Observations on Monterrey
Transcription
Observations on Monterrey
26 / 0 / 2 0 0 1 ( l i t S 2 BY Observations STEPHEN on FOX Monterrey * street in Borne Anhquo. A$ A FIRST-TIME architectural tourist, I had been warned that Monterrey was architecturally uninteresting. Nut I found it fascinating. Judgment depends on expectation, II Guanajuato or S.m Miguel de Allende is your idea of Mexico, then Monterrey will disappoint. With the Above: Gram Picric looking toward the Foio del Comercio, Ihe Metropolitan Cathedral of Our Lady of Monterrey, and ihe t exception ol the small Barrio Anriguo, wedged between the Macropla/a, the Palo (io Municipal Avenida Constitucion expressway, and the Lall: T h i H views ol l l n Gran Plum Ojos de Santa l.ueia, Monterrey lacks the narrow streets bordered by high-walled casas-patio that define traditional Mexican urban spaces. Kven the westward extension of downtown, the Zona Centro, toward the Cerro del Obispado, initially laid out in the early nineteenth century, has wide, straight streets lined by buildings thai differ in height, mass, and site coverage. Central Monterrey is not a U.S.-style city (as some have characterized it); its mixture of buildings and uses is typical of older Mexican city centers. But Monterrey is largely a 20th-century city, with diverse building types and varied urban spates. It is not disappointing, hut like Houston, it is not a city of consistent urban spaces or unified architecture. THE MACROPLAZA You see this lack of consistency even in the central city. Since the l'->K<k the Barrio Anriguo (historically called the Barrio de la Catcdral) has been isolated from the Zona Ccntro to the west by the Ciran Plaza, or Macropla/.a, as it is popularly known. The Macropla/.a is lined with assertive modern buildings of the mid-1980s that house cultural institutions and governmental agencies. The eight-btock plaza terminates in front of the I'alacio de Gobiemo del Estado, the state capitol of Nucvo Leon, an imposing neoclassical building completed in 1905. Behind it rises the slender Art Deco tower of the Palacio Federal (I9.U)). At the opposite end of the Macropla/.a, at its southern foot, is the Palacio Municipal of 197T, Monterrey's city hall. Ihe Palacio Municipal faces what had been the Plaza Zaragoza, Monterrey's original phtza de iirtius before it was stretched northward to become the \S.K ropla/a. The scale of the Macroplaza is not what I had expected, because it is basically a seven-block extension of the oneblock wide Plaza Zaragoza, it is less of a departure from the small scale of historic Monterrey than photographs suggest, l i k e most of the center of Monterrey, it shows evidence of intensive use. In terms of design, the Macropla/a is low-key, especially in contrast to the flamboyant, gestural designs of the State ( migiesMun.il Offic< Building, the region al headquarters of the I N I O N A V I T social housing agency, and the Municipal Theater lall three by Oscar Bullies Valero and Benjamin Felix of Monterrey), the Central Public library (by Jose Angel Camargo de 1 Ifjar ol Monterrey), and the State Supreme Court Building (by Rodolfo Barragan of Monterrey), which line the run-up to the Esplanade ol 1 Eeroes in front of the Palacio de (iobierno. en* 5 21 2 0 0 1 27 I f 0 / / I GMIIWIK lioni top led Gmn Hotel Amira (19171 hnliguo Ptilocio Munkipol (now Mmeo dc HKm™de Hutvo L»n ISIS. 1853.1887) BoncD Meiconlil (1901, Allied Gil«] In Rpinrta 11901 AHied Gil«) Undominio Acera Monlirtey 11919 Roman Lnmodiidl alorvgade ihp Antigua Poloda Municipal Edificio Monterrey (1960. Ritatda Guajntdo and Aimondo Raviie Rodriguez! Aveoida Morelos, one block north of tity. The building is formally austere, con- Purisima in collaboration with Armando the Plaza ! lidalgo, used to cross the structionally specific, and meticulously Ravize Rodriguez. The church's parabolic offshoot from the mid-1990s: the Paseo Macroplaza block. Now the seven blocks detailed to serve the purposes for which it vaults are thick folded plates ot rem dc Santa Lucia by R T K I . of Dallas. The of Morelos to the west of the Macroplaza was built. forced concrete supported1 by a series ol The Macropla/.a's amiability