Italian architect
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This week David and Marina of FAME Architecture & Design are joined by Morris Adjmi, founder and principal of Morris Adjmi Architects. The three discussed Morris's childhood, architecture education and experiences; modern & historical architecture expressions; early career and working with Aldo Rossi; the Scholastic Building; Morris Adjmi office founding & operations; analog vs digital in architecture; and more. This episode is supported by Integrated Projects • Autodesk Forma & Autodesk Insight • Programa • Learn more about BQE CORE SUBSCRIBE • Apple Podcasts • YouTube • Spotify CONNECT • Website: www.secondstudiopod.com • Office • Instagram • Facebook • Call or text questions to 213-222-6950 SUPPORT Leave a review EPISODE CATEGORIES • Interviews: Interviews with industry leaders. • Project Companion: Informative talks for clients. • Fellow Designer: Tips for designers. • After Hours: Casual conversations about everyday life. • Design Reviews: Reviews of creative projects and buildings. The views, opinions, or beliefs expressed by Sponsee or Sponsee's guests on the Sponsored Podcast Episodes do not reflect the view, opinions, or beliefs of Sponsor.
As founder of his eponymous New York firm, visionary architect Morris Adjmi's work is deeply rooted in a respect for heritage while embracing innovation. With a career shaped by early experiences working alongside Pritzker Prize-winning architect Aldo Rossi, Adjmi developed a distinct approach that balances modern aesthetics anchored in a deep understanding of architectural and cultural history. His projects, spanning adaptive reuse to new construction, reflect a meticulous attention to detail. Take the recently opened Forth Atlanta, which is revitalizing the Georgia city's Old Fourth Ward with Adjmi's signature refined yet curated style. Adjmi's forthcoming projects—including the renovation of the Swan Hotel at Disney World in Orlando, Florida and the Four Seasons Hotel Charleston in South Carolina—maintain a dialogue between past and future to honor each city's identity while reimagining its possibilities.This episode is brought to you by American Leather. For more information, go to americanleather.com.Thank you for listening! For more of our great interviews, find us at hospitalitydesign.com.
Today we discuss the intersection of architecture and interior design, finding a common ground for both aspects to complement each other. Ian Mills and Becca Roderick, Executive Directors of Architecture and Interiors, respectively, at Morris Adjmi Architects. They delve into the concept of hospitality, the collaborative process within their firm, and how they align their visions to create contextually relevant and impactful projects. The conversation covers notable projects like the Wythe Hotel and The Forth, emphasizing how thoughtful design can redefine neighborhoods and meet client expectations. They also discuss the emergence of branded residences and the importance of client buy-in and strategic investment in design.Takeaways: Encourage regular collaboration and communication between the architecture and interior design teams to align on the project's North Star.Conduct thorough research on the location, history, and context of the project site to create designs that are both impactful and fitting with the surroundings.Prioritize elements that make guests feel cared for, regardless of the budget or exclusivity of the experience.Invest in high-quality design, as it can significantly enhance the financial performance of hospitality projects. Tightly manage budgets to ensure investments are spent judiciously and effectively.Be prepared for unexpected challenges, especially in adaptive reuse projects. Have mechanisms in place to manage and respond to these surprises.Keep clients informed and involved throughout the project's lifecycle to ensure continuous alignment and buy-in.Quote of the Show:“ We're bringing the same mentality and sort of rigor to every project because we think that every project can change the neighborhood that it's in.” - Ian Mills“ When you strip everything back and peel things away, hospitality is really about caring for people and fostering community.” - Becca RoderickLinks:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ian-mills-a77a1a19/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/becca-roderick-45405299/ Website: https://ma.com/ Shout Outs:0:48 - Four Seasons https://www.fourseasons.com/ 0:49 - St. Regis https://st-regis.marriott.com/ 0:54 - AvroKo https://www.avroko.com/ 0:55 - One Kings Lane https://www.onekingslane.com/ 9:09 - Wythe https://www.wythehotel.com/ 10:28 - The Goodtime https://www.thegoodtimehotel.com/ 10:43 - Forth Hotel https://forthatlanta.com/ 18:13 - Morris Adjmi https://www.linkedin.com/in/morris-adjmi-7295918/ 25:31 - The Founder's Dilemma 27:46 - Frank Gehry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Gehry 54:01 - Theory Building https://ma.com/theory-building.html 54:41 - 837 Washington https://ma.com/837-washington.html 56:36 - Scholastic Building https://ma.com/scholastic-building.html 56:42 - Aldo Rossi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldo_Rossi
In the latest episode of A is for Architecture,Dr. Cameron McEwan, Associate Professor of Architecture at Northumbria University discusses some few of the ideas behind his book, Analogical City (Punctum Books, 2024), including the relationship between architecture, urban form, and the ways we think about and design cities. Drawing on Aldo Rossi's concept of the analogical city, Cameron challenges us to rethink the role of history, memory and analogy in shaping the built environment. We discuss how cities transcend their functional role, particularly as it was conceptualised in postwar modernism, but are instead dynamic entities shaped by layers of meaning, history and collective memory and tradition. Reflecting on the ethical and emancipatory imperatives driving Rossi' vision, Cameron also reflects on how analogical thinking can help architects, urbanists, and scholars engage with contemporary urban challenges in new and creative ways.Cameron can be found at his workplacehere, and onX,LinkedIn andInstagram. The book is linked above.
