fbpx
Wikipedia

Legislative Palace of San Lázaro

The Legislative Palace of San Lázaro (Spanish: Palacio Legislativo de San Lázaro) is the main seat of the legislative power of the Mexican government, being the permanent meeting place of the Chamber of Deputies, as well as the seat of the whole Congress of the Union, when the Chamber of Deputies convenes in conjunction with the Senate of the Republic.[2][3] Built in the late 20th century after a 1977 political reform, the complex is located in Mexico City about a mile east of the Zócalo central square, in the Venustiano Carranza borough or district, next to the Palace of Federal Justice. The complex draws its name from its location, as the San Lázaro Railway Station was the former occupant of the grounds where the palace was built.[4][5]

Legislative Palace of San Lázaro
Palacio Legislativo de San Lázaro
Legislative Palace of San Lázaro
General information
Architectural styleMinimalist, Modern architecture
AddressAvenida Congreso de la Unión No. 66, Colonia El Parque, Delegación Venustiano Carranza C.P. 15960[1]
Town or cityMexico City
CountryMexico
Coordinates19°25′49″N 99°07′03″W / 19.43028°N 99.11750°W / 19.43028; -99.11750
Construction startedSeptember 1979
Completed1981
ClientPresident José López Portillo
Design and construction
Architect(s)Pedro Ramírez Vázquez, Jorge Campuzano, David Suárez; Restoration Architect: Manuel de Santiago-de Borbón González Bravo.

History edit

 
Works of the palace, 1981.

After the Mexican political reform of 1977, the number of deputies of the Chamber passed from 186 to 400, and thus, it was impossible for them to convene in the former meeting place, then known as the Legislative Palace of Donceles, which is now occupied by the Legislative Assembly of the Federal District. Thereupon, construction on a new seat of the Legislative began as a part of a plan of urban restructuring of the sector where the San Lázaro Station was located, on the limit of the Venustiano Carranza and Cuauhtémoc boroughs. Also on the property was built a new Palace of Federal Justice for the functions of the Judiciary branch of the government.

The project, which was promoted by former president José López Portillo, was a faction of a massive development and public works program of the government, resulting from a Mexican petroleum boom. Construction began in September 1979, following the plans of architects Pedro Ramírez Vázquez (who at the time served as Secretary of Settlement and Public Works), Jorge Campuzano, and David Suárez.

The grounds were formally inaugurated on 1 September 1981 as a part of the 5th Government Report (the equivalent of the State of the Union Address in Mexico) of López Portillo, and officially at the installation of the deputies and senators of the LI Legislature of the Congress of the Union.

The building was severely damaged after a fire in 1989, and President of Mexico Carlos Salinas de Gortari had it restored by Mexican architect Manuel de Santiago-de Borbón González Bravo, a renowned member of the International Council on Monuments and Sites.[6]

On October 10, 2001, two Israelis, one of them a dual citizen of Mexico, were arrested after reportedly acting in a strange manner and failing to properly identify themselves when requested.[7][8] They were later found to be carrying false Pakistani passports, firearms, as well as explosives, and identified as former members of the Israeli Special Forces.[7][9][10] The men were then released after mediation from Israeli authorities.[11][12][13]

On September 13, 2023, a public hearing presided over by prominent Mexican journalist and ufologist Jaime Maussan was held in the palace.[14] During the hearing, what were alleged to be two extraterrestrial corpses from Peru were unveiled, with Maussan claiming support from Mexican authorities and the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).[15] The event generated significant interest; however, the Mexican Congress did not conclusively affirm Maussan's claims.[16] Furthermore, Julieta Fierro, physics researcher at UNAM, also stated that the university never endorsed Maussan's claims about the corpses and that his data "made no sense."[17] UNAM further republished their September 2017 statement specifying that they did not make any conclusion as to the origins of a sample sent to them for Carbon 14 testing and that no other kind of testing was performed by them.[18] Wired reported that "mummies" presented by Maussan are believed to be "an elaborate hoax made of human and animal bones".[19]

Architecture and restoration edit

The main facade of the building, which is located on Congreso de la Unión Avenue, is made up of three sections: the two ends are lined with red tezontle and the central one with white marble, forming a wide access plaza between them. Above the main door there is a sculptural set in bas-relief, on a green oxidized bronze plate made by artist José Chávez Morado, giving the total of the set the three colors of the Flag of Mexico.

