Centro Cultural de los Ejércitos

The first floor has a balcony with a wrought-iron guard rail and access is through a segmental arch with decorated tympana that disappear on the side to adapt to the greater height of the dining room.

The third floor on the side of Calle del Clavel enjoys a double height space to accommodate the library, and it is crowned by semicircular arches with large shields on the keystones, which transform the cornice into a crenellated meander.

[3] The arched door at the entrance is protected by a large awning framed in wrought-iron, a balustrade balcony on top of the main floor flanked by two double-height columns with Corinthian[citation needed] capitals that support a second balcony on the third floor, and a finishing tower surmounted by a slate-clad vaulted roof.

This vertical ensemble acts as an axis of composition where symmetry is deliberately renounced, but where each element finds in response another similar but not identical component on the other side of the rounded corner.

The construction obtained the first honorable mention at the City Council awards for the best-built properties in 1916, and the architect, Eduardo Sánchez Eznarriaga, received a cooperation diploma.