Palazzo San Giacomo

The project achieved the goal of restoring and adapting the building to its original use as a diplomatic residence, meeting all the requirements and technical requirements of current Italian and Spanish laws: static improvement of the building’s structure to Class IV; complete overhaul of all systems and installation of fire prevention systems; conservative restoration of the decorative paintings (frescoes and ceiling paintings); and accessibility of all levels of the building. These requirements then had to be combined with the need to enhance the internal spatiality, which involved the elimination of surreptitious, layered interventions carried out in different periods and which often detracted from the spaces of the large rooms overlooking Piazza Navona.

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Campus Poste Italiane Posillipo

The project’s goal is to create new training spaces to implement learning methods in line with evolving work-related training and communication systems, optimizing knowledge transfer and reflecting Poste Italiane’s values.

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Antiquarium – Città del Sole

The project’s goal is to create new training spaces to implement learning methods in line with evolving work-related training and communication systems, optimizing knowledge transfer and reflecting Poste Italiane’s values.

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Parco Centocelle

The project aims to redevelop the southern area of ​​the Centocelle Archaeological Park, creating an access point from the Tuscolano-Don Bosco district of Rome. A portion of the Urban Park, covering approximately 48 hectares, is being designed, developing several elements to create a new access point from the southern side along Via Papiria, and integrating permeability and accessibility from the densely populated neighboring neighborhoods.

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Church of Santa Maria dell’Orto

The current church, with its sixteenth-century layout, features fresco and stucco decoration, created from the mid-sixteenth century onwards and over the course of the following two centuries, evidence of the taste and economic availability of the Confraternity of Fruit Vendors which allowed them to hire prominent artistic figures such as Taddeo and Federico Zuccari, as well as the architect of the church himself, Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola, Niccolò Martinelli from Pesaro and finally Giovanni Baglione.

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Church of Sant’Angelo in Pescheria

The chapel of Sant’Andrea was acquired by the Università dei Pescivendoli in 1579 and rebuilt at its expense in 1583. Governed by its own statutes, it enjoyed constant maintenance over time. Suppressed at the end of the 18th century by decree of Pius VII, it had previously been rebuilt between 1579 and 1619 and today stands next to the presbytery.

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Pincio Promenade

The study for the final project identified intervention on the access section to the Pincio Promenade, including the Kaufmann Ramp and the Belvedere Terrace, as a priority.

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Villa Flora

Redeveloping the Villa Flora complex for community life, through a participatory process shared by the PAU Department of Rome Capital, the Municipio II, and various neighborhood associations and citizens, the project pursues the goal of restoring a long-abandoned asset to the city and making it usable for the needs of the urban community.

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Villa Poniatowski

The project’s central objective is a restoration that enhances the historical stratification and the relationship with the context, key features of the project. The design approach is based on a critical-conservative approach.

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Civic Center

The project for the new Casale Nei Civic Center and Urban Park aims to create a multifunctional, sustainable, and accessible public architectural complex, destined to become a social and cultural landmark for the newly developed neighborhood.

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