The central motif of the sculptural ensemble is the national coat of arms, surrounded by a series of moving flags symbolizing the plurality of thoughts; faces emerge from the banners that represent the popular movements that Mexico will see. A huge feathered serpent is the symbol of traditional culture; Above it, virgules emerge that when ascending are joined with several hands, and each of these, accompanied by a different allegory, symbolizes the political, economic and social diversity of contemporary Mexico. The set is crowned by a large sun with the inscription Mexican Political Constitution. On each side, as background elements, there are representations of urban and rural cultures.

Session room edit

From the main door there is a direct entrance to a hall, where there are a series of murals made by muralist Adolfo Mexiac, where he narrates the history of three of the Constitutions that Mexico has had, those of 1824, 1857 and 1917.

From the lobby there is an entrance to the Session Room, where the Chamber or the General Congress meets to meet, with a capacity for two thousand people, taking into account the galleries for special guests. In the session room, the 500 deputies and the 128 senators can meet together and is made up of a wide hemicycle that descends towards the center in a staggered manner.

The side walls of the room are lined with wood, while the front is lined with the same red tezontle as the façade. On this wall, at the opposite end of the entrance to the hall, is the main visual hallmark of the enclosure: the Wall of Honor.

Wall of Honor edit

The Wall of Honor is a set of surfaces on which the names of national heroes, institutions or individuals recognized for their merits to the country have been inscribed in gilt bronze letters, colloquially called "gold letters", with the aim of rendering them tribute and perpetuate their names in historical memory.[20]

The wall is formed primarily by a quarry surface placed at the upper end of the front wall, next to the ceiling, and in huge gilded bronze letters is a famous phrase of President Benito Juárez:

Among individuals as among nations, the respect to other people's rights is peace

It is accompanied by the following names:[20]

Under this phrase, there are five quarry walls, placed just behind the chamber of the Chamber, from where the Board of Directors presides over the sessions, of these walls the central one is wide and the other four are thin, two placed on each side of the center.

Two large national flags are placed on the central wall, one from left to right and the other from right to left, which are linked in the center with a tricolor bow, placed just below the quarry sculptural representation of the national coat of arms. At the top of this wall are the names of the last Aztec emperor, Cuauhtémoc, of the Tetzcocan Tlatoani Nezahualcoyotl and another famous phrase, this time by the insurgent Vicente Guerrero:

My homeland comes first.

It then features a large number of other names, the latest one having been added in 2018, being that of the Mexican Movement of 1968.

Tribune edit

Under the Wall of Honor is the tribune of the Chamber, a space divided into two levels, at the top of which is the seat from which the Deputy President of the Chamber presides over the sessions of the Chamber or the General Congress, accompanied by the vice presidents of the Board of Directors. In sessions of the General Congress, the President of the Senate of the Republic is also placed in this rostrum and in special sessions also the President of the Republic (outgoing and incoming in case of the ceremony of transmission of the Executive Power) and the President of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation; in addition to foreign heads of state invited on the occasion of a special session.

