Use this link to cite:
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/14372 El vacío como elemento ordenador del espacio construido en las Universidades Laborales: la plaza o patio central y losotros patios
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Identifiers
Publication date
Authors
Robles Cardona, Miguel Ángel
Advisors
Other responsabilities
Journal Title
Bibliographic citation
Boletín Académico, 2014, 4: 23-32. ISNN 2173-6723
Type of academic work
Academic degree
Abstract
[Resumen] Las Universidades Laborales nacen con el objetivo de formar a las nuevas generaciones
de trabajadores para el desarrollo industrial que se iniciaba en España en los años
cincuenta. Llegarían a ser veintiún centros repartidos por todo el país, promovidos
por el Estado y diseñados por arquitectos elegidos entre las fi guras de máximo prestigio
nacional del momento, abarcando su construcción desde 1945 hasta 1976. En
el conjunto de proyectos, el vacío destaca por su valor estructurante, bien a modo de
plaza o patio de bordes defi nidos, de explanada o patio abierto o semiabierto, o de
intersticios que relacionan unos edifi cios con otros.
[Abstract] Labour Universities were born with the aim of educating and preparing new generations of workers for the industrial development that began in Spain in the fi fties. Th ey would become a group of twenty-one Centers located all over the country, promoted by the Government and designed by architects chosen among the most prestigious national fi gures of the time, spreading their construction from 1945 through 1976. In all the projects, the empty space stands out for its structuring value either as a square or courtyard of defi ned edges, or as an esplanade or as an open or half-open courtyard, or as interstices that relate some buildings to each other.
[Abstract] Labour Universities were born with the aim of educating and preparing new generations of workers for the industrial development that began in Spain in the fi fties. Th ey would become a group of twenty-one Centers located all over the country, promoted by the Government and designed by architects chosen among the most prestigious national fi gures of the time, spreading their construction from 1945 through 1976. In all the projects, the empty space stands out for its structuring value either as a square or courtyard of defi ned edges, or as an esplanade or as an open or half-open courtyard, or as interstices that relate some buildings to each other.

