headquarters for the Society of Post and Telegraph of Spain 5 Palacios and Otamendi were also the consultants for the Bilbao Bridge Madrid Casino and the San Sebastian Bridge The Cybele Palace was the beginning of the brilliant career in construction for both architects The decorative motifs of the facade and interior were made by the romantic sculptor Angel Garcia Diaz a regular collaborator of Antonio Palacios 6 One of the design objectives was the construction of a building for the public After their construction and due to the wear and tear of normal use the buildings slowly started to show signs of the modifications made which included alterations to improve the communication systems Modifications were carried out in both buildings in the 1960s and were directed by Alejandro de la Sota Antonio de Sala Navarro and Reverter carried out further repairs and alterations between 1980 and 1992 The decline in the use of postal mail in the late twentieth century gradually reduced the functions of the complex and as a result it began to lose its importance In 1993 it was declared a Bien de Interes Cultural Asset of Cultural Interest and classified in the monument category 7 At the beginning of the 21st century it was incorporated into the municipal estate and became a cultural centre and seat of the City Council of Madrid History edit nbsp The bullring at the Puerta de Alcala in an aerial painting of Madrid in 1854 drawn by the French engraver lithographer and architect Alfred Guesdon Buen Retiro Palace the Puerta de Alcala and the gardens of the Buen Retiro zone which will become the site for the future Cybele Place are also visible 8 Madrid was growing in population and size in the seventeenth century after the decision of Philip II of Spain to transform the city onto an administrative and political centre for the nation The Calle de Alcala initially began at Puerta del Sol and ended at Paseo del Prado at the height of the Plaza de Cibeles Madrid s population growth meant that postal communication during the reign of Fernando VI of Spain was promoted through the construction of the Real Casa de Correos Royal House of Letters which was allocated to the Spanish architect Ventura Rodriguez After the crowning of the new monarch Charles III of Spain Charles III reassigned the architect Jamie Marquet to the city 9 The building served as the Casa de Correos Post Office until the construction of the new Palacio de Comunicaciones The location in the heart of the city resulted in road congestion and slow communication The widening alterations to Puerta del Sol in 1856 led to the Casa de Correos finally hosting the Ministry of the Interior The preliminary draft was approved by the minister of Public Works Claudio Moyano for the expansion on 19 July 1860 following the proposal project of the architect and engineer Carlos Maria de Castro to expand the old city limits During Spain s restoration period the Paseo del Prado and Recoletos continued being the preferred location for prestigious institutions and organisations as well as mansions Examples include Buenavista Palace the Army General Headquarters which was designed by the architect Juan Pedro de Arnal in 1776 for the Dukes of Alba and the Palacio del Marques de Linares Palace of Linares which is currently the Casa de America One of the distinguishing elements of the surroundings was the installation of the Fountain of Cybele in 1794 designed by Ventura Rodriguez The Plaza de Cibeles was originally called Plaza de Madrid which was renamed as the Plaza de Castelar 10 The gardens of the Buen Retiro stretched to the Paseo del Prado 1 The so called gardens of San Juan seemed to be the site for the construction of the new building The architect Jose Grases Riera had previously carried out studies for the remodelling of the area and had one of them published 11 The unveilings of the gardens of the Buen Retiro in 1876 and the Hipodromo de la Castellana two years later led to the traffic moving to the junction of the Calle de Alcala and the Paseo del Prado This led to the disappearance of the Real Posito and the construction of the Palacio de Linares between 1873 and 1900 The Alcanices Palace or the Duke of Sexto were demolished to make way for the building of the Bank of Spain On 4 April 1910 the works commenced to demolish and build the north south road axis of Gran Via This new larger road axis aimed to displace the role of the east west axis featuring the roads Mayor Alcala which had previously been predicted by architect