British Institute building, Madrid In 1926 Lacasa designed a small residential palace for Valentín Ruiz Senén that was later occupied by the British Institute for many years. It has a surprising neoclassical style. The building was erected in 1926-31. It was later remodelled by Luciano Delage Villegas in 1944 and then enlarged by Eduardo Torallas López in 1946. by Lacasa and Sánchez Arcas (1932)
National Institute of Physics and Chemistry Manuel Sánchez Arcas and Lacasa won the 1927 competition by the Board for the Extension of Studies to build the Instituto Nacional de Física y Química (Institute of Physics and Chemistry) funded by the International Education Board of the
Rockefeller Foundation. Known as the "
Fundación Rockefeller building", it was designed in 1927 and built between 1928 and 1930. The brick structure was carefully thought out. It followed the new principles of
rationalist functionalism. It fused these principles with traditional construction practices. The windows of the central body have semicircular arches, while the others are
lintelled. A giant portico on the main facade has great simplicity. It recalls classical designs but is free from historicism, and reflects the architecture of the great American universities.
Colegios Mayores student residences In 1932 Lacasa designed four residential colleges for Madrid University, Antonio Nebrija, Ximénez de Cisneros, Menéndez y Pelayo and Diego Covarrubias. They were built in 1935–36, and rebuilt and enlarged by Javier Barroso Sánchez-Guerra(
es) in 1941–43. The complex of buildings and facilities was a grouping on linear and geometric blocks in an orthogonal and independent arrangement around a series of gardens, open spaces and sports areas. It included T-shaped structures for general services, two bedroom pavilions with corridors to the north and rooms to the south, the director's residence, a conference room and other facilities. Lacasa chose a modular design that allowed repetition of brick forms in pure rationalist orthodoxy. After the civil war the whole complex had to be rebuilt, although the original spirit was preserved.
Spanish pavilion at the 1937 Paris exposition in Barcelona, a reproduction of the 1937 Spanish pavilion Lacasa was commissioned to design the Spanish Pavilion for the 1937 Paris Exposition. He was later joined by
Josep Lluís Sert, the most international of Spanish architects at the time. They were helped by the young architect
Antoni Bonet i Castellana and by the French architect Abella. The two main architects favoured different styles, with Lacasa in favour of regionalism and social realism and Sert in modern rationalism. Sert's views prevailed in the structure, while Lacasa was responsible for the
museography and content.
Josep Renau, head of the Directorate General of Fine Arts, made key decisions about the content, as did the Ministries of Propaganda and Public Industry. The Spanish Pavilion had a rationalist architecture and used modern, functional materials. The temporary building was erected quickly on a small site in the
Jardins du Trocadéro, with a very limited budget. It tried to demonstrate that despite the civil war the Spanish Republic was committed to modernity and humanism. The structure had an exact, cool geometry that emphasises horizontal shapes. It was largely colored in shades of gray, although the red lines of the painted metal structure gave a Spanish touch. It contained
Pablo Picasso's painting
Guernica. Picasso visited the pavilion while it was being built, and Sert visited Picasso in his workshop while he was making the painting. The Spanish pavilion was rebuilt in
Barcelona for the
1992 Summer Olympics. ==Publications==