161 results on '"A. Pollo"'
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2. Smart construction object. Tools for reprogramming the city
- Author
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Riccardo Pollo, Matteo Giovanardi, and Matteo Trane
- Subjects
IoT ,building process ,urban metabolism ,smart construction object ,smart façade ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
The focus on the concept of Smart Cities in the shift towards circular development models derives from the ability to govern increasingly complex phenomena and processes. By introducing data-driven approaches, the information produced by ICT technologies allows us to ‘reprogram’ the functioning of the urban system, as a complex ecosystem in which matter and energy are continuously transformed. Starting from the analysis of research experiences carried out at the European level, this paper aims to explore potential and real barriers related to Smart Construction Objects in urban processes. Technological-digital integration, the use of data, and the emergence of new economic management models based on services are investigated with reference to façade systems, as components able to generate and share information to govern the input and output of the urban metabolic system.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Urban Metabolism, interdisciplinary models and design at micro-urban scale
- Author
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Riccardo Pollo, Matteo Trane, and Matteo Giovanardi
- Subjects
Urban Metabolism ,Smart Urban Metabolism ,Interdisciplinarity ,Transdisciplinarity ,Environmental Design ,Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
The architecture and the micro-urban scale design are elected to disciplines capable of materializing society’s perennial and rapid evolution demands. The design quality derives from its characteristic of opening up to external contamination, making work on the frontiers of knowledge and the hybridization of knowledge crucial. The contribution reflects on the Urban Metabolism’s (UM) role as a boundary metaphor, within which interaction among the scientific community, stakeholders, policymakers, and designers is possible. This metaphor could then be understood as a potential investigation and design tool for the Urban Ecosystem. UM’s possible relationship with architecture and environmental design is investigated, starting from models and approaches typical of other disciplinary fields.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Time and Architecture
- Author
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Massimo Lauria and Riccardo Pollo
- Subjects
Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
In the Italian language, the term “tempo” (literally time) is a word of daily use to which we attribute many meanings. It can signify a chronological dimension between past, present and future, an epoch or a period, a phase of an action, as well as the weather and its change. In philosophical and scientific thought, it was the becoming, the before and after of each moment, the unchanging and uniform time of Galilean and Newton’s physics, the variability of existential states or the memory of a primeval condition. As the physicist and essayist Carlo Rovelli states, time «is perhaps the greatest mystery» (Rovelli, 2017). The journalist Federico Rampini recalls an ancient Afghan proverb «you have the clocks, we have the time», reflects on its value dimension, different from the attitude of western culture to measure this dimension, to attribute meanings according to its precise accounting (Rampini, 2013). The contemporary age thus stimulates reflections on the comparison between different visions of time, from the linear ones, typical of modernity and the industrial age, to the “timeless” phenomena of quantum physics, where only relationships count, up to measures of different types like the succession of the cycles of nature and human generations. In its various meanings, time is a fundamental factor of forecasting, of the future and, therefore, of every project, in the meaning of its Latin etymon projectus, which is the action of becoming and projecting forward. In the relationship with the project, artistic practices therefore imply a very close link with the temporal dimension. Among these, the architecture that «claims that share of aspiration to eternity that lies in the very foundation of the idea of humanity» (Gregotti, 1997). Time and architecture are therefore terms of a powerful dichotomy that considers architecture works and their duration together; their permanence and changes in form and image; their conservation according to the social, productive and urban transformations of the city and landscape. Time in the city is, and has always been, relative. The monuments and old towns have a centuries-old history, the political discussions and dynamics that govern the projects are asynchronous, empty and inconsistent anticipatory announcements of promised architectural works, perennial delays in implementation. Celebrations and festivities live ephemeral seasons, the installations are, by definition, temporary. The speed of transportation and instant communication tools coexists with the slow time of the man who walks and with the real-time processes of the smart city. The time of unfinished works is interrupted. In recent days, humanity has experienced a new dimension of time, that of the pandemic. A time that we perceived suspended and widened. Inversely proportional to the contraction of space that has suddenly become insufficient due to the confinement at home and to sharing living and working in a single environment. An unmeasurable event – the pandemic – invisible, of which we do not know and cannot imagine its boundaries, another “hyper object”, as Timothy Morton could define it, like Global Warming and Nuclear Holocaust (Morton, 2013). The new scenario cannot fail to be a topic of reflection, as well as a dramatic break in the biography of the living. Many of the changes taking place were already present, or at least they were in Western culture: smart