Many of the landscapes that surround us today have a clear industrial descent. In fact, it is difficult to find among the spaces in which we move every day, places that have remained outside the industrial processes of the last two centuries.
The definition of these industrial landscapes does not respond, in most cases, to a conscious design or a pre-established logic, but rather they are the result of a process in which necessity, contingency or chance have determined their design.
Also, this concept of industrial landscape is not linked to a static concept, but dynamic. The obsolescence of procedures and machinery, as well as technological advances, continually forces us to replace elements or structures with others that respond to new functional and productive needs.
That is why we must understand these landscapes in a constant evolution, where elements belonging to different historical moments overlap. Thus, dams and electricity producing plants have become fields occupied by wind generators or covered with solar panels, and like this there are many other examples.