Caruso St John Collected Works v.2
Listen to author and critic Erica Wagner in conversation with Harriet Constable, writer of “The Instrumentalist”, her first novel published by Bloomsbury in 2024, in which she retraces the story of musical prodigy Anna Maria della Pietà, student of Antonio Vivaldi. Through this conversation with Erica Wagner, Harriet Constable talks about her professional background as a journalist and filmmaker, her creative process and the importance of artistic solidarity in the journey of publishing a first novel. Together, they also discuss how narrating the untold stories of inspiring women is inseparable with both historical research and perseverance.As part of the Rendez-vous littéraires rue Cambon [Literary Rendezvous at Rue Cambon], the podcast "les Rencontres" highlights the birth of a writer in a series imagined by CHANEL and House ambassador and spokesperson Charlotte Casiraghi.© Harriet Constable 2024, 'The Instrumentalist', Bloomsbury Publishing PlcCopyright Guardian News & Media Ltd 2024The Rough Guide to Kenya by Richard Trillo © Rough Guide, 2024The Queen's Gambit by Walter Trevis © Walter Trevis, 1983. Published by Penguin RandomHouse USCopyright © Diogenes Verlag A G, Zurich, 1985 Translation Copyright © John E. Woods, 1986Maggie O'Farrell, Hamnet, Knopf, 2020Antonio Vivaldi, Le Quattro Stagioni, 1723-1725William Shakespeare, Hamlet, 1623Teatro La Fenice © Gian Antonio Selva, Aldo Rossi, Giovanni Battista Meduna, 1792© The New School
Listen to author and critic Erica Wagner in conversation with Harriet Constable, writer of “The Instrumentalist”, her first novel published by Bloomsbury in 2024, in which she retraces the story of musical prodigy Anna Maria della Pietà, student of Antonio Vivaldi. Through this conversation with Erica Wagner, Harriet Constable talks about her professional background as a journalist and filmmaker, her creative process and the importance of artistic solidarity in the journey of publishing a first novel. Together, they also discuss how narrating the untold stories of inspiring women is inseparable with both historical research and perseverance.As part of the Rendez-vous littéraires rue Cambon [Literary Rendezvous at Rue Cambon], the podcast "les Rencontres" highlights the birth of a writer in a series imagined by CHANEL and House ambassador and spokesperson Charlotte Casiraghi.© Harriet Constable 2024, 'The Instrumentalist', Bloomsbury Publishing PlcCopyright Guardian News & Media Ltd 2024The Rough Guide to Kenya by Richard Trillo © Rough Guide, 2024The Queen's Gambit by Walter Trevis © Walter Trevis, 1983. Published by Penguin RandomHouse USCopyright © Diogenes Verlag A G, Zurich, 1985 Translation Copyright © John E. Woods, 1986Maggie O'Farrell, Hamnet, Knopf, 2020Antonio Vivaldi, Le Quattro Stagioni, 1723-1725William Shakespeare, Hamlet, 1623Teatro La Fenice © Gian Antonio Selva, Aldo Rossi, Giovanni Battista Meduna, 1792© The New School
From The Architecture of the City 1982. Read by Kate Finning
Rendez-vous sur Instagram: @betyle__Email: betylepodcast@gmail.comBetyle est un podcast créé par Sophie Lambert, Carla Romano & Nicolas Cazenave de la Roche Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Aldo Rossi, in The Architecture of the City, describes the urban artefact as a permanence, “a past we are still experiencing.” Rossi proposes permanence's present two aspects: “they can be considered as propelling elements or as pathological ones: artefacts that enable us to understand our city in its totality, or artefacts that appear as a series of isolated elements that we can link only tenuously to an urban system.” Tune in to a discussion that focused on our built heritage and how it can be interlinked with urban design imperatives and opportunities. Are they appropriately interlinked? If not, why not? What might it be like to have these spheres more productively entangled? What policy and other changes in approach might better enable heritage to be integral to a vital and lived future within the context of a broader urban system? Join KTA and our panelists—Christine Phillips, Dan Hill & Felicity Watson—in conversation with compere extraordinaire Stuart Harrison. Curated by Kerstin Thompson Architects. KTA is the 2022 Urban Design winner for the Melbourne Awards, proudly supported by the Naomi Milgrom Foundation.
