|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Click
on images for larger views. [Google Earth link]
Included in a+t's Density
series, the urban plan by
Cino
Zucchi Architetti for the site of the former Junghans
industrial plant on Venice's Guidecca island exhibits the
obvious focus of those books, while also dealing with a historical
context in a sensitive manner, something the other projects
in those pages, particularly the urban plans, don't deal with
to such an extent.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Described by the architect in
the European
Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture in 2001 (for
which one building was a finalist) as "a sort of microsurgery
within the delicate body of the city," the mix of renovations
and new buildings creates new open spaces that create new
connections in the fabric, via alternately large and small
gestures. The five residential
buildings here consist of both new construction and renovations,
each named rather dryly as a letter at the beginning of the
alphabet. |
|
|
|
 |
|
Building
A2-A3 is the renovation of an existing industrial building.
Openings in the flat white facade are enlivened by operable
shutters and an apparent discrepancy between the new openings
and the old building behind. Building
B is a reconstruction and extension of a small structure
in brick; the tapered section and double-height openings give
it a contemporary expression that separates it from its neighbors.
The new D building (which
was finalist for the Mies van der Rohe Award) uses surface
treatment to enhance the pretty regular openings, while its
massing creates new paths
that connect to the canal.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Building
E1 sits directly adjacent to a new canal created for in
the masterplan. The new building presents a white face to
the canal but a facade of alternating
colors to the street behind. Lastly the twin G1-G2
buildings sit in an L-shaped relationship to create a
common garden for residents.
This last piece is where the vertical circulation is found,
and this may inadvertently illustrate the key to the whole
project: horizontal (pedestrian) circulation structures the
larger plan while vertical (internal) circulation helps determine
each building's form and expression. It might seem simplistic,
but the consideration of the spaces in between buildings and
the celebration of movement within a building are certainly
strong lessons to embrace. |
| |
|
|
Junghans Residential Buildings in Venice,
Italy by Cino
Zucchi Architetti |
2008.04.14 |
|
| |
|
Click
on images below for larger views.
|
| |
|
|