working, telemedicine, distance education, sociality no longer experienced in physical contact but through social media. All different phenomena investigated by many and often referred to as the ability of technology to make them possible in accordance with man’s boundless confidence in governing his relationship with the environment. The eruption of this planetary phenomenon also linked and favoured – but probably not determined – by technology, therefore pushes us to observe reality in a different way. And although the authors of the Dossier have not been allowed to explicitly address an issue, the pandemic that is not yet manifest but perhaps already immanent to the environmental theme, it is certain that these latter events seem to strengthen the relationship of connection space-time, and of these two entities, with architecture and more generally with nature. In the past, these relationships were fulfilled and evolved through the succeeding alternation of generations. The ancient city centuries-old construction sites were built with the contribution of the entire community, which then proudly displayed its ancestry, memberships and social goals. The architecture was the synthesis of a complex process that allowed its construction by workers, custodians of knowledge of local techniques and materials, their processing and conservation. The collective enjoyment of historic buildings was a prerequisite for their durability and compatibility between urban transformations, needs of civil society and representative functions of architecture. On the other hand, the buildings’ construction has always required long times. Incomparably longer, however, has always been the time necessary for them to give rise to a place, become part of the city, be accepted by the inhabitants. Time, when referring to architecture, evokes and therefore naturally combines with the idea of transformation and the action of construction. But also, with regard to this aspect, there are differences between the present and the past, when designers often did not see their most ambitious works completed. Palladio never saw one of his buildings completed. The Sagrada Familia, symbol of the city of Barcelona and whose construction began in 1882, is still being completed today after having accompanied the life of its designer, Antoni Gaudi. The case of the Spanish basilica demonstrates how the history of the time-architecture relationship does not follow linear patterns and successions between design, construction and use, showing the paradox of a building that is a symbol of a city, enjoyed by millions of visitors but not yet completed; a unique architectural work that is still in construction and under restoration, studied by the disciplines of engineering and architecture. The natural course of time appears so upset: past, present, future coexist and chase each other in a circular succession of events that confirm the intuition, present in the expression widespread among architectural technology scholars, of Valerio Di Battista at the end of the last century, of «project of the existing» (Di Battista, 1992). Principle according to which a linear and unidirectional temporal succession can no longer be associated with the “life” of an architecture. At the same time as the metabolization of these theories, other terminologies brought to the general attention further questions on the time concept: that of techniques (Nardi, 1990), their appropriateness (Gangemi, 1988), recovery (Caterina, 1989), building maintenance (Molinari, 1989). An evolutionary process that took place, first through the conscious definition of the characters of the new complexity connected to the theme of the intervention on the existing building stock, prefiguring as a priority the search for knowledge tools and suitable intervention methods. In the following decades the meanings of terms such as conservation, reuse and requalification have been declined according to the significance that the technical-scientific lexicon still adopts in the present. In this perspective, time faded in its boundaries and is no longer uniform but a generator of sequences and cyclic modification processes. In one of his last writings, Vittorio Gregotti, quoted here because of a heartfelt tribute to a protagonist of 20th century architecture, says that past, present and future take on meaning as «material of the architectural project», like space, context and function (Gregotti, 2020). His interpretation of time is therefore that of one of the “structural materials” that the project shapes. Time, place and space represent an opportunity for the present to confront a poetic, disciplinary and civil past. What many researchers and intellectuals – Ruskin, Riegl, Yourcenar – have referred to as true “beauty”. In the contemporary urban environment, on the contrary, time seems to have lost these dimensions and values, just as the civic sense that supported the most important works seems to be lacking. Buildings completed with the rapidity of industrial processes are placed with indifference in the city, contradicting the dialogue between “conservation” and “transformation” typical of the historic town. Such historic contexts, where well preserved, seem to show organicity, compatibility with the environment, evoking in definitive the abused but powerful concept of sustainability as well as the most current one of resilience. The extension of the construction time phases has changed compared to a more static and slower past, becoming pressing and close, functional to programmed lifetimes, linked to the solution of contingent problems and short-term financial goals. According to Salvatore Settis, contemporary urban transformations are to a large extent subject to negotiation between public authorities on the one hand, and area owners, investors and property developers on the other. So, the uncontrolled expansions of the city or even certain regenerations of dismissed and abandoned places are the result of economic or financial calculations, rather than architectural works (Settis, 2017). Logics are therefore too often dictated by short-term economic