Alberto Palacio

Alberto de Palacio y Elissague (1856-1939) was a Spanish engineer and architect born in Sare (Northern Basque Country) and grown up in Gordexola.[1]

Monument to Palacio in front of his Transporter Bridge
Atocha station, Madrid

He studied architecture in Barcelona and completed his education in Paris, studying mathematics, engineering, astronomy and medicine.[2] He was also a student & disciple of Gustave Eiffel.

Works

Bridge of Biscay, the first transporter bridge

Between 1890 and 1893,[2] he worked, together with his brother Silvestre de Palacio (engineer), on his most important project, the transporter bridge ("Puente Colgante") on the Nervion river, between Portugalete and Getxo (Biscay), for which he gained international recognition. It was the first bridge of this kind ever built.

All his work is characterized for the search of the functionality and the innovation, where iron and glass play a noticeable role.[2] He passed long seasons of work in Madrid[2] where he:

  • Participated in the construction of the Palace of Velázquez in the Retiro Park, together with architect Ricardo Velázquez Bosco, coordinator of the project, and the ceramicist Daniel Zuloaga (1881 and 1883).[2]
  • Participated in the construction of the Crystal Palace (inspired by the London one) in the same park, again with architect Ricardo Velázquez Bosco, coordinator of the project, and ceramicist Daniel Zuloaga (1887).[2]
  • Designed and built the new Madrid Atocha railway station, in collaboration with the engineer Saint-James (1889-1892).[2]
  • Built the Osram factory (1914–1916).[2]
gollark: Intel doesn't make server GPUs yet.
gollark: The ESP32 microcontrollery thing comes on many different actual boards.
gollark: That's one of the existent ones I'm aware of, and it has WiFi, so sure?
gollark: Unless you mean the actual processor chip, no, what you probably want is a microcontroller thing.
gollark: ESPsomething microcontroller boards?

References

  1. Alberto de Palacio y Elissague Archived 2012-08-01 at Archive.today, March 27, 2010 (Spanish)
  2. Madrid Histórico:Palaccio Elissague, Alberto del, retrieved April 22, 2012 (Spanish)



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.