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When Caracas was the architectural capital of the 1950s

2021-11-07T05:13:10.329Z


Today undermined by the economic crisis and dotted with slums, Caracas was in the 1950s at the forefront of architecture, with achievements signed by world-renowned designers.


In a magical decade, the Venezuelan capital has seen the birth of gems: the Central University of Venezuela, a World Heritage Site, the "

total work

" of Villa Planchart by Italian designer Gio Ponti, or the Humboldt hotel, a jewel Bauhaus.

At the time, oil and money flowed freely. Riding on a flourishing budget, the dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez (1953-1958) launched the country in a policy of major works, building bridges, highways, ministries, housing ... "

Regardless of the legitimate criticisms that can be made

" on human rights and democracy, "

Perez Jimenez was an excellent public works manager

," architect and Professor Oscar Rodriguez Barradas told AFP. “

There was also a nationalist dimension with 'We can do it'

”. The period also coincides "

with the arrival of European immigrants and a highly qualified workforce capable of carrying out the projects

", he underlines.

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Humboldt Hotel, head in the clouds

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To all lord, all honor: the

Humboldt hotel

, "

our Corcovado

" enthuses Mr. Rodriguez, dominates Caracas at 2,150 meters above sea level, on the ridge line of Avila, the massif separating Caracas from the sea.

It was built in 1956 for unmentionable reasons: Perez Jimenez wanted a cable car that could transport “

800 soldiers per hour

” from the port to the center in the event of disturbances, recalls Carlos Salas, the hotel manager.

It was then decided a "

space of relaxation

At the top to justify the cable car and the dictator commissioned a young, fashionable architect, Tomas Sanabria.

A pupil of the founder of the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius, at Harvard University, Sanabria succeeded in one of the most beautiful buildings of this style on the continent.

Even today, the hotel is only accessible by cable car or by a track reserved for 4X4.

From the city, only its tower is visible but on approach, it is its base that impresses with its clean lines and wave-like vaults.

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"

The hotel floats between the clouds

", sums up the manager.

The interior of the building, perfectly restored by the Venezuelan state after years of neglect, is composed of large luminous spaces that the clouds, pushed by strong winds, seem to cross.

Reopened to an upscale clientele, nearly 294 euros per night, the hotel hopes to become World Heritage in 2022.

The Simon Bolivar Center, built in 1954 by Cipriano Dominguez FEDERICO PARRA / AFP

Perez Jimenez's legacy can also be seen in the heart of the city with in particular the

Simon Bolivar Center

(1954): two twin towers and long ministerial buildings, signed by the Venezuelan architect Cipriano Dominguez and which bear witness to "a language à la

Le Corbusier

with aspirations that go beyond their function as “offices to channel downtown activity,” emphasizes Oscar Rodriguez.

With its immense car parks and "

cascade of stairs

", it was also the expression of the automobile civilization, then a sign of modernity and wealth.

Villa Planchart, a butterfly on the hill

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Venezuelan Armando Planchart is making his fortune with his American car dealerships sold to an emerging middle class.

His wife Anala convinced him to build a house on the heights of Caracas.

Subscribers to the prestigious Domus review by Italian designer and architect Gio Ponti, they decide to hire him: it will be the

Villa Planchart

, built in 1957.

The Plancharts give carte blanche to Ponti who designs the house of his dreams to create this “

butterfly on the hill

”, according to his expression.

Ponti had almost no limits as to the resources and wishes of the sponsors,

” underlines their niece Carolina Figueredo, who manages the Planchart foundation.

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Flooded with light by a patio and "

through

"

windows

, the house has almost no doors, but clear partitions between the spaces.

Ponti designed practically everything: hinges, door handles, crockery, lamps, chairs .... It is

“the total work” because in addition to architecture and design, he planned the placement of collections or works

”signed Calder, Leger, Buffet, Cabré or Reveron, explains Carolina.

Ponti positioned the windows that function as paintings to offer views of the Avila.

Only disagreement, the library where the owner wants to exhibit his African hunting trophies little appreciated by the designer.

Ponti solves the problem with a coquetry: a revolving wall worthy of a James Bond, which makes it possible to hide or exhibit the heads of buffaloes and antelopes!

Ponti was delighted with the result, but also with Caracas

” for which he designed a vast urban project that never saw the light of day, explains Carolina Figueredo.

Library of the Central University of Venezuela, Caracas Wikimedia / Wilfredor

The great Venezuelan architect of the time is undoubtedly Carlos Raul Villanueva, who excelled in the rare residential houses he designed, but above all as an architect of public buildings.

Its masterpiece remains the

Central University of Venezuela

(UCV).

It's a constructed utopia

,” says his daughter Paulina Villanueva, architect.

In total, around forty buildings, including a hospital, classrooms, conference rooms, libraries, plazas.

To walk there is a wonder with different buildings but which form a unit.

Indoor and outdoor spaces intermingle.

The covered passages, with roofs appearing suspended in the air, are one of the architect's findings.

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Karina Sainz Borgo's

daughter of the Spanish

, or the crazy shadows of Caracas

These are places of life and exchange, you walk around without ever losing contact with the outside, the air, the light,

” explains Paulina Villanueva.

My father thought that architecture was the construction of the place of human life.

The place is not imposed, but accompanies, stimulates,

”she explains.

A true “

conductor

”, Villanueva has incorporated works by renowned artists, Vasarely, Arp, Lam, Leger or Narvaez.

High point: the

Aula magna

, a vast auditorium adorned

with Alexander Calder's

Clouds

”.

But with the unparalleled economic crisis that has hit Venezuela since 2013, the university is deteriorating.

Holes in the walls and ceilings, damaged frescoes, broken windows, vegetation and water infiltration ... In 2020, a section of a covered passage collapsed.

We are talking about 25 years of abandonment.

It hurts !

Teachers don't earn $ 10 a month.

There are no bulbs, the students buy them and take them out when they leave so they won't be stolen,

”cries Paulina, sometimes with tears in her eyes, sometimes angry.

For my father the university was his second home, his most expensive work, he would not have understood its current state

,” she says.

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Figaro

travel guide

Like the UCV, many buildings from this golden era are in poor condition.

Others have been misled, like

L'Hélicoïde

(1958), a shopping center transformed into a prison, or quite simply razed, like the

Villa Diamantina in Ponti

.

It was a generation of architects, intellectuals who had a vision for the future,

” says Paulina Villanueva.

They thought this future was possible.

Unfortunately, it was not

”.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2021-11-07

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