visions, inconsistent with the times of the social and cultural construction of the city. The short durations and the frenetic constructions in fact often escape the control of the project and are “suffered” by the city. Construction sites are subject to slowdowns, accelerations and abrupt interruptions creating new urban landscapes dotted with contemporary ruins, new simulacra dedicated to ambition, to bad political programming, to technical incapacity, in some cases to malfeasance. “Birth”, “life” and “death” of a building wear out, sometimes, quickly and unreasonably. In this way, an important domain is set up which contemporary architectural production faces by considering in dialectical terms the need to implement, right from the initial stages of the design process, strategies inspired by the permanence of architectural works and temporary-oriented options. The first are linked to the traditional concept of the durable building, whereas the latter consider it an artifact of limited and programmable duration, rapidly obsolete, ephemeral and consumable. In this dialectic, absolutely central issues are involved in the disciplinary debate concerning the governance of anthropic transformations of the built environment, from economic and sociological issues, to the need for a correct environmental balance, overcoming mere financial goals. This concept is well described by the French word “durable”, synonymous with sustainable. A dialectic, however, of marginal significance, according to Francois Burkhardt, who says «it seems to me that neither is realistic, since one dreams of a past that is future and the other a future without a past» (Burkhardt, 1997).In this scenario with boundaries as wide as uncertain, in inviting researchers from different fields, from architecture, to technology, to philosophy to express their point of view on the theme, the expedient of proposing them, such as starting point, some quotes from the literature were followed. These trace a sort of logical common thread that moves from the historicity of the object and the architectural project (Lewis Mumford and Aldo Rossi), to the relationship between the designer’s thought, permanence and aesthetic value of the architectural artifact (Rafael Moneo, Giò Ponti), to its transformation by nature and society (Marc Augè), to end its relationship with the environment and the climate (Jeremy Rifkin). The authors, as expected, betrayed and, at the same time, supported that schedule, introducing highly topical themes and profound representations. The multifaceted aspects of time, different and variable in individual perception and physical reality, are intertwined with biographical paths, with disciplinary training, with the events of society, with the narratives of culture and with the relationship between man, nature and artifacts. Through the magnifying glass of time, an unprecedented comparison between the different disciplines and architecture has resulted. Philosophy, history, environmental physics, technology, as systematized methods of knowledge of nature, of thought and of acting in it, have always looked at architecture as art and as a practice. This relationship is also true in the opposite direction, from architecture to forms of knowledge of the world and society, without which the discipline and its practices would not exist. In architecture as an artistic and material expression though, that of culture that makes us feel contemporaries of the ancients, and nature, which inevitably marks the birth and death of objects and living things, as well as people, meet and interpenetrate. Moving between the loops of this ambiguous relationship, Ettore Rocca claims that the architectural project becomes «supreme human manipulation of nature» which, when completed, «becomes nature, is delivered in the time of nature». Art and culture are man’s time. The time of nature is indifferent, it is birth and death. Architecture is both the time of man and the time of nature, which also decays, dies and, like all matter, is regenerated. A vision that seems to allude to the reflections and elaborations typical of the technological culture of design, which connects the project, as an intentional act, but with not obvious and uncertain results, to the time of nature which, in turn, transforms and corrupts the material of the building. In this way we can interpret the quotation in his essay “Architecture should become a detail of the Earth” (Hiroshi Sambuichi) as a vision of the relationship between time and architecture. In a historical perspective, such as that suggested by Stefano Della Torre, the city is a living material of men and artifacts. The Mumfordian metaphor of the “mold” can therefore be interpreted, outside of determinisms no longer acceptable, in a dynamic meaning in which history, culture and matter find relationships outside of ideological visions that enhance parts, or eras, at the expense of others. Invoked by Sergio Croce, the concepts of resilience, adaptation, mitigation inform the theories and tools of environmental design. The response to changes and catastrophes through social and technical reorganization is the new needs reference framework of the contemporary architecture project. Adaptation is the condition in which the natural and artificial worlds find themselves to avoid trauma and extinctions, mitigation, the set of technical and conceptual tools that intervene to govern complexity towards favourable and shared outcomes. In a conscious contemporary vision, environment and health are collective and no longer individual goods. The fragility of individuals and communities, underlined by Teodoro Georgiadis, is combined with that of nature and it is no longer conceivable to separate the environment from society, the living from humans, the communities among each other. Universalism aimed at continuous progress, as well as the localism that feeds conflicts, must make place for the consciousness of being “terrestrial”, as Bruno Latour argues, capable at the same time of «imagining under what conditions the world, in age of globalization, can be made habitable – and