contrasts with a more obviousl) designed paseo begins al the Plaza de 4(H) Alios, are a pedestrian mall. Architectural coun- one level below the street. This large terparts of the Ciran I Intel Ancira — the Ccntro especially attracted my attention: ing, artfully tapered, stone-faced bell sunken pla/.a incorporates the ojos, the stone-built, classically detailed Banco what was originally the Ldificio lower displays modernistic touches. springs ot Santa Lucia, and is the nioiui- Mercanril (1901) and La Reinera depart- Financiers Nuevo Leon ( 1970). This nme- mental forecourt to the Museo de la ment store (19011, both designed by story building, located in a low-rise sector i s m is s t r i k i n g , as is t h e j o ) Historia Mexicans (1996). Another work Alfred Giles of San Antonio — are the • a d i e / m i . i < eul t o . is the u i n k . il i h e w o r k i n g with ordinary materials. The of Oscar Bulnes Valero, this time in col- most venerable landmarks along the dean ot Monlerre\ architects, Lduardo walls filling the concrete frame are laboration with the veteran Mexico ( tt\ Morelos in.ill. Padilla Martinez Negretc. Its north-facing made of rubble stone and evoke tradi- glass curtain wall is set back behind a tional masonry w o r k . The pews were architect Augusto H. Alvarez, the histor\ Next to La Reinera is a building that One other modern tower in the Zona parabolic concrete arches. The free-stand- I >r la Mora's detei mined regional In- t o o k in museum is boldly scaled but less exagger- impressed me very much: the Hdificio delicate exo-skeletal grid ot reinforced made from the roof beams of the ated in its composition than the public Monterrey (19f>0), a M-story office concrete. Because the cxnskclcton is so church that previously occupied the buildings of the 1980s. It also appears to tower by Ricardo Ciuajardo and the engi- articulately proportioned, the tapered site, grounding La Purisima's modernity have had the advantage of a much higher neer Armando Ravize Rodriguez. Like concrete columns and slender beams in the history of the parish. The almost construction budget. The Paseo de Santa other Monterrey skyscrapers ol the 1450s achieve a fine balance between tectonics rustic ambiance of the interior is rigor- Lucia is pleasant, but its suburban timi- and '60s, the Ldificio Monterrey has a and decoration. The exposed structure is ous and austere, but leavened by such dity, historically thettied picturcsuucncss, small Moorplate. Il ills tightly on its site, restrained rather than melodramatic, and details as the golden onyx panels set in and general lack of pedestrians seem a half block framed by two side streets the problem ot blind party walls was the concrete frame beneath the entry more characteristic of North American that have been turned over to pedestrians. addressed with wit, flair, and precision. arch. The critical regionalist attitude public spaces than Mexican ones. The ground floor is two stones high, with The contrast of the glass curtain wall and implicit in the church reminded me of two more stories of flush-glazed lease the blind end walls of glazed green brick O'Ncil l o r d and Arch Swank's Little THE ZONA CENTRO spaces atop. An intermediate floor with a contributes to the modernist tradition Chapel in the Woods (1939) in Downtown in the Zona Ccntro, the street terrace is recessed, and the remaining ten lliat I was beginning to interpret as Denton, Texas. and block pattern dales from the I Nth floors rise in a concrete-framed tower, emblematic of Monterrey. century, but the buildings are largely from which contains <. leai plate-glass window the 20th. The Plaza Hidalgo, which abuts walls set within bay-sized sunscreens on AUSTERITY AND RESTRAINT known private university, Monterrey lee: the 19th-century Anriguo Palacto the front (south) face and blind east and Well 10 the wesi ol the Zona Centra lies the Institufo Tccnologico y de I'studios Municipal (the old city ball, now the wesl sides surfaced with orange-red what was once Monterrey's most famous Supcriorcs de Monterrey. "The buildings Nuevo Leon I listorical Museum), is sur- Roman brick with raked joints. The building, ihc Basilica de la Purisima of that de la Mora designed (again with rounded by multi-story buildings, man) building is precisely scaled. 