Women and the Making of the University of Alicante Campus: Critical Reappraisals of Modern Architecture (1982–1999)

  • Gutiérrez-Mozo M
  • Parra-Martínez J
  • Gilsanz-Díaz A
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Abstract

A stroll around the University of Alicante campus is like a journey through the history of Spanish architecture of the last 40 years, as many of its buildings exemplify the best production of the period. This legacy also tells a story about the role played by female architects within the profession. In fact, a gender reading reveals that only two women, Pilar Vázquez Carrasco, the architect of the Faculty of Sciences (FS, 1982) and the Social Club I (1987), and Dolores Alonso Vera, responsible for the Higher Polytechnic School IV (HPS, 1999), have designed structures on the campus over almost four decades and out of a total of more than 50 buildings. The FS is an example of structural sincerity whose brick and concrete materials and externalisation of services provide Brutalist echoes. The HPS IV is a design exercise consisting of a series of elegant, inviting volumes and open spaces intertwined with the campus garden. This essay focuses on the comparative analysis of these two award-winning works to unveil those contributions that female authorship has brought to their solutions by relating them to comparable buildings in space, time and type, but designed by male architects.

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APA

Gutiérrez-Mozo, M.-E., Parra-Martínez, J., & Gilsanz-Díaz, A. (2020). Women and the Making of the University of Alicante Campus: Critical Reappraisals of Modern Architecture (1982–1999). Arts, 9(2), 57. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts9020057

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