Puerta de Atocha (city gate)
Coordinates: 40°24′24″N 3°41′21″W / 40.40667°N 3.68917°W
The Puerta de Atocha was a gate in the city walls of Madrid (Walls of Philip IV). It owed its name to be located in the vicinity of the old hermitage, later Convento de Nuestra Señora de Atocha. It was demolished in 1850. Its location must exit to [1]
It was added as part of the Walls of Philip IV in 1748, substituting the previous .[2] The last gate that was finally demolished in the mid-19th century was built by Ventura Rodríguez in 1769 on a program to improve several of the gates of Madrid, which also were built or improved the gates of Puerta de Alcalá and , the latter two by Sabatini. However, as described the Diccionario geográfico-estadístico de España y Portugal of and in 1826, the gate did not deserve "nor by its matter nor by its form, be one of the main of Madrid and was calling for the construction of a more dignified of the place [sic] in which it is located."[1]
The gate was demolished in 1850 to begin works on the Atocha railway station[3] in 1992, was given to the station the name of Puerta de Atocha to the new terminal of Alta Velocidad Española in honor of the missing gate.
References[]
- ^ a b Sebastián De Miñano y Bedoya; Tomás López de Vargas Machuca (1826). "Madrid". Diccionario geográfico-estadístico de España y Portugal. Vol. 5 (first ed.). Madrid. p. 324.
- ^ "Murallas, Cercas y Puertas de Madrid". www.unaventanadesdemadrid.com. Retrieved 2016-09-01.
- ^ María Pilar González Yanci (1977). The rail access to Madrid. Its impact on the Urban Geography of the city. Biblioteca de Estudios Madrileños. Vol. XXI. Madrid: . p. 37. ISBN 840003690-5.
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- Neoclassical architecture in Spain
- Demolished buildings and structures in Madrid
- Infrastructure completed in 1769
- Former gates
- City gates in Spain
- Buildings and structures demolished in 1850