Alas Building

Alas Building
General information
Status Complete
Type Office
Residential
Location Buenos Aires, Argentina
Construction started 1951
Completed 1957
Height
Antenna spire 185 m (607 ft)
Roof 141 m (463 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 42
Floor area 99.000 m²
Design and construction
Developer Agrupación de Trabajadores Latinoamericanos Sindicalizados S.A. (ATLAS)

The Alas Building (Spanish: Edificio Alas) is a residential and office building located in the San Nicolás section of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It stands at a height of 141 metres (463 ft) and houses 41 floors.

Alas was the tallest building in Buenos Aires between 1955 and 1995, when it was surpassed by the Le Parc tower. It has long been a vital part of the skyline of Buenos Aires, together with other, neighboring buildings on Leandro Alem Avenue, such as the similarly Rationalist Comega Building (1930), as well as those built in the International style during the 1970s (notably the Catalinas Norte development). Recently, however, it was overshadowed by the construction of several towers in the Puerto Madero area; as of 2009, it remains the 20th tallest building in Argentina.[1]

The building was commissioned in 1950 by President Juan Perón for the Association of Unionized Latin American Workers (ATLAS, S.A.); he ordered that plans include an underground bunker for use in case of war or a coup d'état. Perón, however, did not seek refuge there during the June 16, 1955, bombing of Plaza de Mayo by the Argentine Navy in an attempted coup, nor was he able to do so during his eventual overthrow, three months later.[2]

The building was transferred to the Argentine Air Force after the 1955 coup, and renamed ALAS ("wings"). The bunker was later converted into Argentine Public Television studios. These were relocated to Figueroa Alcorta Avenue in 1978, though two underground floors are still in occupied by parking spaces, a gym, the boiler room, bike racks and other amenities.

References

  1. Emporis: Alas building
  2. Page, Joseph. Perón: A Biography New York: Random House, 1983.

Coordinates: 34°35′57″S 58°22′14.1″W / 34.59917°S 58.370583°W / -34.59917; -58.370583

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