La Pagoda

La Pagoda, officially known as Laboratorios Jorba, was a building in Madrid designed by Spanish architect Miguel Fisac. It was located near the Avenida de América and served as the headquarters of Laboratorios Jorba, a pharmaceutical company.[1] The popular name of the building refers to the visible structure's resemblance to a pagoda, with each floor rotated 45º from the lower one and joined with a hyperboloid ruled surface.[2] It was controversially demolished in 1999, despite being widely recognised as one of the city's architectural icons.[3]

Laboratorios Jorba
La Pagoda
c. 1970
General information
LocationMadrid, Spain
CountrySpain
Construction started1965
Completed1967
Demolished1999
ClientLaboratorios JORBA
Design and construction
ArchitectMiguel Fisac

References

  1. Miguel Fisac, (1969), Laboratorios Jorba, Nueva forma : arquitectura, urbanismo, diseño, ambiente, arte, ISSN 0029-5825, Nº 41, 1969 , pág. 58
  2. Diego Peris Sánchez, 2015, Miguel Fisac: Arquitecturas para la investigación y la industria, Madrid, Bubok. ISBN eBook en PDF: 978-84-686-6189-6. ISBN Libro en papel:978-84-686-6188-9
  3. Ricardo Aroca, (1999), Una muerte sin anunciar. Crónica de la destrucción de los laboratorios Jorba, Arquitectura Viva, Madrid, nº 67, pág. 112

Further reading

  • Balters, Sofia (3 September 2011). "AD Classics: The Pagoda / Miguel Fisac". ArchDaily. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  • Copertone, Carlos; Eguiluz, Patxi (2015). "The Short Life and Long History of The Pagoda". MAS Context. 25–26.


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