Castle of Matrera explained

Castle of Matrera
Native Name:Castillo de Matrera
Native Language:Spanish
Coordinates:36.8073°N -5.5656°W
Location:Villamartín, Spain
Built:9th century
Designation1:Spain
Designation1 Offname:Castillo de Matrera
Designation1 Type:Non-movable
Designation1 Criteria:Monument
Designation1 Date:1985
Designation1 Number:(R.I.) – 51 – 0008200 – 00000

Castle of Matrera (Spanish; Castilian: link=no|Castillo de Matrera or Torre Matrera) is a medieval castle at Villamartín near Prado del Rey in Spain dating back to the 9th century. It was declared a national monument in 1949[1] and an example of Bien de Interés Cultural ("Heritage of Cultural Interest") in 1985.[2] The structure underwent a controversial restoration in 2015.

History

It was built in the ninth century by Omar ibn Hafsún to defend Iptuci, the most advanced city of the Cora de Ronda. However, Mount Pajarete was a place of human settlement since Antiquity.

In the 13th century, it was conquered by Ferdinand III, who rebuilt it. Nevertheless, at the beginning of the XIV century, it returned to Muslim hands before being definitively reconquered by Alfonso XI in 1341. However, being located in the middle of the Moorish Border, it was besieged by the Muslims of Granada in 1408 and in 1445.

Renovation

By 2010, only a few walls of the castle remained standing, and the ruins were further damaged by rain in 2013. A restoration project was launched in 2010, led by the architect Carlos Quevado, and completed in 2015. Parts of the tower were rebuilt with lime plaster similar to samples found on the site, with large, plain blocks defining the original shape of the castle. Quevado described his aim as being not only to protect the ruin, but to "recover the volume, texture, and tonality that the tower would originally have had", and to differentiate new additions from the original structure.[3]

The renovation received negative reactions from some locals, with Spain's cultural heritage organization Hispania nostra calling the project "absolutely terrible".[4] [5] It was praised by the architectural community, and was nominated for the 2016 Architizer A+ Award, in the Architecture Preservation category, winning the public choice vote.[6] [7] The Guardian described the design as neo-brutalist, and praised it for restoring "the clout its Moorish creators originally intended".[3]

Conservation

In 2013, a large part of the tower collapsed due to the scarce work of repairing the structural problems detected decades ago.[8]

The subsequent work of preservation in 2016 with the authorization of the Junta de Andalucía was very controversial, receiving both criticism[9] and a nomination to the New York A + Architizer awards,[10] which ultimately ended up winning in the "Preservation" category.[11]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Castillos de España en CastillosNet. Juan. García. dead. https://archive.today/20120630001704/http://www.castillosnet.org/programs/castillosnet.php?tip=inf&dat=cadiz/CA-CAS-170. 30 June 2012. dmy-all.
  2. Web site: La última bóveda del castillo medieval de Villamartín se derrumba. El País. 16 April 2013.
  3. Web site: Spain's concrete castle: a case of accidental genius? . The Guardian . 10 March 2016 . 21 October 2016 . Wainwright, Oliver.
  4. Web site: Jones. Sam. 'What the hell have they done?' Spanish castle restoration mocked. The Guardian. 20 March 2016.
  5. Web site: Krishna. Rachael. This Is A Perfect Example of How Not To Restore An Old Castle. buzzfeed.com. Buzzfeed. 20 March 2016.
  6. Web site: Carquero Arquitectura restores ancient Matrera Castle. 3 October 2016.
  7. Web site: 2016 Winners – Architizer A+ Awards. 10 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161121190906/http://awards.architizer.com/2016-winners/?type=51#. 21 November 2016. dead. dmy-all.
  8. Web site: El emblema de Villamartín se derrumba. Diario de. Jerez.
  9. Web site: Polémica por la restauración del Castillo de Matrera en Cádiz. 11 March 2016. El País.
  10. Web site: La restauración del castillo de Matrera, finalista en unos premios de arquitectura. Efe.. Cádiz. heraldo.es.
  11. Web site: La polémica restauración del castillo de Matrera gana el premio de arquitectura Architizer. 20Minutos.