As the founder and principal of MA, Morris Adjmi, FAIA is dedicated to understanding the history and complex forces that shape cities to create buildings that are contextual but unmistakably contemporary. Adjmi's passion for contextual architecture was formed by the cast-iron French Quarter balconies and crumbling Creole cottages in his hometown of New Orleans and refined in New York and Milan during a 13-year collaboration with Pritzker Prize-winning architect, Aldo Rossi.Morris established MA in 1997 following his collaboration with Rossi, and on that strong foundation, built a multidisciplinary design practice known for its thoughtful engagement with history, distinct interpretation of industrial forms, and creative expression of innovative materials. The resulting work has become a favourite of both forward-thinking developers and history-minded preservationists. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Buon Lunedì e buon inizio settimana Amici del Sigillo! Oggi ho per voi un consiglio di lettura complesso ma non per questo meno affascinante e interessante: "Massoneria e Rosacroce" di Paolo Aldo Rossi. A domani! E non scordate di venire all'evento di sabato: "Meditare con i Tarocchi"!! Per dubbi o curiosità seguici sui nostri social: https://www.facebook.com/LibreriaEsotericailSigillo?locale=it_IT%2F https://www.instagram.com/libreriaesotericailsigillo/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC71ncDLmdQL9_Hyai2F-YRA Oppure acquista sul nostro sito www.libreriailsigillo.it La Libreria Esoterica il Sigillo è a Padova in via Beato Pellegrino 102 Esoterismo On Air è un podcast originale della Libreria Esoterica il Sigillo, la voce è di Fabio Todeschini --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/libreria-il-sigillo/message
Nabeel is the Chief Executive Officer of Pedesting and a Co-founder in the Pedesting Corporation. In 2017 the Senate recognized Nabeel for his contributions by awarding him The Senate 150th Anniversary Medal for his generosity, dedication and volunteerism in his hometown and community; in 2019 Nabeel was inducted by Avenue Magazine into the Calgary 40 Under 40 club for his accomplishments in his professional life as a proud Calgarian. Erin is the Chief Creative Officer of the Pedesting Corporation and is Co-Founder in the company, along with his business partner Nabeel Ramji. His passion for accessibility derives from his vocation as an architect and his years-long friendship with Nabeel who has used a wheelchair his entire life. Erin received his architecture degree from the University of Oregon and apprenticed in New York City with world-renowned architect Aldo Rossi for four years. He has more than 30 years' experience as an architect, working on projects spanning three continents. Erin spent a dozen years immersing himself in the study of urbanism but it was not until he crossed paths with Nabeel that he realized architecture, for some people, can be a confounding barrier. With Nabeel, Erin has created an approach to understanding the built environment that has the power to give all pedestrians a clear understanding of the urban landscape and how to navigate safely and quickly through the many man-made barriers. To Erin, the Pedesting app has the potential to help everyone partake in everything that our society has to offer: on the sidewalks, in the parks, at the universities and in the shops. Twitter: https://twitter.com/pedesting LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/company/pedesting Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pedesting Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Pedesting/ Website: https://pedesting.com/ Nabeel's Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/nabeelryyc Nabeel's LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/nramji My Life Without Limits is a podcast from Cerebral Palsy Alberta. Music from Soundstripe: Astro Jetson by Mikey Geiger https://app.soundstripe.com/royalty-free-music Follow us on Instagram @mylifewithoutlimitspodcast Support our podcast by buying us a coffee here: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/mlwlpodcast lison@cpalberta.com for any questions! We acknowledge that what we call Alberta is the traditional and ancestral territory of many peoples, presently subject to Treaties 6, 7, and 8. Namely: the Blackfoot Confederacy – Kainai, Piikani, and Siksika – the Cree, Dene, Saulteaux, Nakota Sioux, Stoney Nakoda, and the Tsuu T'ina Nation and the Métis People of Alberta. This includes the Métis Settlements and the Six Regions of the Métis Nation of Alberta within the historical Northwest Metis Homeland. We acknowledge the many First Nations, Métis and Inuit who have lived in and cared for these lands for generations. We are grateful for the traditional Knowledge Keepers and Elders who are still with us today and those who have gone before us. We make this acknowledgement as an act of reconciliation and gratitude to those whose territory we reside on or are visiting.
