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This book narrates the complete detailed history of the New Rome
Convention centre in Rome and its construction through numerous and
evocative images of the work site showing the complexity of the
construction stages and the special techniques that were necessary.
There are photos of the completed building, by internationally
renowned photographers and an essay by Joseph Giovannini, and is
completed with very rich iconographic material composed of
technical drawings on various scales, and sketches by the
Massimiliano Fuksas, author of the work together with Doriana
Fuksas. The NUVOLA (NEW CONVENTION CENTRE) is a work of outstanding
artistic merit, featuring innovative logistics solutions, and a
choice of technically advanced materials. The structure rises in
the historic EUR quarter and covers a surface of 55,000 square
metres. The project concept can be defined in three images: the
Theca, the Nuvola, and the Lama of the hotel structure. The Theca
[display case] is the enclosing structure in steel and double glass
facades that encases the Nuvola [cloud], the true core of the
project, enclosed inside the Display Case box underlining the
contrast between the organisation of free space without rules, and
a geometrically defined form. The Nuvola contains an auditorium
with seating for 1850, cafés and snack bars, and support services
for the auditorium. This highly flexible complex is able to house
congresses, exhibitions, and events with a seating capacity of
almost 9,000 people. The book has been published on various types
of paper and differently sized sheets which are inserted within the
pages. Studio Fuksas, directed by Massimiliano and Doriana, is one
of the most famous international architectural firms in the world.
Over the past 40 years, the firm has developed an innovative
approach through a surprising variety of projects all over the
world and and has been awarded numerous international prizes.
The juxtapositions of Zaha Hadid's architectural models and
drawings and Judith Turner's photographs of the architect's
buildings in this volume reveal that Hadid and Turner are
complicit. There is a clear agreement of sensibilities. Each
understands the other. Hadid does not design with complete
geometries in stable con-figurations, but designs instead with
incomplete or distorted geometries that are dynamic and visually
unstable. Turner does the same in her photographs, cropping before
a form completes itself in a frame that leaves the rest of the form
suggested outside the frame. Hadid's work is abstract a permutation
of Modernism's trifecta of point, line and plane. Turner's
photography, too, is abstract so that Turner's photographs of
Hadid's buildings compound the abstraction, arguably intensifying
the three-dimension-al abstraction by compressing it into two.
Hadid's neutral palette of materials, especially concrete, takes on
value in Turner's graphic compositions of black, white and gray,
counterintuitively giving neutrality subtle intensity. Hadid
structures her designs dynamically with diagonal lines and oblique
planes playing with and against each other in three-dimensional
fields. Likewise Turner works on the diagonal, always positioning
herself obliquely to buildings, shooting glancingly rather than
frontally: her diagonal position further dynamizes Hadid's already
energized diagonals. Often Turner doubles down on the diagonality
by cranking the camera's lens off its up-down axis to heighten the
architectural dynamism. Turning her photographic angle lofts
Hadid's already anti-gravitational architectural system off the
ground. Judith Turner resides in New York where she began taking
photographs in 1972. She has had solo exhibitions in various cities
in the United States, Europe, South America, Israel, and Japan.
Turner has been awarded several grants and fellowships. She
received an Honor Award from The American Institute of Architects
in 1994 and a Stars of Design Award in Photography from The Design
Center of New York in 2007.
The selection, preparation and application of materials in
architecture represent key decisions in the design process, today
as in the past. This book features projects by Archea Associati, a
firm of architects and designers founded in Florence in 1988, that
demonstrate how materials can be used in innovative ways, while
still honouring their traditional characteristics. Glass,
terracotta, concrete and wood are just a few of the elements they
work with. Examples of ancient and contemporary materials are
featured throughout this well-illustrated volume. A gallery of
photographic images accompanied by drawings and descriptive texts
illustrate each building, alternating between details and general
views, from the basic elements to the complete work as a whole.
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