On the lower level are the Secretaries of the Board of Directors and there is also the platform from which the deputies speak in the sessions.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ubicación - Cámara de Diputados". Cámara de Diputados. 2022-12-06.
  2. ^ "Proyectos de Pedro Ramírez Vázquez". Arkin. 2018-11-16.
  3. ^ "Imágenes sobre el constitucionalismo de México". Cervantes Virtual.
  4. ^ Ramírez Vázquez, Pedro. El Palacio Legislativo de San Lázaro (PDF) (in Spanish). Cámara de Diputados.
  5. ^ Villa, Elisa; Colin, Susana (2019-09-22). "Los orígenes del Palacio Legislativo de San Lázaro". El Universal.
  6. ^ Beltrán Reyes, María Luisa (2017-10-24). "Con punto de acuerdo, relativo a la construcción de rutas de evacuación inmediata en la sede de esta soberanía". Gaceta Parlamentaria (4892-V).
  7. ^ a b "October 10, 2001: Two Israelis Are Detained in Mexican Legislature Building after Behaving Suspiciously and Found To Be Carrying Arms". History Commons. from the original on 2018-01-14. Retrieved 2021-10-08.
  8. ^ . History Commons. Archived from the original on 2011-11-14.
  9. ^ "Bomba en San Lázaro". Diario de México. 2001-10-11.
  10. ^ . Procuraduría General de la República. 2001-10-12. Archived from the original on 2001-11-23.
  11. ^ "Autoridades mexicanas investigana [sic] un israelí". La Prensa. 2001-10-14.
  12. ^ . La Crónica de Hoy. Archived from the original on 2002-01-09.
  13. ^ . La Jornada. 2001-10-14. Archived from the original on 2020-11-01. Retrieved 2021-10-08.
  14. ^ Kaur, Anumita. "Self-proclaimed UFO expert shows alleged aliens to Mexico's Congress". The Washington Post. from the original on 2023-09-14. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  15. ^ "'Alien Corpses' Revealed in Hearing Before Mexican Congress". 13 September 2023. from the original on 14 September 2023. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  16. ^ Wrona, Aleksandra (September 13, 2023). "'Alien Corpses' Revealed in Hearing Before Mexican Congress". Snopes. from the original on September 14, 2023. Retrieved September 14, 2023.
  17. ^ "Scientists call fraud on supposed extraterrestrials presented to Mexican Congress". Associated Press News. 2023-09-13. from the original on 2023-09-13. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  18. ^ "El Instituto de Física de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) emite hoy, 13 de septiembre de 2023, el comunicado publicado en 2017, derivado de la misma situación que ahora vuelve a ocupar la atención mediática". www.dgcs.unam.mx. from the original on 2023-09-14. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  19. ^ Lagos, Anna. "No, This Is Not an Alien. Here's Why". Wired. from the original on 14 September 2023. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  20. ^ a b . Cámara de Diputados. 2006-01-01. Archived from the original on 2010-02-11. Retrieved 2010-02-11.

