home
subscribe
free e-newsletter free e-newsletter
reader service
widget
advertise
Subscribe to Architectural Record today
and save 60% off the newsstand price.
comment

Making Waves

Month day, year

A bold urban strategy transforms a worn beachfront into a vivid curvilinear “plaza” on Spain’s Costa Blanca.

By Linda C. Lentz

Sou Fujimoto Architects’ Tokyo Apartment
WAM Architecten’s hotel in Zaandam, the Netherlands
VitraHaus, designed by Herzog & de Meuron
Photos © Aleix Bagué 
Click here to view images.
Rate this project:
Based on what you have seen and read about this project, how would you grade it? Use the stars below to indicate your assessment, five stars being the highest rating.
----- Advertising -----

When Carlos Ferrater, principal of Office of Architecture in Barcelona (OAB), won the competition to upgrade the mile-long Poniente Beachfront of Benidorm — a sliver of a city dubbed the “Manhattan of Spain” for its concentration of high-rise buildings along the Mediterranean — he and his associate, Xavier Martí Galí, who are the project’s design architects, referenced the landscape and wavy patterning of Roberto Burle Marx’s Copacabana promenade, as well as the work of Antonio Gaudí, to devise an engaging intervention. The resulting esplanade is now the central public meeting place of this thriving tourist city.

Completed in 2009, the architects’ solution is a sinuous structure comprising a sculptural concrete shell and brilliantly color-coded, landscaped tile paths punctuated by stairways and ramps that provide universal access to the town and beach. A slender “boardwalk” winds around the base for strolling, bicycling, and jogging.

A visual and functional tour de force, OAB’s new Benidorm promenade is so successful, says architect and team member Borja Ferrater, that the “City Hall has commissioned us to extend it for about 500 more meters [1,600 feet].” More important, he notes, “Everybody likes it. Not only the architects, but the people who go there.”

 Reader Comments:

Sign in to Comment

To write a comment about this story, please sign in. If this is your first time commenting on this site, you will be required to fill out a brief registration form. Your public username will be the beginning of the email address that you enter into the form (everything before the @ symbol). Other than that, none of the information that you enter will be publically displayed.

We welcome comments from all points of view. Off-topic or abusive comments, however, will be removed at the editors’ discretion.

----- Advertising -----
View all Record Blogs
View all
Reader Feedback
Most Commented Most Recommended
Rankings reflect comments made in the past 14 days
Rankings reflect comments made in the past 14 days
View all forum discusions