1 he ground 1946, the first modern church building in Armando Ravize) were completed in l l M~. De la Mora's work again reminded me of Lord ar the campus ol Monterrey's best- of them hotels, including Monterrey's floor feels monumental at street level, yet Mexico. It was the first work ot architec- and their virtues — their conscientious most famous, the Ciran Hotel Ancira the building doesn't disrupt the fabric ol ture in Monterrey Hi be published in the dedication to constructional and spatial (1912), a wishful transposition of the the Avenida Morelos. international architectural press. economy, and their willingness not to be Parisian Belle Lpouue to the skirts ol the Sierra Madrc. The Ldilicio Monterrey neatly sums up the city's modern architectural iden- The Mexico City architect l.nriuuc tie la Mora y Palomar designed La "interesting" —evoke Lord's early buildings at Trinity University in San Antonio, xt Gymnasium, Institute teinologiio y de Etludios Superiorn de Monterrey 1196S, Ricardo- Guajarda). rated township ol San Pedro Garza building demonstrates I.egorreta's skill at Garcia. Since the I9~(ls. San Pedro has shaping architecture that, unlike the been where almost everything of conse- restrained, austere modernism of quence has happened in metropolitan Monterrey, responds emotionally to its Monterrey. It is the middle-class capital setting (in this case, a plain with the ot Monterrey and, as Juan Ignacio Sierra Madre as a backdrop). In a similar Barragan has demonstrated, it is a model vein, l.egorreta incorporated circular lor communities that Mexico's middle geometry in plan and a sweeping diago- class longs to construct: governed by nal in section in the 1994 Bihlioteca responsive public officials, with well- Magna of the Universidad Autonoma de planned, well-maintained public infra- Nuevo Leon, Monterrey's major public structure and very few residents who university. And in a private office com- aren't affluent. On the surface, San Pedro pound in San Pedro, diagonally sloped can seem very North American. Drive walls laced with yellow stucco gesture your SUV to a restaurant and you could insistently toward the Sierra Madre. be in north Dallas, except that all the people are speaking Spanish. A t M o n t e r r e y 'lee the four-story e.lsiK accessible: M A I U O, the Mliseo de classroom buildings, called aulas, are mented San Pedro's transformation from Arte Contemporaneo de Monterrey simple slabs lined up in rows along a rural township to metropolitan suburb. (1991). Commissioned by liugenio Garza wide, tree-shaded promenade that frames The process began in I 945, when Alberto l.aguera, who was then head ot the distant views of Monterrey's natural Santos platted its first elite neighborhood. Grupo Tinanciero Bancomer and the signum urbis, Saddle Mountain, the M- the Colonia del Valle. In I 9 4 " , Santos Tomento T.conomico Mexicano, as well peaked Cerro de la Silla. The south end built the first vehicular bridge over rhe as chairman of the board of trustees of of the promenade terminates alongside a Rio Santa Catarina, linking his new sub- Montcrrev Tec, the museum was built to classic example til Monterrey mod- division with the west end of Monterrey, contain a yet-to-be-assembled collection ernism, the university's gymnasium of where such elite neighborhoods as the o! modern Latin American art, as well as |9f,S hy Kic.trdo Guaiardo, who began Colonia Obispado had been developed in traveling exhibitions. The M A R l l l occu- Monterrey Tec's school of architecture, the 1920s and '30s. The Colonia del Valle pies an entire block front facing the lee's buildings, I thought, were even set the standard for larer development in Macropla/a, next to the Metropolitan more characteristic of Monterrey than La Viu Pedro, and by the end of the 1950s, Cathedral ol Our I acly ol Monterrey and Purisima. Unpretentious, solidly built, the suburb's demographics began to across from the Palacio Municipal. It is conservatively finished and detailed, with attract country clubs and private schools contained on the outside, but