The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) is a United Nations regional commission whose main headquarters was built in Santiago in 1966. In order to understand the significance of the ECLAC building within the history of modern architecture in Chile, it is essential to examine the context in which it emerged.
In the early decades of the twentieth century, under the influence of broad social, political, and economic transformations, modernity began to establish itself in Chile as the symbol of a new developing society (Aguirre, 2008). The production of new technologies associated with industrial processes expanded the architectural horizon, inaugurating a new era of experimentation and innovation in the local discipline.