Portal Fernández Concha

Coordinates: 33°26′18.7″S 70°39′01.24″W / 33.438528°S 70.6503444°W / -33.438528; -70.6503444
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Portal Fernández Concha
Map
General information
Architectural styleNeoclassical
LocationPlaza de Armas, Santiago, Chile
Coordinates33°26′18.7″S 70°39′01.24″W / 33.438528°S 70.6503444°W / -33.438528; -70.6503444
Completed1871
Renovated1928
Technical details
Floor count7 (after renovation)
Design and construction
Architect(s)W. Hovender Hendry, Lucien Hénault; Josué Smith Solar, José Smith Miller (renovation)
DesignationsNational Monument of Chile
Portal Fernández Concha and the Plaza de Armas in 1872

Portal Fernández Concha is a historic mixed-use building in Santiago, Chile. Built in 1871 as a commercial building including a hotel, it forms the south side of the central Plaza de Armas. It was registered on 3 December 1986 as a national monument as part of the zona típica consisting of the square, the former National Congress building and nearby buildings.[1][2]

Building[edit]

The Portal Fernández Concha is a seven-storey Neoclassical building with an arcaded ground floor housing shops and restaurants. It forms the south side of the Plaza de Armas; the Portal Bulnes [es], on the east side, is also a commercial building.[2]

History[edit]

The building was erected in 1871 as a replacement for the Portal Sierra Bella, which had been destroyed by fire. The brothers Pedro and Domingo Fernández Concha provided part of the financing.[3] The design, by the British architect W. Hovender Hendry, was Beaux Arts, reminiscent of buildings in Paris and London; a shopping arcade that runs through the ground floor, the Pasaje Matte, is by the French architect Lucien Hénault.[3][4][Note 1]

In its original form, the Portal Fernández Concha had three storeys in addition to extensive underground vaults. The façade had turrets in the centre and at both ends. A hotel was located on the upper floors: at its opening as the Hotel Santiago, it was the premier hotel in South America, and had furniture imported from Europe.[5] The hotel became the Gran Hotel Inglés in 1884 and the Gran Hotel de Francia in 1900. In 1919 it was again renamed to the Hotel Plaza, and the Hotel Milán opened separately in part of the premises.[3] The Pasaje Matte, whose shops were originally almost entirely French, and the adjacent Pasaje Bulnes were among the most fashionable retail centres in 19th-century Santiago. Electric lighting was installed in the building in 1882,[6] one of the first installations in the city.[7]

In 1928 the building was extensively remodelled by the Chilean architects Josué Smith Solar and his son José Smith Miller. Its height was increased to seven storeys plus an attic,[3] and the façade was simplified. Art Deco elements were added to the interior.[8] A statue of the Virgin Mary by Domingo García Huidobro was placed at the top centre of the façade.[3]

The organisation which established the Santiago Stock Exchange was founded in 1870 and had its offices in the Portal Fernández Concha.[9] Radio del Pacífico, renamed in 1938 from Radio La Chilena Consolidada, operated from the building for more than thirty years.[7][10]

Starting in the 1940s, the upper floors were subdivided into both residential and commercial spaces, and the building acquired a reputation first for Bohemianism and later for illegal enterprises.[8][11] In 2023 the National Congress passed a motion calling for the expropriation of the Portal Fernández Concha as a public nuisance.[12] The contemporary art gallery Espacio218 opened in 2022 in an apartment in the building.[13] The ground floor remains commercial, but the original restaurants serving European cuisine have given way to fast food.[7] One restaurant, Chez Henry, operated there from 1925 until its closure in 2003.[14]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Bastoen credits the entire building to Hénault, with Hendry as constructing architect.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Con declaración: Santiago". Patrimonio Urbano (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 5 November 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Plaza de Armas, Congreso Nacional y su Entorno". Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 5 November 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Santiago, Plaza de Armas: Portal Fernández Concha (antes, Portal Sierra Bella)". Biblioteca Nacional Digital (Archive photo) (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  4. ^ Julien Bastoen (2022). "Catedrales del comercio: la difusión internacional de los grandes almacenes parisinos". In Fernando Aliata; Eduardo Gentile (eds.). El modelo beaux-arts y la arquitectura en América Latina, 1870-1930. Transferencias, intercambios y perspectivas transnacionales (PDF) (in Spanish). La Plata: Facultad de Arquitectura y Urbanismo, Universidad Nacional La Plata. p. 231. ISBN 978-950-34-2114-7.
  5. ^ Recaredo Santos Tornero (2011) [1872]. Chile ilustrado: Guía descriptivo del territorio de Chile, de las capitales de provincia, de los puertos principales. Biblioteca fundamentos de la construcción de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. 44. Santiago: Cámara Chilena de la Construcción / Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile / Dirección de Bibliotecas Archivos y Museos. pp. 70, 158, 161. ISBN 9789568306731.
  6. ^ Alfonso Calderón (1984). Memorial del viejo Santiago (in Spanish). Santiago: Editorial Andrés Bello. pp. 59–60. OCLC 11368565.
  7. ^ a b c "Portal Fernández Concha, de hotel de lujo a paseo". La Nacion (Blog/Opinion) (in Spanish). 27 April 2009. Archived from the original on 29 August 2014.
  8. ^ a b Carolina Briones; José Pablo Guzmán (29 November 2018). "Memorias y Prejuicios del Portal Fernández Concha". Santiago Adicto (With interior photos) (in Spanish) – via landie.cl.
  9. ^ Tornero (2011) [1872]. p. 181.
  10. ^ "Breve historia de la radio en Chile". Huellas.cl (in Spanish). 2020.
  11. ^ "Portal Fernández Concha, vivir entre delincuencia y prostitución". T13 (video, 9 mins 20 secs) (in Spanish). Santiago: Canal 13. 8 March 2023.
  12. ^ Karin Schlegel (4 May 2023). "Piden recuperar el edificio patrimonial Portal Fernández Concha". Cámara de Diputados (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  13. ^ "Espacio218: la plataforma que busca difundir el arte contemporáneo llega al centro de Santiago". Radio Universidad de Chile. 25 April 2022. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  14. ^ "Remate puso fin a 78 años de historia del Chez Henry". La Cuarta (in Spanish). 26 March 2003. Archived from the original on 6 December 2013.

External links[edit]