Il #Milan torna a vincere e sembra esser tornato il vecchio caro Milan che ha portato lo scudetto in via Aldo Rossi. Il gioco è ritrovato, così come Mike #Maignan e Zlatan #Ibrahimovic. Analizziamo con Carlo Pellegatti le parole di Massara, #Leao e Ibra sul rinnovo del portoghese Volete inviare la vostra domanda a Carlo per i prossimi episodi di Filo Rossonero? Trovate il box domande dal lunedì al giovedì, ogni mattina, nelle storie Instagram di Radio Rossonera.News Milan del giorno e tanto altro su RADIOROSSONERA.ITIbrahimovic-Ambrosini, il simpatico scambio di battute dopo Milan-AtalantaSala convoca i club: “Voglio chiarezza. Ok il Milan, ma l'Inter che fa?”Donadoni: “Ibra esempio di vita sportiva. Ieri il Milan poteva farne altri due o tre”Milan, la Svezia si schiera con i rossoneri esaltando il ritorno di IbraVisita il sito per tutte le NEWS aggiornate https://radiorossonera.it/Iscriviti al nostro canale Youtube per vedere tutte le live e contenuti extrahttps://www.youtube.com/c/RadioRossoneraSeguici anche su Twitchhttps://www.twitch.tv/radiorossoneraQuesto show fa parte del network Spreaker Prime. Se sei interessato a fare pubblicità in questo podcast, contattaci su https://www.spreaker.com/show/2355694/advertisement
Today our guest is John Veikos architect an architecture practice based in Athens, Greece. John Veikos is an architect. Educated at Cooper Union, Pratt and Cornell, John is the founder and director of Praxis Design Delivery, providing consulting to complex design projects, fabrication and façade designs, and a special projects director at Mossessian Architecture in London, UK, where John worked in projects in Shanghai, London, Doha and the UK among others. Also worked as Technical Coordinator for Raimund Abraham among other projects the Austrian Cultural Forum in New York, which is one of my favorite buildings. John has spent his career providing design and technical expertise in award winning architectural projects, and has associated his career with leading architects such as Aldo Rossi, I.M. Pei and others.
On this episode, Dr. Marc Herpfer and Dr. Aldo Rossi discuss Phylox from Amlan International, a natural, mineral-based product aimed at preventing coccidiosis and improving gut health in poultry. James Coday, Strategic Marketing Manager for agricultural chemicals company UPL stops by to share 2023 soybean strategies, including implementation of UPL's Preview 2.1 SC herbicide. On this week's installment of “The Dirt” with Nutrien, Senior Agronomist Mike Howell talks about soil sampling. In this week's “Meat Monitor” segment, we learn about growth for U.S. pork in Mexico. Jesse Allen takes a look at the week in the markets in this week's Market Talk report, and Ray Bohacz is talking vehicle locks and weatherstripping in this week's installment of “Bushels and Cents.” The episode also features the latest single from emerging country artist Brayden Ryle, “Deep, Deep South.” Timestamps Fastline Marketing Group advertisement: 0:00 Intro/news: 0:30 Goatlifeclothing.com advertisement: 6:38 Dr. Marc Herpfer and Dr. Aldo Rossi, Amlan International: 6:57 James Coday, UPL: 18:25 Mike Howell, Nutrien: 22:29 Soil Test Pro advertisement: 28:45 Gerardo Rodriguez, U.S. Meat Export Federation: 29:18 Jesse Allen, Market Talk: 32:30 Ray Bohacz, “Bushels and Cents”: 39:32 Brayden Ryle: 41:07
In this episode we talk to Valerie Mulvin. The podcast is part of the Temple Bar 30 Series, an ongoing recording project with members of Group 91. Back in the 1980s a group of young and eager architects began working together in a loose collective, anxious to make things happen in Dublin city. By 1991, this group formalised as Group 91 and contained among others, Shelley McNamra, Yvonne Farrell (Grafton Architects), John Tuomey and Sheila O Donnell, Mc Cullough Mulvin architects and McGarry NiEanaigh. Valerie was part of G91 with Niall McCullough, who died in 2022. As practitioners and writers in and of architecture, Niall and Valerie have published since very early in their career. The podcast begins then, with Valerie reflecting on how and why the desire to research, write and publish came from and how she and Niall sustained this across their entire career. Valerie has just published Approximate Formality: Morphology of Irish Towns to public and critical acclaim and she is now working to complete a book underway by Niall before his death. With a mood and tone of reflection and optimism, Valerie looks back at how she and Niall became involved in G91, and their early research and study trips, their meetings with Aldo Rossi and their first book A Lost Tradition, all of which fundamentally formed their lives in architecture. She reflects too on the impact and legacy of the Temple Bar project, on Dublin, culture, policy and their own individual practice. _ The music is by Sinead Finnegan and is played by The Delmaine String Quartet. The podcast was recorded live at Valerie's home in August 2022.