complexly wide, slacked, open air patios, they com- from Monterrey proper. sculpted inside, with sectional surprises, bined constructional integrity with spatial flexibility and generosity. Tec's original architecture is disarmTop and above: Eiterinr and interior view! ol the Basiliia de la PuriumrJ (194br Enrique de la Mora and Armando Roviie Rodriguez). Juan Ignacio Barragan has docu- I egorreta's most restrained public building in Monterrey is also the most Despite the oscillations of Mexico's unexpected switchbacks and twists in cir- economy between the 1970s and 1990s, culation, and a sequence ol courtyards San Pedro systematically displaced Mon- that brings daylight and views our into ing! v modest and straightforward, espe- terrey as the center for corporate head- the galleries. Legorreta's exterior compo- cially when contrasted with that of the quarters and I I I M I U retail stores. Montci sition is powerful and directed. Bur Qudad Universitaria, the National rev Tec's new graduate school of business, MARCO's interior does not seem rigor- University ol Mexico, built outside the EGADE, is nearing completion in Valle iiusK connected to its program. Instead, Mexico City between 1950 and 1952 Oricntc, a large, master-planned, mixed 11 semis indulgent - as a sliowplace ol Mexican modernity. usr development n< ar San Pedro's bordi i formal sobriety of Monterrey-style mod- (De la Mora, like most ut the other with Monterrey, rather than adjacent to ernism was meant to guard against. important Mexico City architects, con- the Tec campus, which is surrounded by tributed to if.I Monterrey's entrepreneur- mixed urban neighborhoods. ial elite founded lee; its sohi r, solid fust what the stem ARCHITECTS: IN AND OUT OF TOWN Such well-known Mexican architects as buildings reflect what they understood ARCHITECTURE OF EMOTION l.egorreta and de la Mora were the excep- to be their mythic virtues. The EGADE is the work ol Mexico's tions in Monterrey, not the rule. Although most internationally celebrated architec- one might expect the city's corporations SAN PEDRO GARZA GARCIA ture firm, l.egorreta Arqiutccios of and institutions to commission major Monterrey Tec is located on the south Mexico City. Since the earl) |9S(K, buildings from Mexico's leading architects side of the Rio Santa Catarina, an inter- Ricardo l.egorreta has designed one (which is to say, Mexico City's leading mittently dry river lined with high-speed, minor ami one major office building in archilectsl, litis has not been the case. limited-access mads that splits Monterrey San Pedro, two important institutional Most ut Monterrey's public institutions into northern and southern halves. The buildings in Monterrey, and several and many ol its corporate undertakings Santa I atarina also divides the west end houses in San Pedro. arc' the work ol Monterrey architects. of Monterrey from its southwestern suburban neighbor, the separately incorpo- I.egorreta's TCADI is dramatic: a spiral that encircles a stmii lower. The Tduardo Padilla Martinez. Negrete made his mark on Monterrey with large f I I "I 2 0 0 t \ I a ! ! 29 Entrance lobby ol Ihe Muteo de Arte Contempordneo de Monterrey ( 1 9 4 1 . Legorrela Arquktecfoi). industrial complexes that he began to Angelica, north of the Colonia del Valle, design for major corporate groups in the demonstrates Pena's ability to project a 1950s. In the 19KOs, the flamboyant modernist identity that incorporates the Oscar Bullies Valero and his Grupo KM street wall, entrance gate, and Street de Diseno dominated institutional archi- facing garage door. tecture. Hulnes's signature work is Tec's ture produced in Monterrey in the last Production of 1988, which sits (although half of the 1990s lias come from the for- "sits" is surely too static a verb) next to mer hushand-and-wife team of Cecilia the Kecton'a at the front of the main Rangel and lames Maycux. Cecilia campus. During the twentieth century, the *&#". | The most singular domestic architec- Center for Advanced Technology in Range] is a native of Monterrey; James Maycux is from the United States. The out-of-town architects active in Monter- t w o met in the mid-'80s at the University rey were