Calle Michelena
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The Calle Michelena is a street in
Pontevedra Pontevedra (, ) is a city in the autonomous community of Galicia (Spain), Galicia, in northwestern Spain. It is the capital of both the ''Pontevedra (comarca), Comarca'' and Province of Pontevedra, and the capital of the Rías Baixas. It is als ...
(
Spain Spain, or the Kingdom of Spain, is a country in Southern Europe, Southern and Western Europe with territories in North Africa. Featuring the Punta de Tarifa, southernmost point of continental Europe, it is the largest country in Southern Eur ...
) located in the
city centre A city centre, also known as an urban core, is the Commerce, commercial, Culture, cultural and often the historical, Politics, political, and geographic heart of a city. The term "city centre" is primarily used in British English, and closely e ...
, on the edge of the
old town In a city or town, the old town is its historic or original core. Although the city is usually larger in its present form, many cities have redesignated this part of the city to commemorate its origins. In some cases, newer developments on t ...
. It is one of the main streets of Pontevedra and one of the most commercial streets of the city.


Origin of the name

Since 1858, the street has been dedicated to José María de Michelena, who was appointed Civil Governor of Pontevedra and President of the Provincial Council of Pontevedra on 11 November 1851 and who left his post on 6 May 1853. His great initiatives and activity, as well as his excellent conditions as governor, earned him a street in the city. He was responsible for the design of the access to the Church of St. Francis with its iron balustrade and flowerbed in the square in front of the church.


History

The present Michelena Street was a narrow path outside the perimeter of the walls of Pontevedra, with a beaten earth floor where water accumulated, known as Poza das Rans. In 1852, the walls of Pontevedra began to be demolished through the Trabancas gate, between the present-day Herrería and Peregrina squares, which allowed the opening in 1854 of this street that followed the perimeter of the demolished walls in its southern part. Part of the building land was made available to the inhabitants of the city. In 1858, the municipality of Pontevedra decided to give the street the name of José María de Michelena. In 1864, work was completed on the street, giving it a similar appearance to the one it has today. Shops such as the ''Hermanos Guiard'' photographers' shop were set up in the street from 1867 onwards. In the 1860s, the lawyer, politician and businessman Francisco Antonio Riestra Vallaure bought several plots of land in the street, where he had fourteen buildings constructed, including the mansion at number 30. In 1872, Michelena Street was one of the first in the city to have pavements. On 25 July 1888, Michelena Street became the first street in Galicia (along with the neighbouring Oliva Street) to have public lighting, thanks to the installation of electric arcs and
incandescent lamps An incandescent light bulb, also known as an incandescent lamp or incandescent light globe, is an electric light that produces illumination by Joule heating a filament until it glows. The filament is enclosed in a glass bulb that is either ...
. This first Galician electricity network was the work of the Marquis of Riestra, who built the first electricity factory in the northwest of the
Iberian Peninsula The Iberian Peninsula ( ), also known as Iberia, is a peninsula in south-western Europe. Mostly separated from the rest of the European landmass by the Pyrenees, it includes the territories of peninsular Spain and Continental Portugal, comprisin ...
in the Plaza de la Verdura and who in 1887 obtained a patent for a process of adjusting the
dynamo "Dynamo Electric Machine" (end view, partly section, ) A dynamo is an electrical generator that creates direct current using a commutator. Dynamos employed electromagnets for self-starting by using residual magnetic field left in the iron cores ...
s. At the beginning of the 20th century, Michelena Street was already one of the most important streets in the city. On 1 November 1900, construction work began on the new Bank of Spain building at number 28. The building was designed by the architect José Fermín de Astiz Bárcena and was opened in 1903. In 1913, the Ravachol parrot, which had been living since 1891 in Don Perfecto Feijoo's pharmacy, in a house that no longer exists at the eastern end of the street, at the corner of the Peregrina square, died. From the end of 1924 to 1943, the street became one of the main locations for the city's electric tramway, which was later replaced by the trolleybus service and car traffic. On 9 March 1981, the emblematic Michelena bookshop opened its doors at number 22, a reference point in Galicia for its extensive collection of up to 70,000 volumes. It closed its doors on 30 June 2010 due to the economic crisis that hit Spain between 2008 and 2014. In 1985, the street was still one of the main traffic points in the city and had several lanes. In August 2001, the street was closed to car traffic and became pedestrianised.