legislative, palace, lázaro, spanish, palacio, legislativo, lázaro, main, seat, legislative, power, mexican, government, being, permanent, meeting, place, chamber, deputies, well, seat, whole, congress, union, when, chamber, deputies, convenes, conjunction, wi. The Legislative Palace of San Lazaro Spanish Palacio Legislativo de San Lazaro is the main seat of the legislative power of the Mexican government being the permanent meeting place of the Chamber of Deputies as well as the seat of the whole Congress of the Union when the Chamber of Deputies convenes in conjunction with the Senate of the Republic 2 3 Built in the late 20th century after a 1977 political reform the complex is located in Mexico City about a mile east of the Zocalo central square in the Venustiano Carranza borough or district next to the Palace of Federal Justice The complex draws its name from its location as the San Lazaro Railway Station was the former occupant of the grounds where the palace was built 4 5 Legislative Palace of San LazaroPalacio Legislativo de San LazaroLegislative Palace of San LazaroGeneral informationArchitectural styleMinimalist Modern architectureAddressAvenida Congreso de la Union No 66 Colonia El Parque Delegacion Venustiano Carranza C P 15960 1 Town or cityMexico CityCountryMexicoCoordinates19 25 49 N 99 07 03 W 19 43028 N 99 11750 W 19 43028 99 11750Construction startedSeptember 1979Completed1981ClientPresident Jose Lopez PortilloDesign and constructionArchitect s Pedro Ramirez Vazquez Jorge Campuzano David Suarez Restoration Architect Manuel de Santiago de Borbon Gonzalez Bravo Contents 1 History 2 Architecture and restoration 2 1 Session room 2 2 Wall of Honor 2 3 Tribune 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Works of the palace 1981 After the Mexican political reform of 1977 the number of deputies of the Chamber passed from 186 to 400 and thus it was impossible for them to convene in the former meeting place then known as the Legislative Palace of Donceles which is now occupied by the Legislative Assembly of the Federal District Thereupon construction on a new seat of the Legislative began as a part of a plan of urban restructuring of the sector where the San Lazaro Station was located on the limit of the Venustiano Carranza and Cuauhtemoc boroughs Also on the property was built a new Palace of Federal Justice for the functions of the Judiciary branch of the government The project which was promoted by former president Jose Lopez Portillo was a faction of a massive development and public works program of the government resulting from a Mexican petroleum boom Construction began in September 1979 following the plans of architects Pedro Ramirez Vazquez who at the time served as Secretary of Settlement and Public Works Jorge Campuzano and David Suarez The grounds were formally inaugurated on 1 September 1981 as a part of the 5th Government Report the equivalent of the State of the Union Address in Mexico of Lopez Portillo and officially at the installation of the deputies and senators of the LI Legislature of the Congress of the Union The building was severely damaged after a fire in 1989 and President of Mexico Carlos Salinas de Gortari had it restored by Mexican architect Manuel de Santiago de Borbon Gonzalez Bravo a renowned member of the International Council on Monuments and Sites 6 On October 10 2001 two Israelis one of them a dual citizen of Mexico were arrested after reportedly acting in a strange manner and failing to properly identify themselves when requested 7 8 They were later found to be carrying false Pakistani passports firearms as well as explosives and identified as former members of the Israeli Special Forces 7 9 10 The men were then released after mediation from Israeli authorities 11 12 13 On September 13 2023 a public hearing presided over by prominent Mexican journalist and ufologist Jaime Maussan was held in the palace 14 During the hearing what were alleged to be two extraterrestrial corpses from Peru were unveiled with Maussan claiming support from Mexican authorities and the National Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM 15 The event generated significant interest however the Mexican Congress did not conclusively affirm Maussan s claims 16 Furthermore Julieta Fierro physics researcher at UNAM also stated that the university never endorsed Maussan s claims about the corpses and that his data made no sense 17 UNAM further republished their September 2017 statement specifying that they did not make any conclusion as to the origins of a sample sent to them for Carbon 14 testing and that no other kind of testing was performed by them 18 Wired reported that mummies presented by Maussan are believed to be an elaborate hoax made of human and animal bones 19 Architecture and restoration editThe main facade of the building which is located on Congreso de la Union Avenue is made up of three sections the two ends are lined with red tezontle and the central one with white marble forming a wide access plaza between them Above the main door there is a sculptural set in bas relief on a green oxidized bronze plate made by artist Jose Chavez Morado giving the total of the set the three colors of the Flag of Mexico The central motif of the sculptural ensemble is the national coat of arms surrounded by a series of moving flags symbolizing the plurality of thoughts faces emerge from the banners that represent the popular movements that Mexico will see A huge feathered serpent is the symbol of traditional culture Above it virgules emerge that when ascending are joined with several hands and each of these accompanied by a different allegory symbolizes the political economic and social diversity of contemporary Mexico The set is crowned by a large sun with the inscription Mexican Political Constitution On each side as background elements there are representations of urban and rural cultures Session room edit From the main door there is a direct entrance to a hall where there are a series of murals made by muralist Adolfo Mexiac where he narrates the history of three