Zelensky e la moglie immortalati dalle foto patinate di Annie Leibovitz per Vogue sollevano polemiche… Ma quanto sono fondate? Giriamo la domanda a Roberto Mutti che di linguaggio di fotografia si occupa da sempre. Le guerre: vent'anni di conflitti raccontati in 250 foto da uno dei più autorevoli fotoreporter internazionali: Franco Pagetti. Il design di un architetto e progettista: Aldo Rossi, l'opinione di chi lo ha conosciuto bene, Fiorella Minervino. "CANTO CIVILE": Una collettiva celebra Pasolini alla Casa della Memoria di Milano "Frammenti di Paradiso. Giardini nel tempo" alla Reggia di Caserta
In questa edizione si parla di: la classifica dei musei; ‘Aldo Rossi' al Museo del Novecento, il museo dell'arte salvata; live al Medimex
Architect Morris Adjmi talks about Scholastic, Inc. building. The world headquarters of the educational publisher Scholastic Inc. provides new office and retail space in a ten-story building on the edge of SoHo. Designed in collaboration with Aldo Rossi, and posthumously completed, the Scholastic Building honors the architectural traditions of its landmarked SoHo neighborhood in a contemporary architectural vocabulary. The building's Broadway façade, in steel, terra-cotta and stone, takes its inspiration from the classical organization of the elegant 19th-century facades that line the street. A second façade, equal in scale and dimension, expresses a more utilitarian and industrial character of Mercer Street that it faces.
Treba búrať mestá a stavať ich nanovo? Architekt, ktorý sa postavil proti funkcionalizmu – Aldo Rossi – má výstavu v Bratislave. V budove Slovenského národného múzea na Vajanského nábreží v Bratislave si môžete pozrieť skice, maľby a dizajnérske návrhy slávneho talianskeho architekta Alda Rossiho, ktorý zmenil rozmýšľanie o architektúre. Navrhoval obytné budovy, cintoríny, pláže, múzeá či továrne – od Talianska, cez Berlín, Sovietsky zväz až po Japonsko a New York. Podcast Múzeum vyrába portál Aktuality.sk v spolupráci so Slovenským národným múzeom. Nahrával Peter Hanák.
I dati più recenti, spiega Giovanna Melandri, presidente della Fondazione Maxxi, ci dicono che durante la pandemia la spesa culturale in Italia è diminuita del 26%, una percentuale preoccupante e che anche se ci sono timidi segnali di risalita non c'è ancora una vera ripresa. Per questo più che in passato si deve investire sull'arte, sul cinema, sul teatro, sulla musica. La cultura come si sa è un grande volano per la ripresa economica. Anche le istituzioni culturali naturalmente devono fare la loro parte. Per quanto riguarda il Maxxi, sono moltissime le iniziative prese o realizzate in questi ultimi mesi: dall'apertura di una nuova sede all'Aquila, alla mostra “casa Balla”, che prevede anche la visita all'abitazione dove viveva l'artista con la sua famiglia, un luogo straordinario dove l'artista metteva in pratica le sue idee sull'arte, alla mostra sull'architetto Aldo Rossi, a quella su “Voci eroiche dalla ex Jugoslavia” che racconta la storia tragica e complessa di quell'area.