Silvestre Perez in 1810 during the Bonapartist reign 12 The building a long process edit nbsp A view of one of the glass domes from the insideThe building took twelve years to complete During this time it was subjected to delays superstitions and various disputes The project was approved in 1905 with construction commencing in 1907 The official opening was in 1919 After the approval of the design the construction was interrupted and slowed down for a few years due to resistance and political struggles in the period There were political instability and interests at that time that gave rise to the transfer of municipal sites The Chamber of Commerce in Madrid requested cancellation of the project and called for a new competition The construction came to a halt for two years during the time the Liberal Party was in government The construction processes for the new post office began with the arrival of the Conservative Party During these processes J Otamendi tackled two other projects in the capital In 1908 he began the Hospital of Maudes in the neighbourhood of Cuatro Caminos and in 1910 the headquarters for the Banco Espanol del Rio de la Plata in the neighbourhood of Alcala nbsp View of the building s transeptThe work officially commenced on 12 September 1907 13 The works were awarded to the Toran and Harguindey Society The engineer Angel Chueca Sainz was in charge of calculating the new building s metal structures Chueca Sainz was the father of the distinguished architect Fernando Chueca Goitia The construction started quickly and the people gave it the humorous name Nuestra Senora de las Comunicaciones Our Lady of Communications because of its monumental character and size In 1916 it first opened its doors to the Public Postal Savings Bank Caja Postal de Ahorros despite the building not being completed until 1918 13 The construction materials required quickly brought the el Paseo del Prado to a standstill as between one thousand five hundred and two thousand tons of iron seven thousand cubic meters of stone and a huge quantity of bricks were required Groups of artists and artisans were organised by the sculptor Angel Garcia Among them were the ceramist Daniel Zuloaga who suspended his involvement and Manuel Ramos Rejano from the Sevillian ceramists sculpted the interior decoration By 1916 many of the finished facade elements were visible to passers by from the street below The media announced that Francos Rodriguez as Director General of Communication and Santiago Alba as Minister of the Interior were to visit the construction Interior building works were concluding between 1916 and 1918 The cost of the building was at the time twelve million pesetas almost three times the initial amount proposed Inauguration and beginning edit After twelve years of construction the building was officially opened at midday on 14 March 1919 with the name Catedral de las Comunicaciones Cathedral of Communications The royal couple Alfonso XIII and his wife Victoria Eugenie attended the celebration accompanied by members of the government Their visit lasted two hours The palace was at the time a symbol of national progress modernity and the ideas of regenerationism that were taking root in the media and in some of the intellectuals of the age The palace became the hub of communications in Madrid at the beginning of the twentieth century After just one year the palace became the international headquarters of the Universal Postal Union UPU One of the first responsibilities of the palace was to deal with postal traffic Palm trees were planted in the Plaza de Canovas during the 1920s Decoration around the windows on the main facade nbsp Head of the Egyptian Goddess Hathor nbsp Head of Ceres nbsp An Aztec deity In 1927 saw the construction of the rear half of the Bank of Spain Banco de Espana which is situated on Calle Alacla demolishing the Casas Palacio known as Santamarca for its completion The Plaza de Cibeles was the main location for various political celebrations such as the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic on 14 April 1931 when the flag of the Second Republic was raised on the facade of the Palacio de Comunicaciones 14 The first remodelling was undertaken adding two further floors to the management building Despite the important location the building did not suffer major damage from the bombings that devastated Madrid during the Spanish Civil War During the Siege of Madrid the building came under gun fire The bullet holes can still be seen today