Arcipelago Italia. Northern and Central Apennines

Regeneration and renovation projects, weak infrastructures and micro-interventions. The route of “Arcipelago Italia” continues in the internal areas of central Italy.

From the junction at Colle di Cadibona by Savona in Liguria, our itinerary splits in two. One route travels east along the Alps; the other takes a sharp right down the Apennines to Bocca Trabaria by Pesaro and Urbino. This is where architecture attempts to mend its broken relation to nature and assuage the overload of infrastructure: large-scale “slow-speed” initiatives such as in the Val di Sette valley, where municipalities subscribed to a regional plan of cultural and environmental reinstatement, and in Massarosa, where a one-kilometre lakeside walk-and-cycle path was built.

Img.1 Microscape, Shared walk-cycle path “Fior di Loto”, Massarosa, Italy, 2015. Photo © Pietro Savorelli
Img.2 MiR_Architettura, Piazza De Gasperi, Bagnoregio, Italy, 2017. Photo © Moreno Maggi
Img.3 RPBW, Children’s Hospice, Bologna, ongoing. © RPBW, rendering Cristiano Zaccaria
Img.4 Mario Cucinella Architects, Multifunctional centre for art and culture, Bondeno, 2017. Photo © Daniele Domenicali
Img.5 Mario Cucinella Architects, Multifunctional centre for art and culture, Bondeno, 2017. Photo © Daniele Domenicali
Img.6 Carlo Ratti Associati, The Learning Garden, Lavezzo, Italy, 2014. Photo © Daniele Iodice
Img.7 AAA Office, Public space refurbishment, Compiano, Italy, 2017. Photo © Luca Mantovani
Img.8 Laboratorio Permanente, Il Giardino Coperto Kindergarten, Correggio, 2013. Photo © Luca Santiago Mora
Img.9 Laboratorio Permanente, Il Giardino Coperto Kindergarten, Correggio, 2013. Photo © Luca Santiago Mora
Img.10 Reggio Children, Educational centre “Di Onda in Onda”, Ventasso, Italy. Photo © Atelier Di Onda in Onda
Img.11 Marco Ferreri, Sustainable hamlet, Coli, Italy, ongoing. Photo © Max Rommel
Img.12 Mario Cucinella, Casa della Musica, Pieve di Cento, Italy, 2017. Photo © Moreno Maggi
Img.13 Ciclostile Architettura, “Bassa Velocità” initiative, Val di Setta, Italy, 2017
Img.14 Alvisi Kirimoto + Partners, Cantina Podernuovo, San Casciano dei Bagni, Italy, 2013. Photo © Fernando Guerra
Img.15 Spazi Consonanti, Scattered museum of the land and the local olive cultivar, Seggiano, 2018
Img.16 Lorena Alessio Associati, H.E.L.P 6.5, Accupoli, temporary civic centre, 2018. Photo © Giorgio Gulmini
Img.17 Thomas Herzog Architekten, 2068: pedestrian bridge over the Esino River, Rosora, 2017. Photo © Verena Herzog
Img.18 Cimini Architettura, Padiglione della Transumanza,Frisa, 2015. Photo © Sergio Camplone
Img.19 Andrea Dragoni Architetto, Cemetery extension, Gubbio, 2011. Photo © Massimo Marini
Img.20 Andrea Dragoni Architetto, Cemetery extension, Gubbio, 2011. Photo © Alessandra Chemollo
Img.21 Nazzareno Petrini, La Fornace eFFeMMe 23 library, Maiolati Spontini, 2007. Photo © Paolo Semprucci
Img.22 Nazzareno Petrini, La Fornace eFFeMMe 23 library, Maiolati Spontini, 2007. Photo © Paolo Semprucci
Img.23 Burnazzi Feltrin Architetti, Civic centre for young and old, Poggio Picenze, Italy, 2015. Photo © Carlo Baroni
Img.24 Burnazzi Feltrin Architetti, Civic centre for young and old, Poggio Picenze, Italy, 2015. Photo © Carlo Baroni
Img.25 Enzo Eusebi + partners, Opificio Sal.Pi Uno, Preci, 2015. Photo © Pietro Savorelli
Img.26 Idea+, CasermArcheologica, Sansepolcro, Italy, 2017. Photo © Sissi Cesira Roselli, Casa Nera
Img.27 Tier Studio, La casa nera, Urbania, 2012. Photos © Fabio Mantovani
Img.28 Amanzio Farris, Ruins with a view, Rocca Canterano, 2015. Photo Amanzio Farris
Img.29 Amanzio Farris, Ruins with a view, Rocca Canterano, 2015. Photo Amanzio Farris

Others represent small-scale alterations of public space such as in the village of Compiano, where one castle tower has become a terrace, and in Bagnoregio, where two levels of the town were joined handsomely. Reacting to natural destruction, some designs are measured responses to earthquakes (see The Learning Garden school). There are novel combinations of old and new, like a science-education centre in a former hydropower plant (Ligonchio) or a museum about the olivastra, a local olive cultivar in Seggiano. The Cantina Podernuovo winery is one with its surroundings; Il Giardino Coperto is a bright and cheery kindergarten. As we continue our way down, the Central Apennines show us La Casa Nera, a dialogue with the landscape. In Sansepolcro, a former barracks for Carabinieri is in use for quite opposite purposes.
In Gubbio, the extension of a cemetery finally includes settings conducive to thinking, just as the footbridge over the Esino River offers a spot for contemplation in the middle of a thoroughfare. The former brick-firing complex in Maiolati Spontini is now a library and meeting place. Nearing the Sibillini Mountains, a meat-curing factory was born from intimate communion with the site. Architectural projects in Poggio Picenze and Accumoli are more efforts to mend seismic damage. Last but not least, the Padiglione della Transumanza pavilion is a rediscovery of old drove roads used by herders and their sheep.

This article is part of “Arcipelago Italia” , a supplement dedicated to the Italian Pavilion, attached to Domus 1025, June 2018.

  • Arcipelago Italia
  • Mario Cucinella
  • Italy
  • until 26 November 2018
  • Arsenale della Biennale di Venezia
  • Campiello Tana 2169/F, Venice