We speak to an architect involved in the repair of public schools in Beirut, cross to Helsinki to check out a new retail concept store, and visit a new Aldo Rossi exhibition in Rome.
ROBERTO BENIGNI LEGGERÀ LA DIVINA COMMEDIA AL QUIRINALEIl 25 marzo, giorno del Dantedì, Roberto Benigni leggerà un canto della Divina Commedia al Quirinale, alla presenza del presidente della Repubblica. È questo l'evento cardine per la giornata dedicata a Dante nell'anno del settecentenario dalla sua morte, che vedrà la realizzazione di oltre cento iniziative dedicate al Sommo poeta. “Benigni ha avuto la capacità di riempire le piazze leggendo Dante. È davvero simbolico che questo avvenga nel luogo più rappresentativo dell'unità d'Italia”, ha detto il ministro della Cultura, Dario Franceschini, annunciando l'appuntamento che verrà trasmesso in diretta dalla Rai.AL MAXXI GRANDE MOSTRA SU ALDO ROSSI, ARCHITETTO DELLE CITTÀTeorico della città, vincitore del Pritzker Prize, archistar ante litteram, Aldo Rossi è il protagonista di una grande mostra al Museo Maxxi, a Roma. Curata da Alberto Ferlenga, l'esposizione presenta oltre 800 tra disegni, schizzi, appunti, lettere, fotografie, modelli e documenti che testimoniano e ripercorrono il percorso di questo gigante dell'architettura. “Aldo Rossi è un punto di riferimento della storia dell'architettura italiana e internazionale, un maestro, una figura irripetibile che ha messo al centro la città e la sua ricostruzione”, ha detto Giovanna Melandri, presidente della Fondazione Maxxi.UFFIZI, OLTRE 100MILA FOLLOWER PER IL PRIMO ANNO SU FACEBOOKPrimo compleanno da oltre 100mila follower per il profilo Facebook delle Gallerie degli Uffizi. Il celebre museo, sbarcato sulla popolare piattaforma il 10 marzo scorso, all'indomani del lockdown, ha subito raccolto grande seguito con le serie di video ‘La mia sala' e ‘Uffizi on Air'. Non solo Facebook, per le Gallerie è stato l'anno del boom social, con in tutto 836.501 seguaci. In testa c'e' Instagram, con 615.085, quindi Facebook, poi Tik Tok, 70.615 in 8 mesi, e infine Twitter con 49.021 follower.AL VIA IL RESTAURO DEL ROSTRO DELLE EGADI INDIVIDUATO DA TUSAÈ partito il restauro dell'ultimo rostro recuperato dalla Soprintendenza del mare della Regione Siciliana sui fondali delle Egadi. Il via agli interventi è stato dato in occasione del secondo anniversario della scomparsa di Sebastiano Tusa, assessore e archeologo siciliano che aveva individuato nel 2018 il prezioso reperto a nord-ovest dell'isola di Levanzo. Classificato come ‘Rostro Egadi 17', il reperto rappresenta l'ennesima testimonianza della storica battaglia navale che pose fine alla prima guerra punica con la vittoria di Roma su Cartagine.
L'archetipo dell'orologio da polso recuperato dopo il successo degli orologi "di plastica".
La storia di Jacques Herzog e Pierre de Meuron ha inizio nel 1977, quando, due anni dopo la laurea presso l'ETH di Zurigo, i due aprono lo studio a Basilea, loro città natale. Jaques e Pierre, entrambi classe 1950, entrambi reduci delle lezioni di Aldo Rossi e Luigi Snozzi presso il Politecnico svizzero, inaugurano la loro attività all'alba di una transizione importante fra le correnti architettoniche che rivaleggiavano in quel momento, ed alle quali daranno una ulteriore sferzata a fine decennio.