of the Constitutions that Mexico has had those of 1824 1857 and 1917 From the lobby there is an entrance to the Session Room where the Chamber or the General Congress meets to meet with a capacity for two thousand people taking into account the galleries for special guests In the session room the 500 deputies and the 128 senators can meet together and is made up of a wide hemicycle that descends towards the center in a staggered manner The side walls of the room are lined with wood while the front is lined with the same red tezontle as the facade On this wall at the opposite end of the entrance to the hall is the main visual hallmark of the enclosure the Wall of Honor Wall of Honor edit The Wall of Honor is a set of surfaces on which the names of national heroes institutions or individuals recognized for their merits to the country have been inscribed in gilt bronze letters colloquially called gold letters with the aim of rendering them tribute and perpetuate their names in historical memory 20 The wall is formed primarily by a quarry surface placed at the upper end of the front wall next to the ceiling and in huge gilded bronze letters is a famous phrase of President Benito Juarez Among individuals as among nations the respect to other people s rights is peace It is accompanied by the following names 20 Heroico Colegio Militar Constituyentes de 1917 A los Defensores de Veracruz de 1914 Heroica Escuela Naval Militar Antonia Nava Leona Vicario Josefa Ortiz de Dominguez Mariana R del Toro de Lazarin Carmen SerdanUnder this phrase there are five quarry walls placed just behind the chamber of the Chamber from where the Board of Directors presides over the sessions of these walls the central one is wide and the other four are thin two placed on each side of the center Two large national flags are placed on the central wall one from left to right and the other from right to left which are linked in the center with a tricolor bow placed just below the quarry sculptural representation of the national coat of arms At the top of this wall are the names of the last Aztec emperor Cuauhtemoc of the Tetzcocan Tlatoani Nezahualcoyotl and another famous phrase this time by the insurgent Vicente Guerrero My homeland comes first It then features a large number of other names the latest one having been added in 2018 being that of the Mexican Movement of 1968 Tribune edit Under the Wall of Honor is the tribune of the Chamber a space divided into two levels at the top of which is the seat from which the Deputy President of the Chamber presides over the sessions of the Chamber or the General Congress accompanied by the vice presidents of the Board of Directors In sessions of the General Congress the President of the Senate of the Republic is also placed in this rostrum and in special sessions also the President of the Republic outgoing and incoming in case of the ceremony of transmission of the Executive Power and the President of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation in addition to foreign heads of state invited on the occasion of a special session On the lower level are the Secretaries of the Board of Directors and there is also the platform from which the deputies speak in the sessions See also editCongress of the Union Federal government of MexicoReferences edit Ubicacion Camara de Diputados Camara de Diputados 2022 12 06 Proyectos de Pedro Ramirez Vazquez Arkin 2018 11 16 Imagenes sobre el constitucionalismo de Mexico Cervantes Virtual Ramirez Vazquez Pedro El Palacio Legislativo de San Lazaro PDF in Spanish Camara de Diputados Villa Elisa Colin Susana 2019 09 22 Los origenes del Palacio Legislativo de San Lazaro El Universal Beltran Reyes Maria Luisa 2017 10 24 Con punto de acuerdo relativo a la construccion de rutas de evacuacion inmediata en la sede de esta soberania Gaceta Parlamentaria 4892 V a b October 10 2001 Two Israelis Are Detained in Mexican Legislature Building after Behaving Suspiciously and Found To Be Carrying Arms History Commons Archived from the original on 2018 01 14 Retrieved 2021 10 08 Profile Salvador Gersson Smike History Commons Archived from the original on 2011 11 14 Bomba en San Lazaro Diario de Mexico 2001 10 11 LA PGR INFORMA SOBRE LA SITUACIoN DE LOS SUJETOS DETENIDOS EN LA CAMARA DE DIPUTADOS Procuraduria General de la Republica 2001 10 12 Archived from the original on 2001 11 23 Autoridades mexicanas investigana sic un israeli La Prensa 2001 10 14 Cuidara la embajada israeli el proceso de Sar Ben Zui La Cronica de Hoy Archived from the original on 2002 01 09 Liberan al israeli detenido en la Camara de Diputados La Jornada 2001 10 14 Archived from the original on 2020 11 01 Retrieved 2021 10 08 Kaur Anumita Self proclaimed UFO expert shows alleged aliens to Mexico s Congress The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2023 09 14 Retrieved 2023 09 14 Alien Corpses Revealed in Hearing Before Mexican Congress 13 September 2023 Archived from the original on 14 September 2023 Retrieved 14 September 2023 Wrona Aleksandra September 13 2023 Alien Corpses Revealed in Hearing Before Mexican Congress Snopes Archived from the original on September 14 2023 Retrieved September 14 2023 Scientists call fraud on supposed extraterrestrials presented to Mexican Congress Associated Press News 2023 09 13 Archived from the original on 2023 09 13 Retrieved 2023 09 14 El Instituto de Fisica de la Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico UNAM emite hoy 13 de septiembre de 2023 el comunicado publicado en 2017 derivado de la misma situacion que ahora vuelve a ocupar la atencion mediatica www dgcs unam mx Archived from the original on 2023 09 14 Retrieved 2023 09 14 Lagos Anna No This Is Not an Alien Here s Why Wired Archived from the original on 14 September 2023 Retrieved 15 September 2023 a b EL MURO DE HONOR Camara de Diputados 2006 01 01 Archived from the original on 2010 02 11 Retrieved 2010 02 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Legislative Palace of San Lazaro amp oldid 1217543099, 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.