But above all, Aníbal González played an essential role in the great Ibero-American Exposition of 1929, with the design of the pavilions and new urban spaces that the exhibition brought to Seville. The most outstanding:
The Archaeological Museum. Former Pavilion of Fine Arts of the Ibero-American Exposition of 1929, made in neo-Renaissance style.
The Archaeological Museum.
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The Mudejar Pavilion. Also located in the Plaza de America in Maria Luisa Park, this neo-Mudejar building houses the Museum of Popular Arts and Customs of Seville.
The Mudejar Pavilion.
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The Royal Pavilion. It is the third of the buildings located in this lavish square, and completes the tribute to the architectural styles of the city with the neo-Gothic.
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And of course… The Plaza de España. Probably the most spectacular space of regionalist architecture. Commissioned to the architect Aníbal González for the Ibero-American Exposition of 1929, it was inaugurated by King Alfonso XIII. Its total area is 50,000 square meters, of which 19,000 are built and the remaining 31,000 are free space.
It has a total area of 50,000 square meters, of which 19,000 are built and the remaining 31,000 are free space.