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Eight years ago Grafton Architects won the competition to design the University's faculty building with conference and leisure
facilities, including a great hall and offices for professors and students. The architects saw the competition brief as an opportunity for the school
"to make a space at the scale of the city," seeing their building as "a large market hall or place of exchange." The image at left shows the northwest
corner of the large site, the "window to Milan" that "addresses the throbbing urban life" of the city by giving the city an outdoor public space and
a view of the subterranean foyer of the great hall, the project's indoor public space. |
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While the scale of the building and the treatment of its facades is surely grand, the articulation of the building's
masses and volumes, from the roof to the basement, is a complex and creative way of accommodating the various functions and making daylight an important
part of every space. These model views illustrate this clearly, how the section splits the research offices into "beams of space" that allow
sunlight to penetrate to deepest parts of the building. |
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The building is an assured composition that addresses its Milanese context both on a large scale and in terms of its
immediate urban and University surroundings. Its interior adroitly creates a sort of city within a city, with small-scale pieces rising from the block-size base.
What the design lacks in subtlety, it easily makes up for in formal and spatial creativity, though not for its own sake. The design and concept arise from
the site conditions and building functions, and it successfully negotiates these to create a 21st-century megastructure sensitive to both realms. |
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Universita Luigi Bocconi in Milan, Italy
by Grafton Architects |
2008.10.27 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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