Tomás_Carrasquilla_Library_Park

La Quintana

La Quintana

Library park in Medellín, Colombia


La Quintana, also known as the Parque Biblioteca Tomás Carrasquilla (Tomás Carasquilla Library Park), is a culturally significant library park in Medellin, Colombia. The library was designed by Ricardo La Rotta Caballero and named after Colombian writer Tomás Carrasquilla.[2] The building is 14,800 square feet and includes reading rooms, ludotecas (educational play spaces for children), computers with internet, and terraced architecture with views overlooking Medellin. It is located in the Aures neighborhood in the northwestern quarter of the city.[3]

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History

It opened in 2007 and was one of five libraries constructed as part of cultural redevelopment efforts in the city targeted to serve underprivileged communities.[4]

Design

Interior view of ibrary

The library was purposefully located on the basin of La Quintana creek in order to create a central cultural zone that united the surrounding neighborhoods that were naturally separated by La Quintana.[1] The park space was designed as a "public road" that connects with the roads to the different neighborhoods in the area. The library design consists of two giant blocks. The lower block houses the book collection and computer lab in an enclosed space. The upper block in an open-air public space for talking and houses a cafeteria.

See also


References

  1. Manuela Agudo Catalán (2008). El romanticismo en Aragón (1838-1854): literatura, prensa y sociedad. Universidad de Zaragoza. pp. 100–. ISBN 978-84-7733-137-7. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  2. La Quintana Library Park Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine Medellin.travel (City of the Year)
  3. Luis Fernando González Escobar (2010). Ciudad y arquitectura urbana en Colombia 1980-2010. Universidad de Antioquia. pp. 110–. ISBN 978-958-714-382-9. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  4. Library parks as urban catalysts February 21, 2010 Favel Issues

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