most likely to be Texans. Out- of Texas at Austin, where both had dill Rowlett Scott designed the American returned to school as mature adults to School Foundation of Monterrey in San study architecture. The house Rangel and Pedro (1958), 3/D International was the Maycux built for their extended family in architect of the Grupo Industrial ALFA's Colonia Olinala, on the side of the Sierra Aerial view of Voile Oriente in San Pedro Gnrra Garcia wirh the low-rise building in the /on.) Cenrro Madre Oriental overlooking San Pedro, EGADE ( 2 0 0 1 , legoirera Arquitertoil in lower right cornet. (1981), the last major corporate office demonstrates their distinctive approach: building constructed in the center of building lightly but articulately in the Monterrey. AI FA gave up the building landscape. Their house rules above its during the economically turbulent '80s steeply sloping site on thin steel columns. but kept the company's suburban head- IK-iks link the street to the upper floor, a quarters in San Pedro, designed by 11HK u-u- slab on which a glass-walled, Skidmore, Owings &; Merrill of Chicago. curved-roofed pavilion looks out over the ALFA was not alone. In the '70s and Santa Catarina valley. ISelou this, and set '80s, many industrial groups built low- ,u a riglu angle in it, is a second houst. rise headquarters complexes in secure, occupied by Rangel's daughter and her park-like settings in San Pedro. family. Wedged into the hillside anil open to intensively planted natural terraces, the HOUSES IN THE SUBURBS house feels light, spontaneous, and Domestic architecture provides many improvised. The upper deck seems to more opportunities for Monterrey archi- hover in space, while the bottom nestles tects than is the case in Houston. Rodrigo into the mountain. de la Pens, a graduate of the Architectural Association in London, designs houses Center lor Advanced Technology in Prodmlion, ITESM (1988, Onor Bulnes Vnlero and Giupo 103 Diseho). Armando V. Flores Sala/ar, who teaches at the Universidad Autonoma de that are purposefully Mexican and mod- Nuevo Leon, has focused his research on ern, in contrast to the highly visible pref- tin cultural idctitin <>l northeastern erence in San Pedro for the sort of mon- Mexico. Although he is the architect of ster "traditional" houses being built in the Palacio Municipal of San Pedro affluent Texan suburbs. De la Pena's Garza Garcia. I lores b u s in the Colonia houses are planar constructions of Obispado in Monterrey in a handsome, masonry walls, faced wirh white stucco planar-fronted, flat-roofed, white stucco- and penetrated by large glass openings faced modern house that he designed. I le but configured around patios and walled cleverly juxtaposed the void of a street- off from the street, even when they are lacing carport with the roofless void ol a free-standing houses. A one-story house walled front patio to spatially enliven the in an established neighborhood on Via house's planar composition. In the more 30 f a I I \ 1 a o i | C . « S 2 , . •MT'i*- American School, San Pedro (195B, Coudill Rowlell Scull). -..•**>' Housing, Apodacc. Valle Oncnip, San Pcdio Gona Caruo. The tallest building i i the l o n e Dolollui ( 7 0 0 0 , Agiiilin landn). urbanized neighborhood thai the Colonia quiet street. Here again, not so much in ogy and historic preservation m Monter- Obispado became after its fall from grace the design ol the house as in the deter- rey: the transformation of historic indus- in the 1960s, T'lorcs Salazar's modern minedly informal design of outdoor trial buildings into museums. The Cerve- Fundidora, skyscrapers, not smokestacks, house stands out by virtue ol us serenity space, one senses a strong parallel to ceria Cuauhtemoc (189H), a brick-faced are the prime architectural symbol of and composure. Eduardo Padilla Martinez Negrete A century after the beginnings of Cerveceria Cuauhtemoc and the O'Neil l o r d , especially Ford's family's Victorian Romanesque-style brewery, was Monterrey's entrepreneurial ambitions. house, Willow Way, in San Antonio. designed by the St, Louis architect Ernest The two tallest have been built in San ( . [anssen and constructed b) the Mofl I'edro by