Kasa de la Muntanya

Kasa de la Muntanya is a squatted former Guardia Civil (Civil Guard) barracks in Barcelona. It was built in 1909 by Eusebi Güell, abandoned by the police in 1983 and occupied in 1989. It became central to the squatter movement in Barcelona as a self-managed social centre. The Güell family undertook a long legal battle to regain ownership of the building and then started negotiations with the city council about its use. The council announced in 2019 a plan to buy the building and turn it into social housing.

Kasa de la Muntanya
2006
General information
AddressAvinguda Santuari Sant Josep de la Muntanya, 31
Town or cityBarcelona
Coordinates
Completed1909
Opened1989 (squatted)
OwnerGüell family
Technical details
Size745m²

History

In 1909, rich industrialist Eusebi Güell built a police station in the La Salut district of Gràcia in Barcelona and handed it over to the Guardia Civil (Civil Guard), with an agreement that the building would revert to the ownership of the Güell family when the state stopped using it. The barracks were required since there were at the time many violent confrontations between trade unions and business owners in Barcelona.[1] The 745m² building became derelict in 1983, when the Guardia Civil left after an attack by the Catalan nationalist group Terra Lliure.[2][3] The Güell family attempted to reclaim the building but the Ministry of the Interior took over ownership then passed it on to the Ministry of Finance.[2]

Occupation

The building was squatted in November 1989 and given the name Kasa de la Muntanya.[2] The name literally means "House of the Mountains" in Catalan with a "K" being used instead of the usual "C" in Casa, because squatters reclaimed the use of the letter "K" (seldom used in Spanish and Catalan) to signify their difference from mass society.[4] The occupation of Kasa de la Muntanya heralded the heyday of squatting in Gràcia in the early 1990s.[5] It became a well-known anarchist, anti-fascist and anti-capitalist self-managed social centre which hosts events such as talks, cafes, benefits, conferences and festivals.[1][2] The daily newspaper La Vanguardia described it in 2017 as "el emblema del movimiento okupa en Barcelona" ("an emblem of the squatter movement in Barcelona").[6]

The Güell family continued to press for the return of the building after the Guardia Civil officially relinquished it in 1992. The Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Madrid (Superior Court of Justice of Madrid) rejected the case, stating that the heirs were the heirs of the heirs and therefore had no right to the building. The family appealed to the highest court in the land, the Tribunal Supremo (Supreme Court), which sent the case back to the Tribunal Superior, where the family finally won the right to possession in 2007.[6] The result was an impasse, with the squatters remaining in the building whilst the Güell family negotiated with the city council, which informed them that it was listed and not zoned for living.[6]

A serious eviction attempt occurred in 2001, when the nearby Kan Ñoqui was evicted and the Policía Nacional (National Police Corps) seized the opportunity to evict Kasa de la Muntanya as well. During the two days of rioting which followed the eviction, the building was re-occupied and a man lost an eye to a rubber bullet fired by the police.[7] After eleven years of legal battles the Spanish justice system refused the man any compensation for his loss and in 2013 he took his case to the European Court of Human Rights.[8] The following year, the use of rubber bullets in Catalonia was banned.[9]

The collective of Kasa de la Muntanya announced in 2013 that they had disassembled a sophisticated spy camera which had been recording everyone who entered and left the squat. The camera had first been installed on the roof of the Turó del Cargol school and then moved to the roof of Hospital de l’Esperança.[10] In December 2014, the Mossos d'Esquadra (Catalonian police) raided Kasa de la Muntanya and other spaces in Barcelona looking for evidence of an alleged anarchist terror plot. None of the twenty people were in the house were arrested, although books, mobile telephones and computers were seized.[11] The Audiencia Nacional (National Court) later threw out all charges related to the alleged plot in 2017.[12]

The city council announced in 2019 that it had set aside 1,774,000 euros in order to buy the building from the Güell family. The plan was to construct 12 social housing apartments and the squatters said they supported social housing.[13]

References

  1. Valsells 2019.
  2. EFE 2014a.
  3. Merino 2019.
  4. Fuentes 2017.
  5. Debelle 2014.
  6. Staff writer 2017.
  7. Katzeff 2012.
  8. Farré 2013.
  9. Baqué 2014.
  10. Borràs 2013.
  11. EFE 2014b.
  12. Altimira 2017.
  13. Staff writer 2019.

Bibliography

  • Altimira, Oriol Solé (30 May 2017). "La Audiencia Nacional tumba por segunda vez la investigación de los Mossos contra colectivos anarquistas". El Diario (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  • Debelle, Galvão; Cattaneo, Claudio; González, Robert; Barranco, Oriol; Llobet, Marta (2018). "Squatting Cycles in Barcelona: Identities, Repression and the Controversy of Institutionalisation". The Urban Politics of Squatters' Movements: 51–73. doi:10.1057/978-1-349-95314-1_3. ISBN 978-1-349-95313-4.
  • Fuentes, Juan Francisco (2017). "Usos ideológicos de la letra "K" en la España contemporánea: sobre el cambiante significado de un símbolo". Ariadna histórica. Lenguajes, conceptos, metáforas. (in Spanish). 6: 9–27. ISSN 2255-0968.
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