The Pignatelli Reservoirs, Zaragoza — and Why It Matters Here
Four open-air concrete reservoirs. 125 meters long each. Four meters deep. Built in the 1890s to supply water to the south side of Zaragoza, Spain. Sat empty for decades. An urban void next to a public park that everyone had learned to walk around.
Architect Héctor Fernández Elorza just turned them into an urban park.
Not a renovation. Not a museum. A functioning, experiential public space carved out of century-old water infrastructure — the bones of the original reservoirs still visible, the industrial geometry still present, the history still readable in the concrete.
Here's what I keep thinking about: Atlanta has the same bones.
We have rail corridors that became the BeltLine. We have the Westside Reservoir Park — 4 billion gallons of former water storage turned into 280 acres of public green space. We have old industrial sites along the Chattahoochee that developers are still trying to figure out. We have the infrastructure. We have the raw material.
What Zaragoza demonstrates is a specific design philosophy: don't erase the industrial past to build something new. Read what the structure was and build the next chapter from it. The reservoirs don't pretend to be anything other than reservoirs — they just serve a different purpose now.
From a construction standpoint, this is a serious undertaking. Adaptive reuse of water infrastructure involves waterproofing remediation, structural assessment for public load, drainage redesign, and — in a 19th century structure — likely dealing with construction practices that predate modern standards by multiple generations. The fact that these reservoirs are now a park means someone walked through them the way I walk through a property: reading the materials, understanding what was built to do, identifying where the systems need modernization and where the original work was good enough to preserve.
That last part is the skill. Knowing what's worth keeping.
For Atlanta developers eyeing older industrial sites: this is the reference point. Not another ground-up mixed-use block. Something that earns its place in the city by respecting what was already there.
The Pignatelli Reservoirs are in Zaragoza. But the question they're asking belongs here too.

