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Living Lab e Incontri Business to Business in occasione di Lingotto Fiere
4 / 5 giugno 2012 Per maggiori informazioni: www.nutrirsidipaesaggio.it |
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Tour nazionale di 10 convegni e laboratori b2b sul tema della riqualificazione del patrimonio costruito dal titolo: Riqualificazione Immobiliare, Recupero Edilizio, Efficienza Energetica del Patrimonio Costruito Per maggiori informazioni
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DNA in Tour
Programma convegni 2012 |
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Nel corso del 2012 DNA.italia e Sinergie Moderne Network con il patrocinio di Assorestauro, organizzano in partnership un tour nazionale di 10 convegni e laboratori b2b sul tema della riqualificazione del patrimonio costruito dal titolo: Riqualificazione Immobiliare,
Recupero Edilizio, Risparmio Energetico per il Patrimonio Costruito L’iniziativa fa parte del calendario strategico di DNA.italia, che metterà in questo modo a confronto diretto aziende, professionisti e istituzioni, in attesa del prossimo appuntamento fieristico vero e proprio programmato per la primavera del 2013. Tutti gli incontri sono sempre organizzati in collaborazione con gli Ordini Professionali (Architetti, Ingegneri, Geometri), le sedi regionali dell’ANCE, gli uffici tecnici della P.A., le Camere di Commercio locali. |
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The renovation scheme for the old Faema factory industrial area in Via Ventura involves a group of warehouses and buildings covering a surface area of 20,000 sq m. Begun in 2000, the aim of the project was to breathe life back into an obsolete factory by making it part of the quarter and giving it back to the people. The architecture is adapted to a series of different functions. The outlines of the original space have been kept, but dissected and removing parts to introduce light, air and green areas to the new spaces. Terraces, patios and courtyards offer new uses, while former industrial sites become new areas for housing. Architect Aldo Cibic redesigned three warehouses that now house the publishing company “Abitare”, who were the first to move to the refurbished quarter in 2002. Since then, a new area has sprung up around it. Mariano Pichler transferred his studio-gallery here, while on the upper floors lofts were being made ready for journalists and advertising companies. Then came architects Mutti and Albanese. In 2003 gallery owner Massimo De Carlo joined them, taking over a whole warehouse. A year later, a new occupant: inhabiting the top floor (on the east side) was the Scuola Politecnica di Design, which alone brings Lambrate an average of two hundred young people daily, piercing in their mouths and Italian dictionaries in their pockets. Last but not least to make its appearance a branch of the Triennale bookshop, specialising in graphics and design. Also on the site are residential areas, shops and a location for events.
The aim was to be experimental while conserving the pre-existing structure. Various industrial components have been divested of their original use: corrugated fibre cement for the new roofing; polycarbonate plastic for the light-filled reception area, the greenhouses and stairwells; slender strips of galvanised iron for the technical areas; derolled/unrolled multilayer wooden panels for the facing of the front; double panes of U glass to close off the divided areas; railway sleepers, no longer in use, lain on the ground as speed bumps.
