And it is not the only place that is in the process of disappearing.
@islandwalker 's link led me to a page describing heritage sites that are in danger:
Lista Roja del Patrimonio
www.hispanianostra.org
Sobering. Sad.
Thanks for this link, it is really interesting. If you are at all interested in the preservation of cultural heritage, take a look at the map, and drill down to your favorite area of Spain to see what’s threatened. It inevitably takes you to the conundrum of — who decides what is a heritage site and what gets to be preserved? Surely not all of these places can be preserved.
Betanzos, for instance (lovely town on the Inglés) has three sites listed as being on the “red danger alert” list. One is an 11C medieval convent (but take a look at the pictures and see if you think restoration or preservation is a realistic solution, not that I’m an expert or anything), one is a 19C theme park, and one is something described only as an “industrial complex.”
I was in Soto del Real recently visiting friends. They had just bought an apartment (still unbuilt, which they plan to rent out) that was to be constructed in the central part of town. The works have been paralyzed because someone discovered that one of the walls of the 19C building being destroyed contained stones from the 12th century that may have come from a now destroyed monastery nearby.
The wife of this couple had her first assignment as a federal prosecutor in Mérida, about 20 years ago. Talk about fascinating preservation stories! There is no square inch in Mérida that is not above some ancient ruins. She told me it was like a cat and mouse game, people owning property doing construction work at night to escape detection, hoping that they could get their work done, with the anticipated financial penalties being part of the cost of doing business.
For those of us who have a particular historical timeframe of favorite architecture (pre-romanesque and Romanesque, anyone?
) this is really fascinating.