Metropol Parasol is a wooden framework situated at La Encarnación square, in the old one fourth of Seville, Spain. Developed by In german designer Jürgen Mayer-Hermann, the framework appears like a grove of premade wooden plants soaring 26 meters into the air. It has size of 150 by 70 meters and statements to be the biggest wooden framework on the globe. The building is popularly known as Las Setas de la Encarnación (Incarnación's mushrooms).
The Metropol Parasol actually is a system for revitalising the Plaza de la Encarnación, which was used as a vehicle car park for years and seen as a deceased identify between more well-known holiday locations in the town. The framework includes six parasols by means of massive mushrooms, whose style is motivated by the containers of the Church of Seville and the ficus trees in close by Plaza de Cristo de Burgos. The Parasol contains a market, shops, and a podium for concerts and events. In the underground room is an Antiquarium, where Roman and Moorish continues to be found on-site are shown in a art gallery. On the ceiling there is an open-air public plaza, tinted by the wooden parasols above and intended for public activities. There are spectacular balconies, along with a restaurant, providing one of the best opinions of the town center.