Architecture portfolio 2020

Page 1

Beatrice Armano ARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO

2020

1


Index Curriculum vitae

3

Upwell

4-7

Carpenteria

9-13

sLOwCANDA

14-17

TerniLAB

18-21

2


B E AT R I C E A R M A N O

Date of birth 15/05/1997

Profile

Current domicile Torino (IT)

I have always been fascinated by the world of art and my love for photography has contributed to the development of a critical and analytical observation of the world. My personal way of looking is especially influenced by contrasts and harmonies, which are the first things that catch my eye when I walk around. The curiosity towards things and phenomena that surround me was fed by my passion for travelling that allowed me to face multiple realities different from mine. I am really interested in the way architecture could have a positive social impact on the society we live in.

Language skills

Education

Italian Mothertongue

MSc program in Architecture for Sustainability Design Politecnico di Torino 09/2019-ongoing

E-mail armanobeatrice@gmail.com Phone +39 3283845518

English B2 level (FCE) French B2 level

Erasmus mobility MSc Architecture Kungliga Tekniska hรถgskolan 08/2020-01/2021

Spanish B1 level

BSc degree program in Architecture Politecnico di Torino 10/2016-07/2019

Software skills

Experience

Autodesk AutoCAD

Part time collaborator for the educational activity Politecnico di Torino

Adobe Illustrator

03/2019-06/2019 Architectural Drawing and Survey Laboratory, prof. Mauro Luca De Bernardi

Adobe Photoshop Adobe InDesign Adobe Lightroom SketchUp Photoscan Office Suite

10/2019-01/2020 History of early modern architecture, prof. Silvia Beatramo Free-lance photographer Interior design photography Amateur photographer Architecture and landscape photography

3


Upwell No Home. Turin Atelier Urban design C AY 2019/20 Teachers: Angelo Sampieri (Urban Planning) Silvia Crivello (Urban Sociology) Team work

This linear space north of the FIAT complex, the huge industrial area in the southern area of Turin, was born and it expanded as a part of the “public city” in support of the FIAT. With the dismantling of the most of the industrial activities from Torino, the “public city” does not fade with it, but it reinvent and strenghten itself, updating itself at the rythm of the changes that involve our society. The project of this “new” part of the city is oriented towards an increase in the quality and quantity of the living spaces, services, activities and environments that could positively influence locals and city users. It is the city of inclusion, which is welcoming and inviting towards the most fragile subjects. In its spaces, the integration process takes place through

the home, the workspace, the education and the social space. The “new” public city is the space where new ways of working, both individual and collective are experimented. Collective work is promoted inside spaces where people whose coming from different experiences and cultures can share knowledge and practical skills. What further aims to contribute to an improvement of the quality of life is the removal of the cars from the area, in favor of an expansion of the park inside the courtyards, which are rethinked and transformed from private spaces to a more public understanding. In this way the environmental quality is boosted, giving to the city users the chance to establish a more direct connection with nature. Turin southern area

university school culture healthcare religion public dormitory public housing temporary housing city centre public parks and gardens main urban routes bus/tram lines project metro 2 (underground) project metro 2 (outside) railway

4


Project // urban scale

Change in the current viability restricted traffic area pedestrian street

parking lot/ car sharing

Removal of fencing and parking lots removed fencing

Expansion the the existing park

removed parking lots

multi-storey car park

Project // Architectural scale

Rethinking the ground floor of the existing buildings

Densification and raising of the exising buildings

Extension of the living space

Masterplan 5


Scarsellini housing complex / current state

The existing public housing dwellings are characterised by an energetic inefficiency and the presence of architectonical barriers. The apartments are small and the natural light and ventilation mediocre. Realities as a social cohabitation are starting to taking care and give new life of the whole complex and its inhabitants.

Masterplan detail /ground level plan

The ground floor of each building is emptied of its residential function and it becomes a flexible, versatile space that can be easily rearranged according to the users’ needs. They are mainly thought as spaces for workshop and coworking, healthcare assistance, community gathering and shared activities. The new permeability of these spaces makes them a sort of extension of the public space of the courtyard.

Ground floor plan // open space design 6


Masterplan detail /The extented aparments and the new dwellings

The ground floor of each building is emptied of its residential function and it becomes a flexible, versatile space that can be easily rearranged according to the users’ needs. They are mainly thought as spaces for workshop and coworking, healthcare assistance, community gathering and shared activities. The new permeability of these spaces makes them a sort of extension of the public space of the courtyard.