on the building s white facade The bullet holes were caused by the military like actions at the end of the Civil War at the beginning of March 1939 as a consequence of Segismundo Casado s revolt against Juan Negerin s government 15 The constitution of the National Defence Council placed a artillery battery in the Plaza de Cibeles The building was involved in a battle on 8 and 9 March when communist troops succeeded in taking the Palacio de Comunicaciones within a few hours while Casado s troops were resisting in the Naval Office Ministerio de la Marina the War Office and the Bank of Spain Much later it would be confirmed as the beginning of the street Gran Via The Great Way 16 Decline in its use as a postal centre and reuse edit Telegraph services continued increasing in Spain until 1987 During this period the building underwent some restorations and a whitening of its facade in 1994 Since this date the building s use had started to decline until 2005 when it became a purely residential service with less than five hundred users In 1996 the architect Belen Isla Ayuso was in charge of the first restoration of the facade 17 The Palacio de Comunicaciones transformation began in 2003 after the Collaboration Protocol between the City Council of Madrid and the Treasury Department to optimise the use of certain buildings in Madrid The needs of the city hall and municipal administration had outgrown their traditional seat the Casa de la Villa and Casa de Cisneros both of which are located in the Plaza de la Villa Therefore the city council was relocated to the much grander but underused building on Plaza de Cibeles The first municipal bodies including the office of the mayor were moved in 2007 the city council held its first session in the palace in 2011 The Casa de la Villa is still owned by the municipality and is used for receptions and other formal events References edit a b Ariza Carmen 1990 Los jardines del Buen Retiro de Madrid Lunwerg Ayuntamiento de Madrid II Perez Rojas Francisco Javier Arquitectura madrilena de la primera mitad del siglo XX Palacios Otamendi Arbos Anasagasti Exposicion celebrada en el Museo Municipal de Madrid en marzo de 1987 Madrid Ayuntamiento de Madrid ISBN 8450559227 Isla Ayuso Belen 2000 Palacio de Comunicaciones intervencion en una de las muestras del modernismo madrileno Restauracion amp Rehabilitacion Revista Internacional del Patrimonio Historico 44 34 45 ISSN 1134 4571 Perez Rojas Francisco Javier 1985 Antonio Palacios y la arquitectura de su epoca Villa de Madrid Madrid Ayuntamiento de Madrid 38 3 20 Bahamonde Magro Angel 2000 Correos y Telegrafos ed El Palacio de Comunicaciones un siglo de historia de Correos y Telegrafos primera edicion Madrid ISBN 84 7782 758 3 Arevalo Cartagena Juan Manuel 2004 Un escultor para arquitectos la obra de Angel Garcia Goya Revista de Arte 301 302 289 306 ISSN 0017 2715 REAL DECRETO 892 1993 de 4 de junio por el que se declara bien de interes cultural con categoria de Monumento el edificio denominado Palacio de Comunicaciones de Madrid Grabado de Alfred Guesdon Nantes 1808 1876 realizado hacia 1854 y publicado en la revista La Illustration Journal Universel de Paris Virginia Tovar Martin 2008 La Puerta del Sol y sus monumentos siglos XVI y XVII Madrid Ayuntamiento y el I E M folleto Acuerdo Municipal de Madrid de 14 de diciembre de 1900 Grases Riera Jose 1905 El Parque de Madrid Los Jardines del Buen Retiro El Salon del Prado primera ed Madrid Fortanet Sambricio Carlos 1975 Sivestre Perez Un arquitecto de la Ilustracion Catalogo de Exposicion San Sebastian Colegio de Arquitectos Vasco Navarro a b Soledad Burdalo 2001 Diez decadas prodigiosas el Palacio de Comunicaciones de Madrid simbolo de la evolucion de correos en el ultimo siglo Revista de los Ministerios de Fomento y Medio Ambiente 494 ISSN 1136 6141 Martinez Rus Ana 2002 Madrid siglo XX ed Proclamacion de la Republica La fiesta popular del 14 de julio primera ed Ayuntamiento de Madrid p 245 Montero Barrado Severiano 2001 Arqueologia de la guerra civil en Madrid Historia y Comunicacion Social 6 Madrid 97 122 ISSN 1137 0734 Santiago Amon 1977 Programa de TV Trazos recorrido por la Gran Via Isla Ayuso Belen 2000 Palacio de Comunicaciones intervencion en una de las muestras del modernismo madrileno Restauracion amp Rehabilitacion Revista Internacional del Patrimonio Historico 44 34 45 ISSN 1134 4571 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cybele Palace amp oldid 1176945131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.