Planning Death. Designs by the Architect José Mancera for Cemeteries in the Province of Badajoz

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24197/bsaaa.87.2021.257-279

Keywords:

National Institute of Colonisation, Spanish architecture, modern architecture, funerary architecture, cemeteries, José Mancera, Extremadura, Badajoz

Abstract

The National Institute of Colonisation generated an intense constructive activity in Spanish rural environment. These new villages have been quite studied, but not so their funerary architecture. Architect José Mancera Martínez (1929-2003) worked at the Institute. He designed ten cemeteries for these villages in Badajoz between 1963 and 1970. Five received burials and the other half did not, being currently in ruins. Working on a similar program allowed him to research geometry and develop organic, octagonal, or hexagonal plants. His contribution to Spanish funerary architecture stands out for the diversity of layouts and symmetry as a compositional element.

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Published

2021-11-21

Issue

Section

ARTICLES

How to Cite

Planning Death. Designs by the Architect José Mancera for Cemeteries in the Province of Badajoz. (2021). BSAA Arte, 87, 257-279. https://doi.org/10.24197/bsaaa.87.2021.257-279