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Local Government Cancels Inauguration of Grand Canal Bridge in Venice Made by Calatrava
The ceremony to inaugurate the Calatrava bridge made by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava was canceled by the local government after some sectors of society threatened to protest during the act. Photo: EFE / Andrea Merola.
VENICE.- Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava defended his bridge today from the critics. The bridge in Venice is a work that breaks with the architecture of the city being the first bridge constructed in 125 years. The bridge has been baptized as the Constitution Bridge. This is the fourth bridge that goes over the Grand Canal and while some approve of it others criticize it for its high cost. Those critics, headed by small political parties have made the local government make the decision not to officially inaugurate it on September 18.

The Grand Canal is the most important canal in Venice, Italy. It forms one of the major water-traffic corridors in the city. Public transport is provided by water buses and private water taxis, but many tourists visit it by gondola.

At one end the canal leads into the lagoon near Santa Lucia railway station and the other end leads into Saint Mark Basin: in between it makes a large S-shape through the central districts ("sestieri") of Venice. It is 3800 m long, 30-90 m wide, with an average depth of five meters.

The Grand Canal banks are lined with Amongst the many are the Palazzi Barbaro, Ca' Rezzonico, Ca' d'Oro, Palazzo Dario, Ca' Foscari, Palazzo Barbarigo and to Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, housing the Peggy Guggenheim Collection. The churches along the canal include the basilica of Santa Maria della Salute. Centuries-old tradition such as the Historical Regatta are perpetuated every year along the Canal.

Because most of the city's traffic goes along the Canal rather than across it, only one bridge crossed the canal until the 19th century, the Rialto Bridge. There are currently two more bridges, the Ponte degli Scalzi and the Ponte dell'Accademia. A fourth bridge designed by Santiago Calatrava is now finished, connecting the train station to the vehicle-open area of Piazzale Roma. As was usual in the past, people can still take a ferry ride across the canal at several points by standing up on the deck of a simple gondola called traghetto.

Santiago Calatrava Valls (born July 28, 1951) is an internationally recognized and award-winning Spanish architect, sculptor and structural engineer whose principal office is in Zurich, Switzerland. Classed now among the elite designers of the world, he has offices in Zurich, Paris, New York and elsewhere.

Calatrava was born in Benimámet, an old municipality now integrated as a urban part of Valencia, Spain, where he pursued undergraduate studies at the Architecture School and Arts and Crafts School. Following graduation in 1975, he enrolled in the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich, Switzerland for graduate work in civil engineering. In 1981, after completing his doctoral thesis, "On the Foldability of Space Frames", he started his architecture and engineering practice.

Calatrava's early career was dedicated largely to bridges and train stations, the designs for which elevated the status of civil engineering projects to new heights. His elegant and daring Montjuic Communications Tower in Barcelona, Spain (1991) in the heart of the 1992 Olympic site was a turning point in his career, leading to a wide range of commissions. The Quadracci Pavilion (2001) of the Milwaukee Art Museum was his first US building. Calatrava’s entry into high-rise design began with an innovative 54 storey high twisting tower, called Turning Torso (2005), located in Malmö, Sweden.

Calatrava is currently designing the future train station - World Trade Center Transportation Hub - at Ground Zero in New York City.

Calatrava’s style has been heralded as bridging the division between structural engineering and architecture. In this, he continues a tradition of Spanish modernist engineering that includes Félix Candela and Antonio Gaudí. Nonetheless, his style is very personal and derives from numerous studies he makes of the human body and the natural world.

Calatrava has received numerous recognitions. In 1990 he received the "Médaille d´Argent de la Recherche et de la Technique", Paris. In 1992 he received the prestigious Gold Medal from the Institution of Structural Engineers. In 1993, the Museum of Modern Art in New York held a major exhibition of his work called “Structure and Expression." In 1998 he was elected to become a member of "Les Arts et Lettres," in Paris. In 2004, he received the Gold Medal from the American Institute of Architects (AIA).

In 2005, Calatrava was awarded the Eugene McDermott Award by the Council for the Arts of MIT. The Award is among the most esteemed arts awards in the US.

One of his newest projects is a residential skyscraper named 80 South Street after its own address, composed of 10 townhouses in the shape of cubes stacked on top of one another. The townhouses move up a main beam and follow a ladder-like pattern, providing each townhouse with its own roof. The "townhouse in the sky" design has attracted a high profile clientele, willing to pay the hefty US$30 million for each cube. It is planned to be built in New York City's financial district facing the East River. As of 2008 this project had been canceled; the Manhattan real estate market had gone soft, and none of the ten multi-million dollar townhouses had been sold.