"Le cimetière d'aujourd'hui peut être considéré comme une ville des morts, comme l'envers de la ville des vivants. C'est la grande leçon du Père Lachaise, cet ensemble urbain uniquement composé de monuments. Mais que reste-il du monde après la mort ? Celle de n'importe quel individu n'annonce-t-elle pas toujours, comme un spectre, celle de l'humanité entière ? Cette question oppose les architectes contemporains. Scarpa, Aldo Rossi ou Paola Chiarante répondent par la métaphysique, en affirmant une architecture éternelle et indépendante de toute existence humaine, à l'instar de la géométrie de Platon. Ainsi les cimetières de San Vito d'Altivole, de Modène ou la nécropole de Nice se proposent comme des constructions archétypales sortant du sol par césarienne : mastaba, cube ou terrasse en étoile... Tandis que d'autres, plus réalistes, tendent au contraire à mettre en scène une nature glorieuse reprenant ses droits bafoués par la pire espèce de parasites. C'est la leçon des pierres éparpillées dans la forêt de sapins du Cimetière des Bois de Gunnar Asplund à Stockholm, de la vallée de restanques creusées de tombes de Miralles et Pinós à Igualada en Catalogne ou des collines découpées par Marc Barani au-dessus de Roquebrune-Cap-Martin..." Richard Scoffier, architecte, philosophe, professeur des Écoles Nationales Supérieures d'architecture « Nécropoles» est le dernier acte de l'Université Populaire qui s'est tenue en 2018 au Pavillon de l'Arsenal et à l'occasion de laquelle Richard Scoffier propose à travers un cycle intitulé « Community reloaded » d'analyser les grandes édifications qui se présentent comme des « accumulateurs » et réaniment le sentiment de communion.
There is a strong tension between localism or place and the overwhelming forces of globalism. We might say that in addition to living in the information age, that we find ourselves in the age of mass scale. We see it in pop culture, mass media, globalizing economies, and even in expanding bureaucratic governments. There are certainly advantages that come with scaling up, including efficiency and tapping into previously unknown capabilities, but there are also cultural and social costs that come with orienting everything toward large scales. This becomes quite apparent when considering urbanism, architecture, and the ways in which we design our cities. And all the more tangible when examining the role storefronts play in our communities. In this episode, Jeffrey Howard speaks with Jaime Izurieta. A town planner and urban designer by training, Jaime is the founder of Storefront Mastery, a creative agency that brings beauty to local economic development. Put simply, Jaime helps local economies by creating the optimal setting for people to fall in love with their particular places. He advocates buying locally and designing cities around smaller nodes where he believes urban life actually happens, but he also acknowledges the fantastic power that larger scales can offer us. Now, how do we balance the advantages of mass scale with the unique benefits of having an eye toward the local? What is placemaking and why does fostering a sense of place matter so much? How will the pandemic change urban life? Show Notes Le Corbusier Léon Krier Discussing Le Corbusier The Architecture of Happiness by Alain de Botton (2006) “The Mental Disorders That Gave Us Modern Architecture” by Ann Sussman & Katie Chen (2017) Cognitive Architecture: Designing for How We Respond to the Built Environment by Ann Sussman & Justin B. Hollander (2014) Architecture: Choice or Fate by Léon Krier (2008) The Timeless Way of Building by Christopher Alexander (1979) The Architecture of the City by Aldo Rossi (1982) Storefront Mastery Storefront Mastery Playbook by Jaime Izurieta (2020) Storefront Design Guidebook by Jaime Izurieta (2020)
In this episode host Emmett Scanlon, talks to architecture critic Shane O' Toole. Back in the 1980s a group of young and eager architects began working together in a loose collective, anxious to make things happen in Dublin city. By 1991, this group formalised as Group 91 and contained among others, Shelley McNamra, Yvonne Farrell (Grafton Architects), John Tuomey and Sheila O Donnell, Mc Cullough Mulvin architects and McGarry NiEanaigh. As we approach the 30th anniversary of Group 91, the conversation begins with Shane recalling how he and he colleagues set it up and how they went about initiating and then winning the ground breaking and landmark design competition for Temple Bar in Dublin, a moment in our urban history, and, as one critic put it, that put Irish architecture finally on the public mind. Shane talks about how he was involved in the design and construction of the Ark, the cultural centre for children and the adjoining arch in Temple Bar as part of Group 91. The conversation moves to Shane's career as a critic for the Sunday Times, becoming a writer, hunting down the stories of Irish architects and his work as an advocate for Irish architecture in Europe and beyond. Music is by Rachael Lavelle. If you enjoy the podcast please rate it on iTunes. Shane O'Toole is an award-winning architectural critic and no longer practicing as an architect. A graduate in architecture from UCD and current Adjunct Associate Professor at the UCD School of Architecture, Planning & Environmental Policy. An honorary member of the AAI, he has served the profession as President of the AAI, Vice President of the RIAI, inaugural director of the Irish Architecture Foundation, Commissioner for the Venice Biennale and jury member of the Mies van der Rohe Award for contemporary European architecture. He co-founded DoCoMoMo International and DoCoMoMo Ireland, the heritage bodies, and is Chairman of the Irish Architectural Archive's Collections Development Committee. He was a founder member of Group 91 Architects. He reintroduced the Downes Medal as the AAI's premier award and established its annual international critic's lecture programme. He has co-edited monographs on Kevin Roche and Aldo Rossi, and curated exhibitions on Michael Scott, Liam McCormick and Noel Moffett, among others. He contributed to the pilot inventory of 20th-century architecture in Dublin. He wrote for The Sunday Times for ten years. A member of CICA, the International Committee of Architecture Critics, he was named International Building Press Architecture Writer of the Year in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Gandon also published a collection of his critical essays, 101 Hosannas for Architecture, in 2018.
