In Search of Lost Architecture: The Indoor Swimming Pool of Marbella, Spain, by Paolo Portoghesi and Vittorio Gigliotti.
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Bartolomei, C.
Ippolito, A.
Tanoue Vizioli, S. H.
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Springer Nature
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Abstract
Between 1971 and 1972 an indoor swimming pool was designed and built
in the municipality of Marbella as a service for a hotel. The project was carried out
in Italy by the architect Paolo Portoghesi and the engineer Vittorio Gigliotti. In order
to obtain the necessary permits, the plans had to be signed by architects who had a
Spanish degree or who had homologated the one obtained in another country. For
this reason, Alberto Balbontín de Orta and Antonio Delgado Roig were involved and
directed the works. In 1997, for reasons of maintenance and speculation with the site,
the building was demolished. This research highlights the value of the disappeared
building and underlines the influences that were taken as a reference for its design.
The rich culture of its designers, Portoghesi and Gigliotti, is demonstrated in this
example of post-modern architecture in which the links with memory and nature
stand out.
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