International Investments, the Pedro called El Cielo (1988). Although THE NORTHERN SUBURBS terrey builder Jose Maria Siller. The consortium that developed Valle Orienre: free-standing, El Cielo's high stucco walls Ricardo Padilla continues to receive the brewery was the mother industry of Jorge Loyzaga's 29-story Torre ( omercial are built to the curb and lot lines. Inside kinds of commissions on which his Monterrey. In 1909, it prompted the America (1995) and Agustin Landa's 43- ihis enclosure, the house is shaped in plan lather's practice was built; large industrial founding of the Vidriera Monterrey, a story Torre Dataflux (2000). Neither like an irregular cross, with open-air complexes located on expansive tracts in glass company that produced beer bottles building possesses the tectonic rigor of patios at the corners of the enclosure. Apodaca, San Nicolas de los Car/a, and and eventually became Vitro SA. the Zona Centro's much shorter sky- The patios differ in size and character, other industrial suburban cities that ring Likewise, in 19.if> the brewery spawned scrapers ot the '50s and 'fills. Hut the The focus of the house is a split-level liv- Monterrey to the north. These articulately Empaques de Carton Titan, which pro- Torre Datatlux stands out nonetheless. Its ing room beneath a skylight; the room's organized, concisely designed complexes duced cardboard boxes for the brewery composition of white concrete piers that low windows offer views of the most tend to be big in scale and precise m their and eventually became the Crupo slope inward near the top to frame pro- serene patio on one side, and the narrow- spatial layout — unlike the working-class Industrial A L I A . Since 1978, the brewery jecting bays of dark-glazed office and est and least vegetated pario on another. communities that surround them. has housed the Museo de Motuerrery, the apartment floors is so sculptural that the city's lirst major art museum. Torre Dataflux looks like it's a hundred designed and lives in a house in San El Cielo's walls, patios, and openness not State-subsidized residential neigh- The I'undidora de 1 ierro y Acero de stories tall. to the landscape but to the sky bespeak borhoods, featuring identical one-story, the engagement of Monterrey's nmsi single-family housing units about the size thoughtful architects with the concept of of mobile homes, ride the rolling terrain America, began operation in 190.1 and cultural identity in the 1970s and 'KOs. of Apodaca. These are built amidst the did not cease production until 1995. In From the winding mountain roads of Although a modern house. El Cielo's more typical landscape of popular con- 19Sfi the state of Nuevo Leon and the Oliuala to the narrow gridded streets o) introversion and purposeful rusticity struction and the fluid mixture of uses federal Department of Urban Develop- the Barrio Antiguo, from Ricardo evoke rural |ahsco, where Eduardo that give Apodaca and San Nicolas their ment and Ecology formed a public-private Legorreta to Alfred Cilcs, Monterrey pre- I'adillo grew up. Its iconography is per- sprawling intensity. One comes to realize partnership to transform the bankrupt sents a range of landscapes and architec- sonal: a relief over the front door cele- that this dense, low-rise landscape of foundry into an arts, trade, and conven- tural works that are varied, stimulating, brates don Eduardo's grandchildren, houses and s m a l l M alt commercial estab tion center called the Parquc I'undidora. and provocative. Lacking the glamour, lishments, interspersed with gated indus- The site is extraordinary: 2H5 acres son and occasional collaborator, seriously trial enclaves, is much more characteris- in the center of the city, three kilometers Mexico City, or Guadalajara's sense of pursued questions of cultural identity in tic of the suburbs of metropolitan east of the Zona Centro. To date, the cultural superiority, Monterrey continues (he 1990s. Near his lather's house, Monterrey than the affluent sprawl of brewery's historic metal and brick build- to search for an identity. Perhaps it is this Padilla designed a house for one of his San Pedro. Ricardo Padilla, Eduardo Padilla s brothers. This