Atelier Fleuriste

Metal shingle

Chieri (TO), 2002 / 2008

Roof made with Prestige Compact metal shingle by Tegola Canadese

The project, which includes the complete renovation of a nineteenth-century brick house and the construction of a new building in the internal garden, stems from the desire to strongly mark the presence of an uncommon place, inside a disorderly urban context, caught between memories of the rural town and the recent building interventions. The functional program provides for the creation of exhibition, commercial, residential and informal spaces designed in a flexible way, adaptable to the different needs of the principal. The intervention is divided into two building blocks, formally very different, one conceived as a large showcase-square on Via Andezeno, the other as an isolated pavilion inside the garden open to the public, visible from the street through perspective glimpses.

The renovation of the brick building provides for keeping the central portion intact with all its characteristics: the vaulted roofs, the windows, the plaster and the decorations, while on the sides the original shape of the building has been reconstructed with a large full-height window towards the street and an iridescent copper cover towards the courtyard. The interior space is completely open and is articulated around a large full-height void, crossed by walkways and designed to accommodate large-sized installations and lighting elements. The cooling system of the window consists of a veil of running water that transforms the entire front of the building into a real monumental fountain: the street thus becomes a square, a public space of reference for the entire urban context. The pavilion inside the garden consists of an articulated and fluid plastic volume, raised from the ground by large concrete partitions and covered with a broken brick cover that gives it a strong material character.

Finally, the garden, which includes a public parking servicing the atelier, can be set up to directly communicate with the large void, inside the exhibition and commercial space, through a glass wall that can be opened, becoming the ideal place for outdoor installations and events.

Project details: Atelier Fleuriste and private home

Works: 2002/2008

Principal: Idea Fiori di Marco Segantin

Project: ELASTICO SPA – Stefano Pujatti

Product

Functionality and Design

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Prestige Compact Plus

Prestige Compact roofing transforms a traditional roof into a prestigious architectural element. The natural oxidation of copper creates chromatic patterns that make your roof unique and precious.

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Church of San Francesco di Sales in Rome

Metal shingle

Rome 2003/2005

oof made with Prestige Compact metal shingle by Tegola Canadese

 The characterising element of this church, which is immediately perceived, is the considerable covering that extends over it and fluidly wraps it, as if to embrace and protect the gathered assembly. The projecting roof ends with a point but then widens and stretches, creating a hospitable and welcoming place for celebrations. The overall result of the project is a surprising covering roof, with a considerably interesting texture that weaves innovation and tradition: and that’s why there is a design choice to use an innovative roof covering from a technological point of view, the Prestige Compact copper shingle by Tegola Canadese, and a material such as copper that man has used for centuries for buildings destined to last over time.

Another element of considerable interest is the use of light: it is masterfully employed both in the form of natural light that enters through the many openings, and as artificial light specifically designed and set up to better outline the interior spaces and to be visible from the outside. Even the layout, a regular octagon, is the result of an original idea which focuses on giving the assembly a central position as the protagonist together with the celebrant.

The construction materials used for the structure consist of two different elements: reinforced concrete for all vertical parts with laminated wood; copper for the roof covering. The colour that prevails both outside and inside is white; this can be found both on the external plaster and on the smooth concrete of the interior.

The glass in the doors and windows in the lower areas is also white, while dark blue is used for the fixtures and transparent blue in the windows at the top. All this contrasts with the warm tones of the laminated wood and of the copper on the roof, i.e. materials widely used in tradition and here reinterpreted in a church that represents a link between tradition and innovation.

Project details: Churc

Works: 2003 – 2005

Project: Arch. Lucrezio Carbonara, Arch. Paolo Dattero, Arch. Alfredo Re/Studio Dattero; Re – Rome

The roof: a strong mark characterised by innovation and tradition.

The strong characterisation of this building consists in the covering roof that extends over the building and in the design choice to use the Prestige Compact copper shingle by Tegola Canadese. This shows the refinement of this creation, which is innovative from a technological point of view whilst using a material, copper, which man has used for centuries in buildings destined to last over time. The Prestige Compact copper shingle is versatile and adapts well to any inclination or curvature of the roof covering and the final result is a roof characterised by a particular texture and of considerable interest. The main facade of the church features a repetition of projecting cornices which rise above the entrance portal, while the overlying roofing structure ends with a point; a set of balances and repetitions that turn into an invitation to enter. As a whole, the religious building becomes a very strong architectural mark that rises to welcome and protect the faithful.

Product

Functionality and Design

Product

Prestige Compact Plus

Prestige Compact roofing transforms a traditional roof into a prestigious architectural element. The natural oxidation of copper creates chromatic patterns that make your roof unique and precious.

