Palácio Monroe
{{Short description|Former monumental hall in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (1906–76)}}
{{Expand Portuguese|topic=struct|Palácio Monroe |date=October 2020}}
{{Infobox building
| name = Monroe Palace
| native_name = {{lang|pt|Palácio Monroe}}
| image = Palácio Monroe (0074050cx006e007-01).jpg
| status = Demolished
| building_type = Brazilian Congress seat (1914–1920)
Brazilian Senate seat (1925–1960)
| architectural_style = Eclecticism
| address = Praça Mahatma Gandhi
| location_city = Rio de Janeiro
| location_country = Brazil
| owner = Brazilian government
| coordinates = {{coord|22|54|44.82|S|43|10|31.62|W|type:landmark_region:BR|display=inline}}
| inauguration_date = 1906
| demolition_date = March 1976
| floor_area = {{convert|1,700|m2|sqft|abbr=on}}
| architect = Francisco Marcelino de Sousa Aguiar
| public_transit = {{Plainlist|
- {{rint|riodejaneiro|metro}} {{rint|riodejaneiro|1}} {{rint|riodejaneiro|2}} Cinelândia
- {{rint|riodejaneiro|lrt}} {{rint|riodejaneiro|1l}} {{rint|riodejaneiro|3l}} Cinelândia
}}
}}
The Palácio Monroe was a monumental hall in the Centro neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It was named in honor of U.S. president James Monroe. It was originally built in the U.S. city of St. Louis to act as the Brazilian Pavilion during the 1904 World's Fair. Following the World's Fair, the building was dismantled and transported in cargo ships to Rio de Janeiro, where it was rebuilt in 1906. Its grand opening at the 3rd Pan-American Conference was held on July 23, 1906. From 1914 to 1920, the palace was used as the home of the Brazilian Congress. From 1925 to 1960 it was used as the home of the Brazilian Senate.
In 1975, the architect and urban planner Lúcio Costa, who was the national chief of the National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage (Instituto do Patrimônio Histórico e Artístico Nacional – IPHAN), created a public controversy by refusing to sign the landmarking act of Palácio Monroe. The building was slated for demolition because of the construction of the Rio de Janeiro Metro, but in the face of public and media outcry, the construction company shifted the line to preserve the building. This effort, however, was in vain, because on October 11, 1975, the Brazilian president Ernesto Geisel authorized the building's demolition and a developer razed the building in March 1976. The decision was contrary to the State of Rio de Janeiro's decision declaring the building an Official Landmark in 1974. {{cite web|url=https://www12.senado.leg.br/noticias/materias/2015/05/04/que-fim-levou-o-palacio-monroe|title=Que fim levou o Palácio Monroe?|date=2015-05-04|access-date=2022-04-12|website=Senado Federal|language=pt-br}} In 1979, the Cinelândia Station was opened as one of the first five stations of the then-new metro network, on the site of the demolished palace.{{cite web | url=http://www.metrorio.com.br/Estacoes?p_ponto=18| title=Cinelândia – Sobre a Estação | publisher=MetrôRio | accessdate=2014-09-16 | language=pt-BR}}
Gallery
File:Palácio Monroe (funeral de Joaquim Nabuco).jpg|Palácio Monroe in 1910, during the funeral procession of Joaquim Nabuco.
File:Sight-seeing in South America (1912) (14595357060).jpg|Palácio Monroe in 1912.
File:Palácio Monroe (cartão-postal).jpg|Palácio Monroe on a postcard.
File:Palácio Monroe (15774001372).jpg|Interior of the Palácio Monroe, showing the Senate floor.
File:Demolição Palácio Monroe.jpg|Demolition of the Palácio Monroe in 1976.
File:Planta do 1° pavimento do Palácio Monroe, Rio de Janeiro.tif|Plan of the 1st floor of the Palácio Monroe drawn in 1924, preserved in the National Archives of Brazil.
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category-inline|Palácio Monroe}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080311092516/http://www.almacarioca.com.br/monroe.htm Palácio Monroe – Por que foi demolido?] {{in lang|pt}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Palacio Monroe}}
Category:Demolished buildings and structures in Brazil
Category:Buildings and structures in Rio de Janeiro (city)
Category:Former seats of national legislatures
Category:World's fair architecture in Missouri
Category:World's fair architecture in South America
Category:1904 establishments in Missouri
Category:1904 disestablishments in Missouri
Category:1906 establishments in Brazil
Category:1976 disestablishments in Brazil
Category:History of Rio de Janeiro (city)
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