Estación Mapocho

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Estación Mapocho
Disused train station
Centro Cultural Estación Mapocho.jpg
The facade of the Centro Cultural Estación Mapocho in 2006
Location Santiago, Chile
History
Opened 1913
Closed 1987
Rebuilt 1994 (as cultural centre)

Estación Mapocho is a former train station that since 1994 has been refitted as a cultural centre that hosts many kinds of events.[1]

The train station

The design and construction of the station began in 1905 at the hands of Emilio Jecquier, a Chilean architect based in France. The 280 metre long, 17 metre high structure was composed of a base of masonry and a steel vault covered in glass (now copper). The steel structure was constructed by the Belgian company Haine Saint Pierre. The official inauguration of the station took place on May 12, 1912, and the station opened to the public in 1913.

In many ways, Estación Mapocho is an relic of a significant period in Chilean history when the country was going through major economic and social changes, as well as celebrating its first centenary. The station was one of several civil works commissioned to celebrate the first centenary of Chilean independence, along with the park of Santa Lucía Hill, the Chilean High Court of Justice, and the Chilean National Museum of Fine Arts.[2] The building is located at the intersection of two streets, Presidente Balmaceda and Bandera, on the south bank of the Mapocho River close to the Mercado Central de Santiago. Puente Cal y Canto metro station is beneath the "Plaza de la Cultura", or Culture Square, in front of the station.

For many years, Estación Mapocho was Santiago’s main rail hub serving Valparaíso, Argentina and northern Chile, which at the time was the centre of Chile’s niter or saltpeter boom.

In recognition of its imposing architecture and its sentimental and historic value, the building was declared a National Monument by law in 1976.

In 1986, the station was temporarily closed for remodeling and rail traffic was diverted to Alameda Station, causing great inconvenience to commuters coming from Valparaíso and reducing passenger numbers on the line. The same year, the Queronque rail accident left 58 death and caused the Santiago-Valparaíso railroad to close. In 1987, the Empresa de Ferrocariles del Estado (Chile’s State Railroad Company or EFE) stopped the remodeling works and Estación Mapocho was decommissioned. The serious structural decay and lack of use caused the station to be abandoned.[3] Since demolition of a national monument is expressly forbidden by law, Empresa de los Ferrocarriles del Estado sold the building to CORFO, Chile’s economic growth agency, in 1988.

Estacion Mapocho Cultural Centre

In 1991, a non profit private organization called "Corporación Cultural de la Estación Mapocho" (Estación Mapocho Cultural Corporation) to oversee the redevelopment and management of the building. Sponsored by the "Colegio de Arquitectos" (Architects’ Association), the city of Santiago invited tenders from private organisations to refurbish the building. It was one of the first instances of a private organization managing a public building in Chile, and one of the first cultural projects carried out after Chile’s transition to democracy.

Architects Montserrat Palmer, Teodoro Fernández, Ramón López and Rodrigo Pérez de Arce were appointed to carry out the remodeling work. Their proposal involved remodeling the 10,000 square metre space with minimal alteration or disruption, preserving the original work of architect wherever possible. The project cost an estimated $10 million US dollars.

The restoration work was completed by the beginning of 1994, and the new Estación Mapocho Cultural Centre was inaugurated in March 3, 1994.

File:Estación Mapocho por el Pintor Amaltés..jpg
Estación Mapocho by Chilean painter David Amaltés.

Today, the centre is a heritage site dedicated to the promotion of culture in Chile. The building serves as venue for cultural events such as art exhibitions, musical performances and conventions. The Santiago International Book Fair is held there every year in late spring.[4]

During the nineteenth century, Estación Mapocho was an obligatory stop for international travellers, who went from Santiago to Valparaíso by train, and from there, by ocean, to rest of the world.

The centre’s success in promoting and preserving the heritage of Chile was recognised when it won the City Heritage Award in 2005, its 100th anniversary as a building and 15th anniversary as a cultural centre.[5] It also received the Reina Sofía International Award for Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage in 2008.[6][7] and in 2005, when

See also

References

  1. Estación Mapocho History (es) Centro Cultural Estación Mapocho 2014, retrieved on December 28, 2014
  2. Las fiestas del centenario en 1910 Memoria Chilena - Algunos derechos reservados - 2014 retrieved on December 27, 2014
  3. La remodelación de la ex estación de ferrocarriles (es) http://www.sustentabit.cl/ September 2007, retrieved on December 28, 2014
  4. Santiago International Book Fair (FILSA) camaradellibro.cl 2014, retrieved on December 28, 2014
  5. Estación Mapocho History estacionmapocho.cl 2014, retrieved on December 28, 2014
  6. Corporación Estación Mapocho fue galardonada con el Premio "Reina Sofía" cooperativa.cl EFE February 4, 2009, retrieved on December 28, 2014
  7. El Centro Cultural Mapocho de Sntiago de Chile y el Museo del Carnaval de Montevideo, premios Reina Sofía de Conservación y Restauración del Patrimonio Cultural Gobierno de España, Madrid, April 24, 2009

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