EL MÉDANO SEAFRONT PROMENADE

PLANOS Y DETALLES TÉCNICOS

A Timber Surface Laid Over a Natural Landscape

The intervention transforms the coastal edge of El Médano, a former fishing settlement shaped by later seasonal growth, into a continuous pedestrian promenade integrated with the natural character of the shoreline.

What had been a deteriorated dirt track exposed to uncontrolled vehicle access becomes a landscape operation in which the design of public space is reduced to a minimum, allowing natural elements to structure the intervention.

The project relies on a limited material palette: stone for retaining walls and selected paved areas, and timber for the main walking surfaces, establishing a direct dialogue with the surrounding volcanic landscape.

Two distinct conditions define the promenade. In the first, linked to the urban frontage and the village square, reddish stone and a timber strip mediate between built edge and sand.

Further along, the promenade unfolds as a timber surface laid across the white volcanic formations, resting lightly on embankments of the same material.

The result is a soft boundary where pedestrian movement protects the natural character of the coastline while maintaining continuity between settlement and landscape.

The project is conceived as a restrained intervention in which material, terrain and climate define the identity of the place.

TECHNICAL DATA: Year: 1995-1997. Location: El Médano, Granadilla, Tenerife. Architects: Antonio Corona Bosch, Arsenio Pérez Amaral, Eustaquio Martínez García. Client: Granadilla Town Council, Department of Tourism of the Canarian Government. Collaborators: DD7 (Quantity Surveyors). Photography: Jordi Bernardo, José Ramón Oller.

AWARDS: Honary Mention for the Regional Prize of Architecture in the Canaries Manuel de Oraá.

TAGS // Urban Design