other adjectives that have become important for the contemporary age: sustainable, durable, breathable, liveable» (Latour, 2009). Time acquires a biographical dimension between architecture, research and teaching in Lorenzo Matteoli’s vision. The architectural project is strongly linked to the experience and culture that are projected in acting and ideation. «Where do the ideas come from» is the question that arises with the student mentioned in his essay, highlighting the association between “time” and “ideas” as a possible place for some answers. Ideas come from us, from our mind immersed in the world. In the neuroscientific perspective of the embodied mind, as Pallasmaa states, it is the “thinking hand”, it is the body, with the mind, that designs. Experience, perception and action are not distinct, but inextricably united. The transition from the experiential dimension of the architect to the interconnection with the world of objects and living, according to Tim Ingold’s vision, closes the circle of reflection. The project, an elusive entity is, therefore, increasingly distant from being an abstract idea, which precedes the making, the construction of the object. Construction and design appear increasingly social rather than individual, thus recalling the vision of Marc Augè who inspired the contribution. Finally, starting from Aldo Rossi’s acknowledgment of the permanence of the built, as an objective element of the knowledge of the city and its existential and cultural dimensions, Lorenzo Bellicini contextualizes time in urban reality, in its development and in the social and institutional dynamics that regulate it. Dynamics that often led to pathological results in which the absence of a unified project and the lack of sharing of forward-looking visions by the actors of the construction process led to the at least partial failure of urban planning ideals. From these reflections one could derive the need for a holistic project of the city, its redevelopment or expansion, according to the contexts, capable of responding to the need, this time truly collective, of a healthy city. Thinking about the times of the city thus becomes an instrument to correct the dysfunctions, even temporal, of its structure today, between the past and the future. A renewed, but essential, urban project requires adequate implementation times and certain rules for sharing choices, not marred by vetoes and administrative inefficiency. In closing it could be said with Carlo Rovelli, that “absolute” time does not exist, or rather it is an intellectual construction, it is not a fixed and predetermined entity, but linked to experience, to changes in the life of objects and living, to their relationships, to their physical, atomic and existential nature. At the same time, in a homologous way, the architectural project is not, even in an updated anthropological perspective, separated from the material, but united in a continuum that links society, culture, operators, and nature in a single system. This vision is particularly needed in this moment in which the living relate in ways that dramatically escape the logic of domination that has characterized what we have considered the development of human societies for some centuries: a relatively short time if you think about the history of genus sapiens. A separation between project and product, idea and realization, technique and technology, between digital culture and the new dimensions of the infosphere is no longer conceivable (Floridi, 2014). In the same way, we cannot think of the separation between health and economy, between the world of men and biosphere, between nature and built environment. The world of objects, animated or not, cannot be separated from society, just as architecture is not solely to conceive an abstract idea but extends over time of construction and interactions with the environment. Design and construction are intertwined with the lives of people, societies, cities and nature. And it is precisely this multifaceted nature that makes the considerations that follow productive confrontation opportunities for the practice of architecture and for the reflections around it.
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- 2020
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5. Horizontality and verticality in architectures for health
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Stefano Capolongo, Grazia Cocina, Marco Gola, Gabriella Peretti, and Riccardo Pollo
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Architectures for Health ,Hospital typologies ,Hospital organization ,Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
The paper proposes a reflection and a point of view on the design of the contemporary hospital and the architectures for health according to “vertical” or “horizontal” typologies. The aim is to identify in various configurations, the relationships between the quality of the spaces and specific requirements in relation to the most recent developments in medicine both from the organizational and functional points of view and the social component. The method consists in defining a framework of demanding and performance comparison of different hypotheses, supported by indirect and direct analysis of the outcomes, through an analysis matrix related to case studies, considered as best practices among the architectures for health.
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- 2019
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6. Natura
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Pollo, Simone Flaviano
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ecologia ,cambiamento climatico ,natura ,scienza ,natura umana ,etica ,etologia ,ambiente - Published
- 2023
7. Studium - Le Università cattoliche oggi
- Author
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Emerico Giachery, Stefano Zamagni, Paolo Carusi, Vincenzo Cappelletti, Paolo Cavana, Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Maria Teresa Giuffrè, Alessio Leggiero, Gian Enrico Manzoni, Massimo Naro, Antonio Giovanni Pesce, Mario Pollo, Michele Riondino, Claudia Villa
