You are walking toward an architectural anomaly in Madrid, a cultural center that lies entirely beneath the ground. The Teatro Fernán Gómez sits tucked under the Jardines del Descubrimiento, a design choice made during the extensive reconfiguration of the Plaza de Colón in the nineteen seventies. To enter, you descend from the street level into a subterranean world that was originally designed to solve the city's complex traffic flow and urban planning challenges. For decades, a seventy-two-meter-long water feature cascaded down its entrance, a dramatic element that defined the site until it was eventually replaced by a simpler, modern structure.
Teatro Fernán Gómez
cultural
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