Aguilar Square by Toni Riba and vora arquitectura

https://www.vora.cat/
2026 Landscape and Architecture / 2026 Public Projects / Spain / Built in 2025 /

The renovation of Aguilar square is part of a municipal strategy to regenerate the historic center of the town, which has suffered from abandonment—as seen in many other towns and cities in inland Catalonia—where the population has gradually shifted toward garden-city outskirts. The public spaces in the old town have been undergoing a step-by-step redevelopment for several years, through the pedestrian repaving of all streets, aiming to bring them back to life. The renovation of Aguilar square continues this strategy while seeking to create a protected, unique, and active space with its own distinct identity.
The edges of the square maintain the materiality of the adjacent streets, using concrete pavers and granite stone border bands. This formalization is refined at the junctions, where precisely designed cut granite stones resolve the skewed intersections of the stone border bands.

The square opens up in front of the façade of Ca l’Aguilar, a heritage building rehabilitated as a municipal facility. The new configuration of the central space—a sort of “carpet” made of concrete—responds to this relationship, enhancing the sense of a cozy yet active “place.” Two large planters articulate the space: first, by protecting it from vehicle traffic, and second, by supporting active uses. This is achieved through an “agora” configuration, with the planter edges as benches and an extended platform as a playful and performative structure. The entire center of the square and the planters are realized in colored, rough concrete with deactivated surface where the aggregate becomes visible.

A fountain complements the square, taking advantage of a recess in a garden fence along its perimeter.
The square is “naturalized” through the planting of different height layers of greenery, including trees, herbaceous plants, and flowers, that provide diversity. The trees are deciduous, allowing for sunlight in winter and providing ample shade in summer, with chromatic variation in the leaves ranging from green to yellow throughout the year. A large Walnut tree (Juglans regia) will grow lushly, accompanied by two medium-sized Field Maples (Acer campestre). Beneath the trees, a combination of flowers and herbaceous species has been planted—unique to each parterre—blending different shades of green with seasonal chromatic and olfactory variations, including blue-lilac blooms.

The planters harvest rainwater and store it beneath them through a deep section of fertile soil and structural soil substrate. The topographical configuration of the surrounding square directs all stormwater runoff toward scuppers at the base of the planter walls. These inlets channel the rainwater into the structural soil via inverted drainage pipes to keep the earth moist, while an overflow pipe at a higher elevation handles periods of water saturation.

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