Edificio Rockefeller
Map
Interactive map of the Edificio Rockefeller area
General information
StatusCompleted
Opening1932

Edificio Rockefeller (literally Rockefeller Building) is the popular name of a building in Madrid, Spain that is headquarters of Instituto Nacional de Física y Química (National Institute of Physics and Chemistry). Opened in 1932, Edificio Rockefeller is located within the central campus of the CSIC (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas),

According to architects Manuel Sánchez Arcas and Luis Lacasa, the building was named Edificio Rockefeller because the Rockefeller Foundation in the United States funded its construction and equipment. The architects were selected to bring to the building the new principles of rationalist functionalism. [1]

Edificio Rockefeller owes its historical reputation for the work performed there until the Spanish Civil War. Some of the most important physical and chemical scientists in Spanish history Blas Cabrera, Miguel A. Catalán and Enrique Moles, were part of this first Spanish school of physics and physical chemistry.

References

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  1. ^ Lafuente1, A and Saraiva, T. (2004). The Urban Scale of Science and the Enlargement of Madrid (1851-1936). Social Studies of Science, vol. 34(4): 531-569.

40°26′30″N 3°41′17″W / 40.4417°N 3.6881°W / 40.4417; -3.6881


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Nicolás Cabrera (physicist)

studies in the University of Madrid in 1935. He later worked at the Edificio Rockefeller in Madrid. He published his first paper on magnetism of rare-earth

Luis Lacasa

by the International Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation. Known as the "Fundación Rockefeller building", it was designed in 1927 and built

List of early skyscrapers

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Manuel Sánchez Arcas

in 1970. 1931 Hospital Provincial de Toledo, Toledo, Spain 1932 Edificio Rockefeller, Madrid, Spain (with Luis Lacasa) 1932 Central Térmica, Madrid, Spain

Radiocentro CMQ Building

La Rampa in El Vedado, Cuba. It was modeled after Raymond Hood's 1933 Rockefeller Center in New York City. With 1,650 seats, the theater first opened on

Art Deco

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York and Sawyer

(1927) Central Savings Bank Building (1928) 2100 Broadway, New York City Edificio First National Bank of Boston [es], (1928) built by Paul Chambers [es]