Dwellings extension 7


Carpenteria Alagna Valsesia resort Atelier “ The architectural sustainable design D ” AY 2019/20 Teachers: Antonio De Rossi (Architectural and urban design ), Anna Pellegrino (Building physics ), Orio De Paoli (Environmental Technological Design) Team work

Kreas is a site in the western italian Alps that was exploited until the half of 20th century for its gold mines. After the collapse of the mining company, the site was abandoned and then almost totally destroyed by a landslide. The aim of the project is to give a new life to this place positioned in the middle of two very steep slopes. Thinking of new kinds of slow tourism that are developing a lot in the last years, a small hotel is designed in this place which is felt as ethereal and harsh at the same time. The concept is based on three simple volumes recalling the geometry and orientation of the “Fabbrica di San Lorenzo”, an old building of the 18th century that is the only survivor of the mining complex called “the neighboorhood of gold” that once occupied the site. The three buildings are placed following the terrain topography and they are slightly staggered in order not to shade on each other. The new volumes also follow an aligment with the preexisting stone walls that defined the edges of the mining complex. Two glazed corridors connect the buildings at different levels, working at the same time as spaces of contemplation of the surrouding landscape. The positioning of the three building gives rise to different open spaces that, in spring and summer, could be an extesion of the interior space. Site topography

Fabbrica di Sal Lorenzo

Sunlight exposure 21/12

Sunlight exposure 21/06 21 dicembre ore 12

21 dicembre ore 9

21 dicembre ore 12

9 am

9 am

21 dicembre ore 17

21 giugno ore

21 dicembre ore 9

12

21 giugno ore 9

21 dicembre ore 17

21 dicembre ore 12 21 dicembre ore 12

12 am

21 dicembre ore 9

21 dicembre ore 17

21 dicembre ore 17 21 dicembre ore 17 21 giugno ore 17

21 giugno ore 9 21 giugno ore 9

21 giugno ore 9 21 giugno ore 12

21 giugno ore 17

21 giugno ore 12

5 pm

8

12 am

21 dicembre ore 9

21 giugno ore 9

ore 17

re 12

21 dicembre or

21 dicembre ore 9

21 dicembre ore 12

5 pm 21 giugno ore 12

21 giugno ore 17

21 giugno ore


SCHEMI PROGETTUALI CONCEPT

vallo

rudere

controterr

a

muro

muro

SCHEMI PROGETTUALI

Pre-existence

Stato di fatto

Allineam

vallo

rudere

controterra

muro

muro

Stato di fatto

SCHEMI PROGETTUALI

Alignment Allineamenti of the three new blocks with the ruins

Corridoi

vallo

rudere

controterr

a

muro

muro

Internal conection SCHEMI PROGETTUALIStato di fatto

Allineamenti

Corridoi

Viste

Rapporto tra l’e spazi interni ape

vallo

rudere

controterr

a

muro

muro

Stato di fatto

Allineamenti

Corridoi

Relation Rapportobetween tra l’esternothe e glipublic spazi interni aperti al pubblico spaces (inside/outside) Viste

Site plan

Ruins

A 11 metres

of the Fabbrica di San Lorenzo. Some of the machinery for the gold cleansing is still inside. The municipality wants the buliding to become an eco-museum

high wall has to be built in order to prevent the site from the landslide

Ruins of the walls of the mining complex. The three walls are a strong mark on the site

Viste

The river Sesia here is still a stream

9


R O O M S 360 m2

C A M E R E 3 6 0 m q

BENESSERE 1 4 5 m q

DISTRIBUZIONE

1

2

0

m

q

SHARED SPACES 200 m2 Hall Common livings

second floor SPAZIPUBBLICI 3 0 1 m q

SPAZICOMUNI 2 0 0 m q

S E R V I Z I 8 4 m q

WELLBEING 145 m2

PUBLIC SPACES 301 m2 restaurant cafe museum shop

B L O C C O A

B L O C C O B

B L O C C O C

SERVICES 84 m2 DISTRIBUTION

120 m2

ROOMS

first floor

small

duplex

ground floor

10

suite


11


12


BUILDING APPROACH

Duplex room

The choice of a dry construction, more specifically a steel structure, is given by the ambition of making a reversible structure, which could be ideally dismantled as it was built. An environmental sustainability approach is showed by the choice of using a local larch wood as a cladding material. Due to the topography, which determines a limited amount of time where the site can get good sun exposure, expecially on winter, the south facing facades were the ones where most of the big windows were designed, in order to let as much natural light as possible to get inside the building.