Aldo Rossi founded his eponymous leather goods business in 2014 following a successful career as a photographer. We explore his upbringing in Paris, his time living in New York City, and his last 20 years living in the greater Los Angeles area of Topanga Canyon. We chat about assisting some of the most renowned photographers in the world and why he would begin producing products backed by the philosophy of buy less; buy better. Web Links: Aldo Rossi Bialetti Aldo Rossi (the Architect) Peter Lindbergh Bruce Weber Irving Penn Richard Avedon Epi Leather Horween Leather --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/standardhpodcast/support
ALDO ROSSI raccontato da Alberto Ferlenga
Maria Conen führt ihr Büro zusammen mit Raoul Sigl in Zürich. In dem Gespräch erzählt sie vom Weiterbauen bestehender Häuser, und von den Grundgedanken, die die Entwurfsprozesse von Conen Sigl prägen. "Was uns interessiert, ist doch das Architektur und das Raum-Schaffen etwas extrem Lustvolles und Gestalterisches ist. Und wir versuchen diese Freude in unserer Arbeit und unserer Lehre zu vermitteln."
Mais um da série de livros clássicos! Desta vez convidamos o professor Carlos Eduardo Ribeiro (@caduribeiro) para falarmos um pouco sobre a obra de Aldo Rossi, em especial o livro…Leia maisArquicast 040 – Livros Clássicos: A Arquitetura da Cidade
The second half of Aldo Rossi's career. We discuss his role on the ushering in of the age of po-mo, a few selected monstrosties, and do listener correspondance (one email – that's how easy it is to get read out).Music includes: ‘Β15’ and 'B16' from the album ‘ΝΕΑ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΚΟΚΚΑΛΑ’ by Kοκκαλα, from the Free Music Archive at freemusicarchive.org
Aldo Rossi’s strange and elegiac early buildings – from the tiny Monument to the Partisans, to the vast, unfinished cemetery at Modena – set him on a path toward the widespread fame and influence he would achieve during the 1980s. In many ways, his architectural vision seems to arrive already fully formed – the strange geometry, the stripped down, abstracted versions of familiar types. We explore these varied works, and how his ideas he was formulating about urban memory and history became works of architecture. Music: Chris Zabriskie 'Cylinder 4' and 'Cylinder 5' from the album 'Cylinders' at the Free Music Archive at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Chris_Zabriskie/2014010103336111/
A valiant attempt to understand Aldo Rossi's 1966 'L'Architettura della Citta', a book which both Luke & George have owned for years, but which neither have actually read until now (the pictures are nice, and the spine is an attractive orange colour). Aldo Rossi's celebrity began with this book, and a certain mythic image of him – gloomy, nostalgic, perverse – is widely recognised within architectural history. But what does the book actually say? We explore monuments, urban artifacts, fragments of the city, the persistence of time and memory; and the promise of a new 'science' of urban analysis. Music – 'Sleep Trance' and 'Ciro' both by Lee Rosevere from the albums 'Time-Lapse Volume 3: ASMR' and 'Farrago Zabriskie'... at the Free Music Archive http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Look at pictures on our Google+ page: https://plus.google.com/u/0/104384327113725304822
Fassino: necessità valutare proroga al blocco degli sfratti. Aldo Rossi, segretario nazionale del SUNIA, Avv. Fabio Pucci, Segretario generale U.P.P.I.
This lecture presents interpretations of how to deal with the past, which refers to both history and memory. The views of Aldo Rossi and Léon Krier are offered for debate, as well as the use of architecture in museums, memorials, and as a pneumonic.