• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

It's Tower vs. Arch in Mexico City

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Apr 17, 2009

Via “Gana Torre, no Arco Bicentenario” on LA76:

The team composed of graduates of the National Autonomous University of Mexico and headed by Cesar Perez Becerril, has been announced winner in a national competition for a memorial to commemorate the Bicentennial of Mexican Independence. The design proposes a vertical height of 104 meters of coated quartz and slender, which eliminates the role and obstruction of reform. “It’s simple and effective. As much as a light tower is innovative, it is simple, rational and appropriate,” said the jury that chose Perez Becerril, among the 35 proposals which were presented at the National Bicentennial to build the Arch.

image

Winning Proposal for Mexico’s Bicentennial Memorial by Cesar Perez Becerril

But there’s also controversy (via “Rojkind Criticizes Bicentennial project” on LA76):

“When was the last time a Modern and Illustrated State built an Arch or any other type of self-celebration monument?” asked the team composed by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz in their presentation for their submission for the “Bicentennial Arch” in Mexico City.

Rojkind criticize like this the bicentennial project proposed by the local authorities of Mexico City, their proposal ordinates the vehicle traffic, expanded the green areas, would take 20 years to be built and will cost 200 million dollars.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

It was suppose to be an Arch, but an arch built with 5 thousand social housing units on one of the main streets of Mexico City, Paseo de la Reforma. Michel Rojkind participated in the competition to commemorate the 200 years of the Independence of Mexico and betted to lose just to evidence the waste of resources (economical and intellectual) in an archaic project

“We bet to open a debate on the pertinence of building a commemorative monument”

“What are we going to celebrate? That the streets in the city are a chaos? That has been years since the last time there was a competition to do social housing in Mexico? That the people takes 3 hours to get to work? That the governors and political class, aiming to be remembered propose a project that will cost millions of pesos to execute it in a ridiculous time and closing Reforma and Circuito Interior (2 of the main avenues in Mexico City)?” Rojkind asks.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

Rojkind was one of the 37 invited architects to the competition, and then he invited
Arturo Ortiz and Alejandro Hernández to develop the proposal. The 150,000 pesos that they received were used to design and evidence the actual situation of social and public infrastructure decay.

“From the 37 invited teams, one decided not to participate, i see that as the most radical stand, to say “i wont play this game because i think is stupid”, i believe our stand is more a political one, to say “we do not agree, because of this” and take it to a more radical side, but seeking to open a debate about public space and the inclusion of the inhabitants of the city.” Hernandez adds

their proposal ordinate the vehicle traffic, expanded the green areas, would take 20 years to be built and will cost 200 million dolars. Their presentation showed real actual problems like car traffic chaos or informal vendors in the area.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

Due that the architects and people of the city wasn’t “invited” to participate in the decision of “how to celebrate”, the the team had the possibility to remember that architects have always a chance to take a more critic-political position, mentions Ortiz

“when was the last time a Modern and Illustrated State built an Arch or any other type of self-celebration monument?” asked the team to the jury in their presentation for their submission.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

“You don’t need a big forehead or a lot of visas in your passport to know that this projects don’t happen often in the world, and whenever they are done, they are reason of laugh or fear, like when Sadam Hussein builds his “BLADES OF VICTORY”, emphasizes Hernandez.

image

In their presentation boards the team showed that the cost of the project will be equivalent to: One Month of the salary of Carlos Slim (CEO of the mexican Grupo CARSO), or a Year of Salary of any State Secretary in Mexico, or also the salary of 100 years of 10 workers (in minimum wage)

Images & text via LA76

Related

tower ● mexico city ● mexico ● memorial ● latin america ● arch

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

It's Tower vs. Arch in Mexico City

Eight innovative timber projects honored at 2026 Wood in Architecture Awards

Beautiful brick architecture honored at BRICK AWARD 26

Over $500,000 awarded to architectural discourse projects by Graham Foundation

Best in urban planning recognized at AIA Regional & Urban Design Award 2026

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Re:Form - New Life for Old Spaces / Edition #3 advance registration deadline is approaching!

New architecture and design competitions: IDEAS Awards, UIA-HYP CUP International Student Competition, Vancouver Tall Challenge, and Memorial to the Sixth Extinction

Best small projects chosen at AIA Small Project Award 2026

10 standout sustainable projects honored at AIA COTE Top Ten Award 2026

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Best residential architecture of 2026 honored at AIA Housing Award

Best new interiors of 2026 chosen at AIA Interior Architecture Awards

Best global architecture honored at RIBA International Awards 2026

World’s most beautiful airports of 2026 chosen by Prix Versailles

New architecture and design competitions: Brick in Architecture Awards, Study Architecture Student Showcase, N.Y.C. Groceries, and New York High Falls Riverfront Market

SmithGroup’s ‘pioneering’ Philip Merrill Environmental Center wins AIA Twenty-five Year Award

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8 FINAL registration deadline is in 5 DAYS!