Description

It is a cobbled street that follows the line of the old medieval wall in the heart of the
city centre A city centre, also known as an urban core, is the Commerce, commercial, Culture, cultural and often the historical, Politics, political, and geographic heart of a city. The term "city centre" is primarily used in British English, and closely e ...
, relatively straight and mostly flat with a length of about 250 metres. Its average width is 10 to 11 metres. This is a central pedestrian street on the edge of the historic centre, linking the plaza de España to the plaza de la Peregrina. Three pedestrian streets converge along it, from west to east: Marquesa, General Gutiérrez Mellado and Fernández Villaverde. Michelena Street is one of the main streets of the city and one of its nerve centres, where official institutions such as the City Hall building or the building of the provincial branches of Spain's peripheral administration, as well as numerous national and international shops and franchises, can be found.


Outstanding buildings

The beginning of the street coincides with the Peregrina square and at the corner between the square and Michelena street was the building of the apothecary Perfecto Feijoo's pharmacy where the Ravachol parrot died in 1913 and where today there is a sculpture of the parrot made by the sculptor José Luis Penado in 2006. At number 28 of the street is the Bank of Spain building. Its construction began in 1900 and it was inaugurated in 1903. It is an example of the administrative architecture of the Spanish state at the beginning of the 20th century, in an eclectic style. Its main entrance is on Michelena Street and it has a backyard with an entrance on Fernández Villaverde Street. The building's facades are symmetrical and solemn. The main door on Michelena Street ends in a semicircular arch with an upper stone balcony on
corbel In architecture, a corbel is a structural piece of stone, wood or metal keyed into and projecting from a wall to carry a wikt:superincumbent, bearing weight, a type of bracket (architecture), bracket. A corbel is a solid piece of material in t ...
s. The stone elements that frame and decorate the windows of the façades have geometric decoration in the upper part, which ends in
segmental arch A segmental arch is a type of arch with a circular arc of less than 180 degrees. It is sometimes also called a scheme arch. The segmental arch is one of the strongest arches because it is able to resist Arch#Basic concepts, thrust. To prevent fai ...
es. At number 30 of the street is the Marquis of Riestra's mansion, built at the end of the 19th century, where the Marquis of Riestra established his residence and the headquarters of his Riestra Bank. It is an
eclectic Eclectic may refer to: Music * ''Eclectic'' (Eric Johnson and Mike Stern album), 2014 * ''Eclectic'' (Big Country album), 1996 * Eclectic Method, name of an audio-visual remix act * Eclecticism in music, the conscious use of styles alien to th ...
building with
art nouveau Art Nouveau ( ; ; ), Jugendstil and Sezessionstil in German, is an international style of art, architecture, and applied art, especially the decorative arts. It was often inspired by natural forms such as the sinuous curves of plants and ...
elements. Its façade has galleries,
horseshoe arch The horseshoe arch (; ), also called the Moorish arch and the keyhole arch, is a type of arch in which the circular curve is continued below the horizontal line of its diameter, so that the opening at the bottom of the arch is narrower than the ar ...
es and decorative frames. The windows and the carriage entrance on the ground floor are framed by semicircular arches. The ground floor is surrounded by a granite plinth. The buildings at numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 10, 24, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 date from the 19th century. Number 2 dates from 1853 and was the house of Manuel Portela Valladares. Number 4 dates from 1878 and number 24 was the house of the politician Alejandro Mon. At number 20 of the street, the restaurant-tapería La Muralla has incorporated a section of the medieval walls in the basement, which has become an additional element of the interior decoration.


Gallery

File:Pontevedra capital Calle Michelena.jpg, Section of the street near the Peregrina square File:Pontevedra-Desierta y lloviendo1 (6615695789).jpg, Section of the street near the Plaza de España File:Casa del Marqués de Riestra - Pontevedra Capital.jpg, Marquis of Riestra's mansion at number 30 File:Pontevedra Capital - Banco de España Imagen general de la fachada.jpg, Bank of Spain building at number 28 File:Librería Michelena.jpg, Former Michelena bookshop at number 22


References


See also


Bibliography

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Related articles

* Ensanche-City Centre * Plaza de la Peregrina * Plaza de España * Mansion of the Marquis of Riestra * Bank of the Spain Building


External links


Michelena Street
{{DEFAULTSORT:Calle Michelena Streets in Pontevedra Pedestrian streets in Spain