He has also designed the approved skyscraper, the Chicago Spire, in Chicago. Originally commissioned by Chicagoan Christopher Carley, Irish developer Garrett Kelleher purchased the building site for the project in July of 2006 when Carley's financing plans fell through. Construction of the building began in August 2007 for completion in 2011. When completed, the Chicago Spire, at 2,000 feet tall, will be the tallest building in North America.

Calatrava has also designed three bridges that will eventually span the Trinity River in Dallas. Construction of the first bridge, named after donor Margaret Hunt Hill, has been repeatedly delayed due to high costs, a fact that has sparked much controversy and criticism. If and when completed, Dallas will join the Dutch county of Haarlemmermeer in having three Calatrava bridges.

Calatrava's work in Bilbao has been criticized for impracticality. The airport lacks facilities and the bridge's glass tiles are prone to break and getting slippery under the local weather. In 2007, Calatrava sued Bilbao for allowing Arata Isozaki to remove a bar from the bridge to connect it to the Isozaki Atea towers. The judge ruled against Calatrava saying that, although the building design is protected by intellectual rights laws, public concerns prevail over intellectual property.

Calatrava gifted the Municipality of Venice with the project of a new bridge on the "Canal Grande" in 1996. As of 2007, the project is still under construction and it has gone though numerous structural changes because of the mechanical instability of the structure and the excessive weight of the bridge, which would cause the bank of the canal to fail. In 10 years the project has been inspected by more than 8 different consultants and the cost has raised up to three times the original expectations; however the work has not been finished yet.

The trainstation Gare do Oriente in Lisbon is known for being very uncomfortable, especially with wind and rainy weather.




Last Week News

September 2, 2008

Albertina Gathers 150 Works Made by van Gogh for its Heartfelt Lines Exhibition

Victoria & Albert Museum Buys Rolling Stones Logo for 50,000 Pounds

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Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art Opens Exhibition by Eric Bainbridge

ShContemporary - The Asian Art Fair Returns to the Shanghai Exhibition Center this September

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Last Days to See From the New Yorker to Shrek: The Art of William Steig

Mike Nelson in x-rummet at Statens Museum for Kunst

Olivier Foulon: The Soliloquy of the Broom at the Kolnischer Kunstverein

Pop Art and After: Prints and Popular Culture Opens at Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum

Call for Entries for UK's Largest Arts Prize - The Art Fund Prize for Museums and Galleries 2009

Beijing Olympics Winning New York Artists Unveil 32 Foot Waterfront Sculpture

Salvatore Ferragamo Celebrates Peggy Guggenheim in Venice

The International Survey of Library & Museum Digitization Projects Presents Data from More Than 100 Library and Museums

Quilt Stories: The Ella King Torrey Collection on View at Philadelphia Museum of Art

Vessel Forms from the South Carolina State Art Collection

Masterpieces on Show at Grafton Regional Gallery

September 1, 2008

Carte Blanche III: Brigitte and Arend Oetker at Museum of Contemporary Art in Leipzig

Devi Art Foundation Opens New Exhibition Space in India

Pavel Schmidt Exhibition at Jean Tinguely Museum in Switzerland

Gallery of Gohlis Castle in Leipzig Opens Harmony of Contrasts Exhibition

Essex Gains Two Important Artworks with the Help of Art Charity

Second Lives: Remixing The Ordinary To Inaugurate Museum of Arts & Design's New Home

Pinewood Photo Exhibition Captures Film History in the Making

The 1930s: The Making of "The New Man" : Less than 10 Days to See this Exceptional Historical Exhibition

V & A Museum Announces Hats: An Anthology by Stephen Jones

Mike Daisy: If You See Something Say Something at MCA Chicago

Real Life: Ron Mueck and Guy Ben-Ner at National Gallery of Canada

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Reserves Tuesdays for School Tours

Guggenheim Foundation Receives $1 Million Chairman's Special Award From NEH

Karen Moss Named Deputy Director for Exhibitions and Programs Sarah Bancroft Joins the Museum as Curator

