ANTONI PARIETTI AND PUIG MAJOR FUNICULAR RAILWAY
The concept that most people have nowadays of nature conservation is not the same as that of our grandparents. Demographic pressure on the island has made man responsible for distorting and altering the landscape. In the early 20th century, when the population was much lower and there were hardly any motor vehicles, Mallorca was totally unspoilt, with excellent prospects as a high-quality tourist destination, providing that better access was ensured to natural spaces that we today try to protect.
The Serra de Tramuntana is a traditionally less accessible natural space, hence its better state of conservation. Having said that, in the first half of the 20th century, projects were often conceived to improve access to the Serra de Tramuntana for tourism purposes. They can be attributed to a different kind of mentality and they transformed the landscape in a way that would no doubt be inconceivable today, although they also brought Mallorcans and tourists into closer contact with certain places that would otherwise be impossible to reach.

View down the road, with the peak. On the right, Pa de Figa de Son Torrella © Photo: Gabriel Lacomba
One of the most tenacious figures in striving to improve access to the Serra de Tramuntana was engineer Antoni Parietti Coll
One of the most tenacious figures in striving to improve access to the Serra de Tramuntana was engineer Antoni Parietti Coll (Palma, 1899-1979). Parietti was the head of the Provincial Government's Engineering and Roads Department, as well as being the chairman of Foment del Turisme, an organization for the promotion of tourism. As part of the Local Roads Plan, aimed at adapting existing roads for use by motor vehicles, he personally supervised two major public works projects in the Serra de Tramuntana: the 1925 road between Port de Pollença and Formentor, which allowed Adan Diehl to build his famous hotel there, and the 1933 road to Sa Calobra. Both were built for tourism purposes, not to unite existing towns and villages but to offer visitors access to two unique spots that have become famous precisely because of these roads. With our more protectionist mentality, the plan to build them would most likely be impossible now. We must also remember that, without them, Sa Calobra and Formentor would not be the two big tourist attractions that they are today. Isn't that a paradox?
Antoni Parietti's real dream was nonetheless a completely different project: to improve access to Puig Major by creating a funicular railway that would link Cals Reis, where the Sa Calobra road begins, to a point close to the summit at an altitude of 1,400 metres. The aim was to build an astronomical observatory on Puig Major, facilities for snow sports, and a restaurant. The project was presented at the Teatre Principal in 1934, arousing substantial popular support, after permission had been granted by the Ministry of Public Works. In June 1936, work began on the bottom platform at Cals Reis, although it was interrupted one month later when the Spanish Civil War broke out.
Parietti did not give up and in 1939 he tried to restart the project with the German firm Bleichord-Zueg, a collaborative relationship that was interrupted by the Second World War. In the 1950s, he managed to get permission to build a toll road but, under the 1953 treaty between the Franco Government and the United States on military bases in Spain, the top of Puig Major was converted into an American radar base, going on to become jointly run in 1963. The Spanish Air Force took advantage of Parietti's project to build the existing road up to the military installations.
To install radars on Puig Major, the mountain was lowered by 5 metres and the two domes that protect the radars were built, replaced in 2005 by just one, which Mallorcans and visitors can see on the highest tip of the Serra de Tramuntana.
Today, under an agreement between the Government of the Balearic Islands and the Spanish Ministry of Defence, the restricted area with the military installations has been transformed into a botanical observatory for the conservation of the Serra de Tramuntana's most unique species, some of which are endemic. The project to build a funicular railway is a symbol of another time and a very different mentality.



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