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Architect Drawings : A Selection of Sketches by World Famous Architects Through History

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Miralles, Enric (1955–2000)<br />

Preliminary plan sketch, 1992–1995, Mollet del Valles, Park and Civic Center,<br />

Barcelona, Spain, Graffiti and crayon on paper<br />

The Spanish architect Enric Miralles, in his short life, influenced the urban fabric <strong>of</strong> his home city,<br />

Barcelona. His architecture utilized a layered mosaic <strong>of</strong> materials to create playful façades.<br />

Miralles began his architectural career when he graduated from the Escuela Técnica Superior de<br />

Arquitectura de Barcelona. He first worked with the architects Helio Piñon and Alberto Viaplana<br />

(1973–1985), and opened a firm with Carme Pinós in 1984. In 1993, he joined with Benedetta<br />

Tagliabue to form the practice EMBT Arquitectes Associats SL. 21 Their urban spaces, Plaça dels Paisos<br />

Catalans and the Park in Besós in Barcelona, use color-ful active screens to enliven these public parks.<br />

Kinetic in nature, these sculptural constructions also act as shading devices for a perpetually sunny city.<br />

Other projects from the <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> Enric Miralles and Benedetta Tagliabue collaborative include: the<br />

Scottish Parliament Building on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh’s Old Town (1998); Construction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Reader’s Circle Headquarters in Madrid (1991); Utrecht Civic Center (1995); first prize for IUV<br />

Headquarters, Venice (1999); and the Mollet del Valles Park and Civic Center in Barcelona, Spain<br />

(2000). The Parliament Building grows out <strong>of</strong> the site resembling a collection <strong>of</strong> upturned boats and<br />

seashore imagery. The design employs a leaf theme (based on a flower motif <strong>by</strong> Charles Rennie<br />

Mackintosh) accented <strong>by</strong> a steel and glass ro<strong>of</strong> with laminated oak beams. Miralles was a visiting pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

at universities in the United States, Britain, Italy and Austria. He directed postgraduate studies at<br />

the Städelschule in Frankfurt, Harvard University, and the <strong>Architect</strong>ural University in Barcelona<br />

(Zabalbeascoa and Marcos, 1999).<br />

This is a sketch for the Mollet del Valles Park and Civic Center (Figure 8.18). Colorful and<br />

expressive, this image uses crayon to form crucial relationships between concepts or representational<br />

spaces. The sketch portrays primary colors as indicators. Bold patches <strong>of</strong> orange and yellow fill in<br />

circles on the left. Green and blue linear strokes extend upward and out to the right and left <strong>of</strong> the<br />

central forms. Seemingly random shapes in the form <strong>of</strong> lozenges and arcs work their way across the<br />

page to provide interludes between the areas <strong>of</strong> color. A very quick sketch, the vibrant strokes<br />

zigzag tightly to fill in shapes or loosely form the linear extensions. The poché spaces are conveyed<br />

with straight and parallel lines contrasted <strong>by</strong> the sparsely nervous lines that cover a larger area. This<br />

diagonal movement indicates the way the squiggled lines, not lifting the crayon <strong>of</strong>f the paper, ultimately<br />

create areas <strong>of</strong> potential form.<br />

The pressure on the sketching tool varies across the page; sometimes light, at other points strong and<br />

forceful. Appearing as plan or elevation relationships, the sketch reflects conceptual intentions. When<br />

Miralles and Tagliabue wrote about this project they were also describing the ephemeral and<br />

exploratory nature <strong>of</strong> the sketch. ‘The main interest <strong>of</strong> this project is, maybe, not directly in it, but in<br />

the “themes” it contains; the suspension <strong>of</strong> the building, <strong>of</strong> graffiti becoming architecture, <strong>of</strong> the colors<br />

<strong>of</strong> a painting becoming places, <strong>of</strong> the suspended spirit <strong>of</strong> the users, <strong>of</strong> unexpected connection. … We<br />

like to think that this project could be a project for the “near future,” being a more subtle conception<br />

<strong>of</strong> architecture. <strong>Architect</strong>ure <strong>of</strong> the future will be lighter, especially in its concept.’ The sketch helps to<br />

define the idea <strong>of</strong> the future project.<br />

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