house is modern yet also Monterrey, the first steel foundry in Latin IN SEARCH OF IDENTITY sophistication, and star-making power of ings have been reused as the Centro de sense <>t questioning, doubt, even inferior- las Artes de Nuevo Leon, with sections ity, as much as proximity, that allies Monterrey to the cities of Texas. Like rusiic, although in this case street walls SMOKESTACKS AND SKYSCRAPERS devoted to painting and sculpture, pho- are dispensed with and the house sepa Art exhibition is connected to the two tography, film, and the Museo de la I louston, Dallas, Fori Worth, and even rates the rear garden from the narrow. most notable works of industrial archeol- Industria y Tecnologia. San Antonio, Monterrey combines - • • ' ;3fc> GAIM* Rongel-Moyeui House, Colonio Olinolo, Son Pedro Gorio Gordo IRongel-Moyeui Arquilerioi). Home in Colonio Obiipodo Gnl»ok induUiinl tomplei. npodor.0 [Hiiocdo Podillo), (Aimondo V. Floics Solninr). entrepreneurial energy and cultural ambi- Special thanks to Arq. J nan tion with an uncertain architectural Barragin Vttlarreal, Arq. Ignacio j& Anayantzin course, veering between excessive regard C.otitreras Chio, Arq. Armando for external opinions and externa! reputa- Salazar, Arq. Ricardo tions and a defensive parochialism. Silverio Sierra yy V. Flores I'adilla, and Arq. Velasco. The efforts of the 1980s and '90s to retrieve and rehabilitate the old city's major historical and industrial landmarks, and to construct institutions ot high culture that signify that Monterrey's elite is as serious about art as it is about business, suggest a broader sense of civic awareness and responsibility. These efforts were reinforced by the prodigious activities of Juan Ignacio Barragan and Ins associates at the Urbis Internacional research center, as well as A r m a n d o I'lores Salazar, Ricardo Padilla, and others at the Universidad Autononia de Nuevo I,con, w h o documented the history of Monterrey's architecture and urban development. N o w debates about development, historic preservation, and new architecture can be more securely anchored in a historical context. Monterrey's architecture of the 1990s lacks the precision of its best architecture of the 1950s and '60s. Kut it does not lack a desire to explore new approaches or reformulate and re I me exist Snurti v Barngan Vfllaireal, Juan Ignacio. < intermex International Business Center, Monterrey: Urbis lnuTM.knni.il. 1991, Barragdn VUhurcal, Juan Ignacio. San Pedro (,.li^.l ( I j r u i : I'.irluil'.hlitll rltiiljtljll.1 y JfSJniltii :*&<- tirbano, Monterrey; UrbisInternacional,2000 ••" miJ revised edition; first published in l<,yn > . •> Gtnesii tie tin numiripio de vanguardia: Sent Pedro tiurzj Garcia). Barragdji Villarreal. bi.m [^H.ILIO, wnli l uKi'ne Towle, Manuel ' ampoa Spoor; and Jori Manuel Agudo. < "•» ."">< de vivitnda m Mexico: bistoria de Li vhnenda en una Optica eeonantiea v social. Monterrey: Urbis liKernflcionsJ, 1994, H.irr.in.in Vill.irn-jl, Juan Ignacio, and I nrique It. Di.i/ Hi.i/. Annuit'iin* •.!•.I Non'-ac. Sprnal issue uf rVr NomUde Mexio: numiVrs HI-12, IW2. Barragan Vill.ure.,1, ]u.ui Ignacio, and Enrique It. Diaz Diaz, Monterrey v MIS jln-di'doif, ijiiia nr l>t>. rurismo. Momerreyi I irhis InrernacionaJ, 1991. I lores Salazar, Armando V. Arquicuhurai modato para el estudio de la arauitet tttra < onto ctdtutu. Monterrey: Universidad Autonoma dc Nuevo I eon, 2001, Flores salazar, Armando V. Calicanto: marcos ad wr.ilt'i rri L arauitectura Regiotnontanat sigtoi \ V .1/ \ V Mniilt 111 \: I'll fcrsij.ii I Allium un.1 dr Muo'ii Leon, 1998, Martin,'/ < 1.117,1. tKtar KJu.irdo. 1 natcnlm out el Barrio Antigua 1A1 Monterrey Monterrey: Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo I eon y R. Ayuntaraictno dc l.i Ciudad dk Monterrey, i'"" 1 J the same reasons as its Texan counterparts: the e n o r m o u s potential it possesses and the possibility that this potential may yet \ leld works of genius. • hmiuLitioii of t . - Podillo Home, Son Pedro Gone Gorao (Riioido Podillo). mg positions. Monterrey is fascinating lor Stephen Vox is a fellow of the i Anchorage Texas. Metropolitan Monterrey. - - » • * — ' « — - — * T J J » | — -