He was born Pedro Adolfo de Castro Besosa[note 1] in January 1895, in Brooklyn, New York,[3] to Pedro De Castro (1867 - 1928; from Ceiba, Puerto Rico)[4] and Manuela Mima Besosa (1872 - 1963; from Ponce, Puerto Rico).[5] His family moved back to Puerto Rico when he was five years old.[6]
Schooling
At the age of 19, in 1914, he traveled to New York where he attended school at the Syracuse University, graduating in 1918 with a degree in architecture. He was the first Puerto Rican to graduate from a U.S. school of architecture.[6][7]
Career
Returning to Puerto Rico in 1918, De Castro Besosa started working at the Puerto Rico Department of the Interior in San Juan, under the direction of Puerto Rico's state architect Adrian Finlayson. During his two-year stay with the government of Puerto Rico (1919-1921), he designed the Puerto Rico Capitol building and the Escuela Central de Santurce building.[2] From his insular government job, Besosa moved to the private sector working for Antonín Nechodoma. There, he designed not only buildings but also lamps, mosaics, furniture, and other products. His private practice was marked by his own interpretation of Spanish architecture to define a purely local Puerto Rican architecture.[6]
Works
De Castro Besosa was the architect most involved in the development of the architecture of the Condado section of San Juan, and his works can be seen throughout the Condado area.[6] He also designed residential estates such as Castillo Serrallés (1926) and Residencia Jacobo Cabassa (1934), both in Ponce.[6][8] During the years between 1918 and 1936, De Castro Besosa designed over 160 residential projects, 35 apartment buildings, 16 theaters, plus several commercial buildings and civic clubs.[6][9] He also worked extensively in the Dominican Republic,[6] where he designed and built residential projects as well as the Centro de Recreo en Santiago de los Caballeros (the Santiago de los Caballeros Recreational Center).[10]
De Castro Besosa died when his small airplane crashed on 18 October 1936.[2][12] He was 41 years old.[10]
Legacy
Castillo Serrallés, designed by De Castro y Besosa, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[13] One of De Castro Besosa's four children, Pedro A. de Castro Gayá (b. 1919), also became a notable architect in Puerto Rico,[3][6] designing, among others, the Ponce YMCA Building.[14]
In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is de Castro and the second or maternal family name is Besosa.
References
^Enrique Vivori Farage. Alarife de Sueños/Architect of Dreams: Pedro Adolfo de Castro y Besosa. San Juan, Puerto Rico: Archivo de Arquitectura y Construccion de la Universidad de Puerto Rico (AACUPR). 1999. Page 9. ISBN0-9650094-0-8.
^ ab"Paisajes urbanos". Carmen Dolores Hernández. In, "1986-2006: Vigesimo Aniversario. Archivo de Arquitectura y Construcción de la Universidad de Puerto Rico (AACUPR)." Escuela de Arquitectura, Universidad de Puerto Rico. 2006. (Her review of the book: "Alarife de sueños / Architect of dreams: Pedro Adolfo de Castro y Besosa" by Enrique Vivoni Farage. San Juan: Archivo de Arquitectura y Construcción de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1999, 224pp.) Retrieved 17 July 2012.
^Enrique Vivori Farage. Alarife de Sueños/Architect of Dreams: Pedro Adolfo de Castro y Besosa. San Juan, Puerto Rico: Archivo de Arquitectura y Construccion de la Universidad de Puerto Rico (AACUPR). 1999. Page 103. ISBN0-9650094-0-8.
^Luis Muñoz Polanco. 1980. 7 July 1980. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form - Castillo de Serrallés. United States Department of the Interior. National Park Service. (Washington, D.C.) Section 8, Page 3. Listing Reference Number 80004494. 3 November 1980.