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Museum of Horse

Metal shingle

Bisignano (CS), 2002 / 2006

Roof made with Prestige Compact metal shingle by Tegola Canadese

Studying the drawings that Marcello Guido prepares to approach his works is fundamental in order to understand his architecture. Not so much as to receive enlightenment regarding the complex spatiality that he composes, but rather to be immersed in the spirit of the inventive process that the images reveal: elevations, sections, plans collapse one on top of the other, the lines of the drawings invade the neighbouring space, hooking it up and dragging it into their own domain.

Mergers of several abstract visuals make it impossible to read the subject, sudden jumps in scale make architectural details stand out in the centre of a layout that appear at first sight to be sections of immense structures. The lines are violently manipulated, the backgrounds of colour fade to form a sky, then a glass window, finally the base of an embankment that merges ambiguously with the façade of a building which can be perceived from afar. The elevations gain independence from every other drawing, and thus they mirror themselves, they overlap, they provide an overabundance of information. Removals and erasures become tools for exploring form.

The same structures, to which these drawings are preparatory, instigate this desecrating attitude: buildings crumble, creating wall sections on diagonals, making sure that, even in the technical drawings, plans and sections must forcibly contaminate each other. Vasari, after all, it was who said “Sketches are a sort of first drawing that is made in order to find the manner of the pose and the first composition of the work; and they are made in the form of a stain, only hinted at by us in a single draft of the everything”, an expression of the “ardour of the architect”, who resorts to this form of representation “to tempt the soul with what comes to mind”. Taken from “Surfing complexity. The work of Marcello Guido di Carlos Villagomez

Project Details: Museum Works: 2002 – 2006

Principal: Municipality of Bisignano

Project: Architect Marcello Guido

 The project stems from the need to exhibit an ancient noble carriage given to the municipal administration of Bisignano. The very small building stands at the back of a late Gothic church, in the area once occupied by the adjoining monastery complex, which was casually demolished in the 1950s to build an industrial car wash. The other part of the area, freed from industrial artefacts, is occupied by some terraces which form a small open-air theatre, but sheltered by a wooden roof. At the centre of the theatre there is a glass floor that showcases an ancient cistern for the collection of water, with a domed vault; this had been long forgotten but was found intact during the excavations for the foundations. The project presents some energy measures and a focus on sustainability: there are no openings towards the south in order to avoid the summer overheating of the interiors due to the greenhouse effect, the building is energetically autonomous and supplies electricity to the public lighting network; the greenery is integrated into the design and the old cistern has been converted to its original purpose of collecting rainwater which irrigates the flower beds.

The project and the model were on display in Istanbul during the 2006 UIA congress

Product

Functionality and Design

Product

Prestige Compact Plus

Prestige Compact roofing transforms a traditional roof into a prestigious architectural element. The natural oxidation of copper creates chromatic patterns that make your roof unique and precious.

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Prince Mahidol Hall

Metal shingle

Mahidol University, Thailandia, 2014

Roof made with Prestige Compact metal shingle by Tegola Canadese

More than 10 architectural firms had submitted their projects to the contest, challenging the times with a creative work and representing a strong sign of contemporaneity The competition was strongly supported by three authoritative members of Mahidol University in Salaya, Thailand, representative figures of the history of modern and traditional Thai architecture: Amnuay Suwankiri, Pichai Vasanasong and Arwut Ngernchuklin.

The Thai studio Architects 49 Ltd. won the competition with a proposal that incorporates and embraces, harmonising it, past and present. Architects 49 was founded in 1983 by Nithi Sthapitanonda, a former student of Chulalongkorn University and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

The chosen project is the Prince Mahidol Hall, built within the Mahidol University campus: it is a multifunctional hall used as a concert hall, ceremonies or events with 2,000 seats and the best acoustics. The architects were inspired by organic and traditional Thai forms.

The lobby and exterior glass corridors offer an extraordinary view. The double-layered roof was designed to isolate external noise and its structure is made up of 19 steel elements whose design pattern recalls the skeleton of the human body, symbolising the search for medical knowledge that is the basis of the university’s birth. The interior space is completely open and develops around a large full-height void, crossed by walkways, and designed to house large installations and light elements. Prince Mahidol Hall is the largest concert hall in Thailand. The hall is named after Prince Mahidol Adulyadej. The hall was inaugurated on 14th April 2014 and was also chosen by the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra for its 100th Anniversary World Tour 2014

Product

Functionality and Design

Product

Prestige Compact Plus

Prestige Compact roofing transforms a traditional roof into a prestigious architectural element. The natural oxidation of copper creates chromatic patterns that make your roof unique and precious.

Discover the product

WE ARE AT YOUR DISPOSAL

Fill out the form to request information