Benidorm is perhaps the singlemost paradigmatic Spanish city of the massive industry of leisure and tourism, a city of an extremely high density concentrated in a tiny territory. This model has shown itself to be more efficient than others that position the deterioration of huge tracts of land, towns that are empty for nine months of the year, almost impossible to maintain. In the competition for the remodeling of the 1.5-kilometer-long West Beach Promenade, we proposed a radical innovation in terms of what different promenades the world over have hitherto been. Not only a borderline of protection, a hinge between town and sea, the construction will be a public place that is conducive to many different activities. The promenade, a place with a life of its own, has organic lines, a reminder of natural wave forms that generate an ensemble of honeycombed surfaces that juggle light and shadow, a series of convexities and concavities that gradually construct a set of platforms and levels that provide areas for play, meeting, leisure or contemplation. Its layout will resolve the natural runoff of rainwater, allow for the support of collectors and infrastructure networks, eliminate architectonic barriers, link the beach with the underground car parks and thus become a complex strip of transition between the town and beach. This scheme, originating in an aleatory decision to work with curvilinear braids (structured in intermediary layers and platforms), does not obey the laws of chance but establishes a number of fixed geometric laws and modulates to facilitate the logic of its construction. Similar in origin to the strategy employed in the Barcelona Botanical Garden, the strategy here assumes a life of its own. The curved fabrics are gradually plaited woven together, obtaining forms of fusion by following a few rigorous geometric norms. The surfaces of the promenade intersect, move off and change level, thus generating jutting platforms and concave and convex shapes without ever invading the area of sand.
Carlos Ferrater Xavier Marti Gali
Seafront of Benidorm






































Credits
Consultants
- Carlos Ferrater Xavier Marti Gali - Architects
- OAB - Landscape Architect
- Juan Calvo. Pondio - Structure
- Luca Cerullo - Collaborator
Contractor
- Ecisa - Construction
- Dragados - Construction
Photographer
- Alejo Bague
Landscape Architecture
Volume 5, Number 3

- Projects
- Times Eureka Pavilion
- Garden of 10,000 Bridges
- Seafront of Benidorm
- Museo del Acero Horno3
- Underwood Family Sonoran Landscape Laboratory
- NorthPark Center
- Rooftop Haven for Urban Agriculture
- Simon and Helen Director Park
- San Francisco Residence
- Connecticut Water Treatment Facility
- The Brochstein Pavilion at Rice University
- The High Line – Sections 1 and 2
- Give Peace a Chance
- Articles
- Dialogues
- Materials
- Books
- The Professional Practice of Landscape Architecture: A Complete Guide to Starting and Running Your Own Firm
- Sustainable Landscape Management: Design, Construction, and Maintenance
- Central Park, an American Masterpiece
- Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates: Reconstructing Urban Landscapes
- Mosaics
- Landscape Design for Architectural Style: Volume One: European Influenced
- Landscape Design for Architectural Style, Volume Two: United States Original Styles
- Trees: The Balance of Life, the Beauty of Nature
- Fifty Plants That Changed the Course of History
- Public Parks: The Key to Livable Communites