This article was originally published on May 4, 2015. To read the stories behind other celebrated architecture projects, visit our AD Classics section.
Arches have long been used to mark the greatest achievements of Roman civilization. Constantine, Titus, and Septimus Severus built them to commemorate their military victories. Engineers at Segovia and Nîmes incorporated them into their revolutionary aqueducts. And fifteen hundred years after the Fall of Rome, Rafael Moneo gave a modern touch to the ancient structure in Mérida's breathtaking National Museum of Roman Art, located on the site of the former Iberian outpost of Emerita Augusta. Soaring arcades of simple, semi-circular arches merge historicity and contemporary design, creating a striking yet sensitive point of entry to the remains of one of the Roman Empire's greatest cities.
Flickr user Fernando Carrasco
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AD Classics: National Museum of Roman Art / Rafael Moneo
https://www.archdaily.com/625552/ad-classics-national-museum-of-roman-art-rafael-moneoDavid Langdon