Abstract

Over the last 60 years, the development of tourism in Spain has produced an unprecedented occupation of the territory. Urban growth, hotels and infrastructures have transformed much of the natural environment. This phenomenon has irreversibly altered conditions of regions with great landscape value, putting their cultural heritage at risk. Yet, the campsite is a model of tourist settlement based on shared living in the open natural space. It promotes minimal and temporary interventions in the territory, by means of transportable accommodations with precise occupations of place, leaving a slight footprint. Therefore, architecture contributes to affording the order and services that these individual artifacts cannot provide by themselves. In terms of slight land occupation and natural qualities preservation, the campsite has proven to be one of the most responsible tourist models. It is an opportunity for the future: a resource for landscape integration and local dynamics reactivation. We present a set of architectural actions for the integration of campsites in cultural landscapes along the Catalan coast. These are recommendations catalogued by means of a diagnosis tool that proposes strategies at different levels, from enclosure to lodgings. Focusing on end-users, this research fosters cultural identity preservation and responsible communal living in nature.

Highlights

  • Over the last 60 years, the development of tourism in Spain has produced an unprecedented occupation of large areas of its geographic territory [1]

  • The analysis focuses on the capacity of the campsite to settle within the context, recognizing the different levels or scales of action: from its landscape integration to the user’s occupation of the plot by means of small individual lodgings

  • 8) What can campsites offer to cultural landscapes?

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last 60 years, the development of tourism in Spain has produced an unprecedented occupation of large areas of its geographic territory [1]. This phenomenon has irreversibly altered the conditions of domains with great landscape value, putting their cultural heritage at risk [2]. This process has resulted in a great paradox (Figure 1). Landscapes evoke memories of our experiences, they are the result of the tradition and history of their inhabitants, and they make a region desirable [3]. Being the fundamental desire of tourism [4], the effects of this economic activity have incomprehensibly consumed landscape values for its own benefit: much architecture of the tourist boom was designed for contemplating, but very few to be seen [5]

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