Background After the creation of the
Companhia do Metropolitano de São Paulo in 1968, São Paulo City Hall carried out numerous expropriations for the construction of the
North-South Line. Several plots of land were cleared in order to build construction sites and the future Aclimação station (now Vergueiro) through municipal decrees No. 7886 of January 3, 1969 and No. 8656 of February 16, 1970. The METRAG Consortium (made up of Metropolitana,
Andrade Gutierrez and Proenge) was hired to build the station and the Operational Control Center. Work began in 1970 and was completed in mid-1974, with the terminal being renamed Vergueiro and inaugurated on February 17, 1975. In July 1974, Mayor
Miguel Colasuonno launched a tender for the construction of two office towers, in which three consortia presented themselves: Construtora Adolfo Lindemberg S/A,
CBPO-Formaespaço S/A and Guarantã Servlease S/A - Prourb. After the bids were announced, the winning consortium was Guarantã Servlease S/A - Prourb, which hired architects
Roger Zmekhol and Sidinei Rodrigues, who designed two 105-meter-high towers as well as a shopping center, library, hotel and a terrace with landscaped slabs, an underground garage and a footbridge over
23 de Maio Avenue, linking Santo Agostinho Square to the
Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo. The project had an estimated cost of 700 million
cruzeiros and was due to be completed in five years. Before work had even begun, Colasuonno left the mayor's office and the new mayor,
Olavo Setúbal, decided to re-examine the project. After much criticism of the project (which also threatened the expansion of
Paulista Avenue), Setúbal annulled the tender on July 2, 1975, alleging breach of contract by the winning consortium. Prourb went to court and the city was forced to compensate them. After a competitive bidding process, São Paulo City Hall hired architects Eurico Prado Lopes and Luiz Benedito de Castro Telles to design the new library, using part of the 300,000 square meter area of the now-defunct Nova Vergueiro project, located to the north of the subway station of the same name. The basic idea was to build a space capable of holding 1.5 million books and accommodating up to 1,300 people simultaneously. The project was divided into three stages: 27,000 square meters were to be delivered in 1978, 30,000 square meters in 1983 and completion in 1990.
São Paulo Cultural Center Due to budget problems, construction only began in 1978, with the earthworks being carried out. Método, Maubertec and Sul Americana de Engenharia S/A (SADE) were contracted to design and build the premises. After Setúbal's term ended, the city government of São Paulo was assumed by
Reynaldo de Barros, who modified the project at the request of his culture secretary
Mário Chamie. Instead of concentrating just an extension of the Mário de Andrade Library, the project was redesigned based on the
Centre Pompidou in
Paris. Construction of the building began in 1981, financed by the
Nossa Caixa bank, and its first stage was completed in 1982. The São Paulo Cultural Center was opened on the last day of Reinaldo de Barros' term, unfinished, at noon on May 13, 1982. The opening was limited because the section of the building facing Vergueiro Street still didn't have a hydrant system, part of the finishing of the light fittings hadn't been installed and there were flaws in the floors and remnants of construction work in some places. Two theaters (one of which was an arena theater), a cinema, an auditorium, a foyer, a pinacoteca with a collection of 1,600 works and an internal garden were delivered. The library, the main facility, was still under construction. In all, a 46,500 square meter building with four floors was constructed at an initial cost of 3 billion
cruzeiros. Despite Secretary Chamie's promises that the library would be inaugurated after a month or two, it only happened on March 6, 1983, by Mayor
Antônio Salim Curiati. On the same day, the other facilities were given their names:
Adoniran Barbosa (arena theater),
Jardel Filho (Italian stage theater),
Lima Barreto (cinema) and
Paulo Emílio Sales Gomes (auditorium). The Sérgio Milliet Library was the first in the city to have a search and cataloguing system computerized by
PRODAM. Initially, the fifty thousand works available could not be borrowed. Moved by the tribute to
Sérgio Milliet, his family donated part of his personal library to the institution. The architect Eurico Prado Lopes, who worked hard to get the project completed, was unable to contemplate it because he died on April 12, 1985, at the age of 45; his memorial service was held in one of the cultural center's libraries. Some time later, Lopes' friends and colleagues contacted the authorities to have the project completed. In 1986, it attracted only 5,000 visitors a day and was still unfinished, with execution problems that architect Telles and the city's technical staff tried to correct. The
Alfredo Volpi Library was inaugurated on August 20, 1992, by Mayor
Luíza Erundina. Only in 2004, with the construction of the garden, named Eurico Prado Lopes, and access to the Vergueiro metro station, the last facilities were completed. == Project ==