Photographer's Note
it is very hard to be in this beautiful place and not remember the dramatic events of March 11,2004- but an absolutely unusual moment of peace and quiet (it took forever to get ths shot without a stream of cars in front of it) allows to appreciate the beauty of this highly functional building which hosts a magnificent tropical garden inside where one can take a break form the rushing of daily life. I have seen many elderly people just resting and chatting and i found that quite peaceful.
from wikipedia:
Atocha Station (Estación de Atocha) is the largest railway station in Madrid. It is the primary station serving commuter trains (Cercanías), intercity and regional trains from the south, and the AVE high speed trains from Seville (Andalusia) and Barcelona (Catalonia). These train services are run by the Spanish national rail company, Renfe.
The station was Madrid's first railway station. It was inaugurated on 9 February 1851 under the name Estación de Mediodía (Atocha-Mediodía is now the name of an area of the Arganzuela district, and means in old Spanish south).
After the building was largely destroyed by fire, it was rebuilt and reopened in 1892. The architect for the replacement, in a wrought iron renewal style was Alberto de Palacio Elissagne, who collaborated with Gustave Eiffel.
The old building was taken out of service in 1992 and converted into a concourse with shops, cafés, a nightclub, and a 4,000 m² covered tropical garden. A modern terminal by Rafael Moneo, designed to serve the new AVE trains to Seville, was added to the complex.
The main lines end in the new terminal; commuter train platforms are located underground, at the ingress to a rail tunnel extending northward under the Paseo de la Castellana. The station, located on the Plaza del Emperador Carlos V, is served by two Madrid Metro stations, Atocha and Atocha Renfe. The latter was added when the new terminal building was constructed and is directly linked to the railway station.
The Reina Sofía museum is in the vicinity of Atocha.
On 10 June 2004 a virtual shrine was dedicated by the Spanish Minister of Transport. Visitors to the attacked stations can leave a hand silhouette and a message through special-purpose consoles.
robertosalguero, guitianmiranda, cobra112, degani ha contrassegnato questa nota come utile
Critiques | Translate
robertosalguero
(292) 2008-05-10 1:52
Ciao Anna,
A beautiful building with fine details. The people add a lively perspective of the scene. Nice composition with an interesting perspective of this place. I imagine the station is very pretty inside as well. Glad there are no cars in the way. Thanks Anna.
Roberto
smartcat
(835) 2008-05-10 3:06
Ciao Anna Maria!
Thanks for this shot.
Yes, I've never understood terrorists. Here in Russia there were also some terroristic acts inapired by CHechen terrorists and maybe by somebody else, which killed many people.
Regards, Igor
cobra112
(15589) 2008-05-10 13:15
Eccezionale l'illuminazione sull'edificio da cui risaltano i colori pastello. Bella profondità dalle strisce pedonali.
Roberto
degani
(3011) 2008-05-12 13:47
bella questa fotografia che mi ricorda un luogo molto caro, anche se poi fu teatro di gravi fatti, bella anche la nota
brava Anna
ciao
franco
Silvio1953
(220665) 2008-05-15 6:02
Ciao Anna, me la ricordo bene quest splendida stazione, capolavoro di architettura magnificamente ripreso, brava, ciao Silvio
Photo Information
-
Copyright: anna maria Colli (amcolli)
(569)
- Genre: Luoghi
- Medium: Colore
- Date Taken: 2008-04-21
- Categories: Vita quotidiana, Transporti, Architettura
- Esposizione: f/9.0, 1/125 secondi
- More Photo Info: view
- Versione Foto: Versione Originale
- Date Submitted: 2008-05-10 1:41