13


sLOwCANDA A resting place for the slow travellers Atelier “Compatibility and sustainability of architectural restoration A” AY 2019/20 Teachers: Carla Bartolozzi (Restoration), Marco Roggero (New technologies for survey and drawing) Team work

Stupinigi’s Palazzina di Caccia was thought and designed by the architect Filippo Juvarra together with a quasi symmetrical system of farmsteads. The whole system is called Stupinigi’s Concentrico. Together with a natural park of 1611 ha -which once was a royal hunting ground and now it is mainly dedicated to agriculture- extended all around the architectural complex. it is part of the Residences of the Royal House of Savoy system, which was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Sites list in 1997.

LOCANDA CASTELVECCHIO The Locanda was built in 1793 by the architect Tommaso Prunotto. Originally the building function was to host the gardeners and officials who were working at the Stupinigi Royal Residence. From the beginning until the end of 20th century it became an small inn and restaurant. It is a c-shaped building with a big garden that was a orchard until the beginning of the 19th century. Nowadays the building is in a state of abandon, needing some restoration work both on the interiors and on the facades. 14


SLOW TOURISM IN PIEDMONT

SLOW TOURISM IN STUPINIGI NATURAL PARK

sLOwCANDA: PROGRAMME

Locanda Castelvecchio overnight stop

bike rental

immersion in nature

A new approach to tourism

Cycling and hiking tours

Cycling and hiking paths within the park

restaurant with local grown products

accessibility

Cycling and hiking paths within the park

The sLOwCANDA’s garden

Bike rental & bike parking

P

Private parking

Vegetable garden

Small pavillon

The garden is going to keep a wild and rural look and it will be a space to relax and contemplate nature. The ancient function of vegetable garden is proposed again but with a more simple and functional design. This vegetable garden will provide some locally grown products that could be tasted in the sLOwCANDA kitchen and also directly sold to the visitors. 15


Current entrances/distribution Main staircase External walkway Service entrance Main entrance

First floor plan

Architectural barrier

Rebuilding the staircase & insertion of a lift

Bike rental Reception hall Room Restaurant Kitchen

16


sLOwCANDA’s left wing: the bike rental and the apartment

Since the previous interior organization was inadequate to the current normatives and requirements, it had to be completely rearranged in the project. The goal was to choose functions which were compatible with the internal spaces without altering them too much. In order to make the building accessible for the most part, the choice was to demolish the old staircase and to insert a new, steel structure staircase and a small lift.

One of the most relevant transformations involved the barn, located in the left wing first floor. It was linked with the rest of the building, since previously was unreachable, and rearranged as a small apartment with an independent-structure loft. The interior receives light from a new big window that takes the shape of the existing arch opening.

sLOwCANDA’s interior life

17


Terni Lab Urban fragments inside the inner city: permeability, continuity and new connections Atelier “Architectural design and restoration� AY 2018/19 Teachers: Silvia Gron (Architectural and urban design), Emanuele Morezzi (Restoration) Team work

Amphitheatrum Faustus

Terni inner city is an heterogeneous context deeply rich in stratifications. Here we find one of the eldest historical evidences of the city’s past: Amphitheatrum Faustus, built in the Ist century AD, which is now mainly used as a performance space in the summertime. The ancient building is seldom opened to the public for tours. A promenade in the inner city

At a urban scale, the project aims to improve the connection between the site and the rest of Terni city centre through the identification of a pedestrian city tour.

The re-thinking of this area that is characterised by the presence of both visual and physical barriers is based on two key ideas: permeability and continuity. Through a change in viability and the choice of a uniform external pavement the elements around the amphiteatre are connected in a sort of system. A new polyfunctional centre physically connected to the amphiteatre is designed and supports its new museal funciton. It represents the starting point of the visit and, together with the ancient building, the new central hub of the area. 18

A new museum

Opus reticulatum


section c-c’

section b-b’

19


Exhibition tour: the new polyfuntional centre as a starting point

study room 119 m2 cafe 160 m2 ticket office+bookshop 228 m2 pedagogical atelier 179 m2

The connection between the new building and the amphiteatre

20

elevation of the building towards the amphiteatre


ground level plan

The north-west ambulacrum

section of the north-west ambulacrum

The viewpoint

21


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.