Next page » Loading

It's Tower vs. Arch in Mexico City

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Apr 17, 2009

Share

Related

tower ● mexico city ● mexico ● memorial ● latin america ● arch

Via “Gana Torre, no Arco Bicentenario” on LA76:

The team composed of graduates of the National Autonomous University of Mexico and headed by Cesar Perez Becerril, has been announced winner in a national competition for a memorial to commemorate the Bicentennial of Mexican Independence. The design proposes a vertical height of 104 meters of coated quartz and slender, which eliminates the role and obstruction of reform. “It’s simple and effective. As much as a light tower is innovative, it is simple, rational and appropriate,” said the jury that chose Perez Becerril, among the 35 proposals which were presented at the National Bicentennial to build the Arch.

image

Winning Proposal for Mexico’s Bicentennial Memorial by Cesar Perez Becerril

But there’s also controversy (via “Rojkind Criticizes Bicentennial project” on LA76):

“When was the last time a Modern and Illustrated State built an Arch or any other type of self-celebration monument?” asked the team composed by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz in their presentation for their submission for the “Bicentennial Arch” in Mexico City.

Rojkind criticize like this the bicentennial project proposed by the local authorities of Mexico City, their proposal ordinates the vehicle traffic, expanded the green areas, would take 20 years to be built and will cost 200 million dollars.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

It was suppose to be an Arch, but an arch built with 5 thousand social housing units on one of the main streets of Mexico City, Paseo de la Reforma. Michel Rojkind participated in the competition to commemorate the 200 years of the Independence of Mexico and betted to lose just to evidence the waste of resources (economical and intellectual) in an archaic project

“We bet to open a debate on the pertinence of building a commemorative monument”

“What are we going to celebrate? That the streets in the city are a chaos? That has been years since the last time there was a competition to do social housing in Mexico? That the people takes 3 hours to get to work? That the governors and political class, aiming to be remembered propose a project that will cost millions of pesos to execute it in a ridiculous time and closing Reforma and Circuito Interior (2 of the main avenues in Mexico City)?” Rojkind asks.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

Rojkind was one of the 37 invited architects to the competition, and then he invited
Arturo Ortiz and Alejandro Hernández to develop the proposal. The 150,000 pesos that they received were used to design and evidence the actual situation of social and public infrastructure decay.

“From the 37 invited teams, one decided not to participate, i see that as the most radical stand, to say “i wont play this game because i think is stupid”, i believe our stand is more a political one, to say “we do not agree, because of this” and take it to a more radical side, but seeking to open a debate about public space and the inclusion of the inhabitants of the city.” Hernandez adds

their proposal ordinate the vehicle traffic, expanded the green areas, would take 20 years to be built and will cost 200 million dolars. Their presentation showed real actual problems like car traffic chaos or informal vendors in the area.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

Due that the architects and people of the city wasn’t “invited” to participate in the decision of “how to celebrate”, the the team had the possibility to remember that architects have always a chance to take a more critic-political position, mentions Ortiz

“when was the last time a Modern and Illustrated State built an Arch or any other type of self-celebration monument?” asked the team to the jury in their presentation for their submission.

image

“Bicentennial Arch” Proposal by Michel Rojkind + Alejandro Hernandez + Arturo Ortiz

“You don’t need a big forehead or a lot of visas in your passport to know that this projects don’t happen often in the world, and whenever they are done, they are reason of laugh or fear, like when Sadam Hussein builds his “BLADES OF VICTORY”, emphasizes Hernandez.

image

In their presentation boards the team showed that the cost of the project will be equivalent to: One Month of the salary of Carlos Slim (CEO of the mexican Grupo CARSO), or a Year of Salary of any State Secretary in Mexico, or also the salary of 100 years of 10 workers (in minimum wage)

Images & text via LA76

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Advanced Architectural Designer

Selldorf Architects

Advanced Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer

7th Street Burger

Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Architect / Project Architect - Remote (U.S. Based)

Joseph David Associates

Architect / Project Architect - Remote (U.S. Based)

Architectural Job Captain (AIA Level III)

Parallax Architecture and Planning

Architectural Job Captain (AIA Level III)

Culver City, CA, US

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Multifamily Interiors - New York Office

Fogarty Finger

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Multifamily Interiors - New York Office

New York, NY, US

Job Captain

Studio AR&D Architects

Job Captain

Los Angeles, CA, US

Architectural Design Manager for Architectural Lighting Design Firm

Castelli-Design

Architectural Design Manager for Architectural Lighting Design Firm

New York, NY, US

Studio Coordinator

Sarah Jacoby Architect

Studio Coordinator

Long Island City, NY, US

Project Manager

Populous

Project Manager

San Francisco, CA, US

Project Architect

The Goldman Group

Project Architect

Walpole, MA, US

Next page » Loading