Groundbreaking Artist Research Program Launches at Arizona State University

Delaware Art Museum Presents 2008 Fall Fundraiser

Museums in Berlin Remain Open Until Late

Summer School: Selections from the Archives of American Art

August 31, 2008

Film Society of Lincoln Center Presents Cinematic Atlas: The Triumphs of Charlton Heston

Shelters for Studies in the Koli Landscape at Alvar Aalto Museum

Bellevue Arts Museum Presents John Grade: Disintegration, Sculpture Through Landscape

Wanted: Skyladders, Call for public involvement as Liverpool Biennial commissions Yoko Ono

The Art Fund Helps Leicester Buy Artwork Satirising a British Asian Woman's Life

The Herbert in Coventry will Open an Exhibition Celebrating 30th Anniversary of Video Art Show

Absolut Launches First Phase of Anticipated Helmut Lang Collaboration

The Yellow Art House Announces the New Canvas Clamp for Artists

AMAM Exhibits French Protest Posters from May 1968

MoMA Presents Independent Films by Chris Smith that Examine Aspects of the American Dream

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía Buys Sculpture Made by Jean Tinguely

An Elegant Salon of European Paintings at St. John's Mitchell Gallery

New Photographic Book, 'One of Us,' by Chris Usher, Documents the Ongoing Impact of Hurricane Katrina

Smithsonian's Archives of American Art Acquires Collection of Jack Mitchell Vintage Photographs

Photographer Snaps Up Sasol New Signatures Competition First Prize

The Freer Gallery of Art Presents the 16th Bill and Mary Meyer Concert Series

IU Jacobs School Announces Architects for New $44 million Building

MOCA Continues to Spotlight its Permanent Collection with a Survey of California Conceptual Art

August 30, 2008

Modern Art. Modern Lives. Then + Now Opens Today at The Austin Museum of Art

Hood Presents First Comprehensive Display of European Art at Dartmouth

Photographs by André Kertész On View at the Portland Museum of Art

Mystic Masque: Semblance and Reality in Georges Rouault, 1871-1958 Opens Today

Out of Albion: British Art from the Allen Memorial Art Museum

The Morris Museum of Art Reinstalls Robert Rauschenberg's August Allegory (Anagrams)

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts To Spotlight "The County Election"

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"Global Suburbia: Meditations on the World of 'Burbs" Opens Today

The Schirn Presents a Retrospective of Painter Peter Doig

Alice Neel - Drawing from Life Opens at Moore College of Art & Design

August 29, 2008

NGS and The National Gallery, London, Join to Secure Future of Old Master Collection

Statuephilia - Contemporary Sculptors at the British Museum

The Lost Buddhas - Chinese Buddhist Sculpture From Qingzhou Opens

Aargauer Kunsthaus Presents Today Mark Wallinger Exhibition

Arthur Szyk: Drawing Against National Socialism and Terror Opens at Deutsches Historisches Museum

Meijer Gardens Announces Largest Exhibition By Jaume Plensa

Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology Acquires Exceptional Indian Textile

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"Shifting Perspectives: Esteban Pastorino Díaz" Opens in Boston

The Krannert Art Museum Presents The Rise of Abstraction in Post-War Japan: Sosaku Hanga Woodblock Prints

The Akron Art Museum Presents John Heartfield vs. Nazi Germany

The RISD Museum of Art Presents After You're Gone, an Installation by Beth Lipman

Antonio Saura Art Work Given to His Foundation

Art Exhibit That Provides Eighth Avenue's Daily Dose of Color Extended Through October

The Moore Space To Close After Eight Years

August 28, 2008

Large Statue of Marcus Aurelius Uncovered in Ancient Turkish City of Sagalassos

Smithsonian American Art Museum Presents Exhibition of Works by O'Keeffe and Adams

The Art Fund Helps Buy Hodgkin Masterpiece for Bath

Davis Museum Releases Statement on Missing Fernand Leger Painting

Portrait of Sir Donald Bradman AC Gifted to the National Portrait Gallery Collection

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The Manifest Hope Gallery Celebrates the Obama Campaign in Denver

New Exhibition Draws From Eclectic Mix of Art Works Bought Online

Painting of George III has Returned to the Refurbished Herbert Art Gallery

MCA Denver Presents Public Art Installation Project For The Democratic National Convention

The Making of a President a New Display Now Open in the Museum at the Kennedy Presidential Library

New Egyptian Gallery at the British Museum to Open in Winter

Eleanor Antin: Historical Takes at San Diego Museum of Art

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5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD

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