- Published
- 2016
8. PROGETTARE LE CASE DELLA COMUNITÀ Applicazione dell'approccio modulare a un modello innovativo di presidio.
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Pollo, Riccardo, Biolchini, Elisa, and Scognamiglio, Valeria
- Abstract
Copyright of Agathon: International Journal of Architecture, Art & Design is the property of DEMETRA CE.RI.MED and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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9. Refurbishment of Social housing: a survey of the building stock owned by ATC Torino
- Author
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Andrea Levra Levron, Donatella Marino, and Riccardo Pollo
- Subjects
social housing ,refurbishment ,maintenance ,durability ,Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
The Italian public housing building stock is considerable, although quantitatively less than that of other European countries,. The public policies adopted in the last decades have pushed the supply of housing by the private sector and supported the sale of the assets by the public housing authorities. Those buildings are often degraded and obsolete. Nevertheless, the issue of redevelopment of this part of the residential building stock is a central focus, also because of its important social role, especially in the current period of crisis. One of the recurring factors in the Italian case is the low quality of this building stock due to the lack of an organic maintenance activity. The paper reports the first results of a research carried out by the Department of Architecture and Design in cooperation with a social housing public authority, the Regional Agency for the Central Piedmont House (ATC). The goal of the research was the development of methodologies for estimating and analysis of maintenance requirements. Moreover, the study suggests and develops a forecasting tool for the planning of maintenance operations and redevelopment of the large building estates.
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- 2016
- Full Text
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10. Recensioni
- Author
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Riccardo Pollo
- Subjects
Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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11. Torino. Dall’energia solare a CityFutures
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Pollo, Riccardo, Carbonaro, Corrado, and Trane, Matteo
- Published
- 2022
12. Etica e scienze del vivente
- Author
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Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
metaetica ,etica ,biologia ,bioetica ,etica ambientale - Published
- 2022
13. Trasformazione e Rigenerazione Edilizia e dello spazio pubblico a Tor Bella Monaca
- Author
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Fabrizio Finucci, Riccardo Pollo, Laura Calcagnini, Maria Munoz Velosa, Roberto Giordano, Antonio Magaro', Eugenio Arbizzani, Adolfo F. L. Baratta, Eliana Cangelli, Laura Daglio, Federica Ottone, Donatella Radogna, Finucci, Fabrizio, Pollo, Riccardo, Calcagnini, Laura, Munoz Velosa, Maria, Giordano, Roberto, and Magaro', Antonio
- Subjects
façade leasing ,progetto degli spazi pubblici ,innovazione tecnologica ,demolizione controllata ,prefabbricazione ,Rigenerazione urbana e sociuale ,remodelage ,nuovi modi dell’abitare - Abstract
The regeneration project pursues the principles of remodelage, that means to operate actions including transformation of a complex of buildings, triggering, at the same time, reverberate on the urban area, with further repercussions on the social level. The remodelage of Tor bella Monaca is divided into the following diachronic actions: 1. addition of parts of buildings, technical elements in R5 and M4; 2. removal of technological units, through selective demolition, to implement typological and morphological transformations (the ground floors of the R5); 3. r eplacement of technical elements of the R5 and M4, including some functional c hanges. The project reconverts the ground floors on the street front, redefining the access systems and determining a new street level open to sociality and services, recapturing the urban space with soft and public mobility schemes: green spaces, blue-green infrastructures, urban agriculture. High-impact prefabricated volumes are added to the apartments, making them adhere to the current family structure and connected to the green courts. The redeveloped envelope incorporates heat pumps powered by the photovoltaic system, respects the architectural image and allows the inhabitants to be kept in situ. The recovery of some costs has been hypothesized through the tool of facade leasing and the reuse of amounts connected with the charges and the surplus deriving from the private closure of the courts with residential buildings on the market.
- Published
- 2021
14. Facilities for Territorial Medicine: the experiences of Piedmont and Lombardy Regions
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Stefano Capolongo, Maurizio Mauri, Gabriella Peretti, Riccardo Pollo, and Chiara Tognolo
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Territorial medicine ,Primary care ,Assistance continuity ,Health ,Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
In recent years, the demographic transition and epidemiological has made the health system hospital-centric obsolete and has highlighted the need for a new organization focused on territorial health community, taking charge of the patient, on team work and can ensure, through dedicated facilities, continuity of care and integration of social welfare. The main changes in the regulatory field have thus oriented investments both structural and economic towards poles to network with hospitals that represent new points of reference for the health of citizens, where primary care services are integrated with the territory and the specialized services of the Public Health departments. These facilities provide the organizational paradigm to which the regional realities must strive. The article reports recent experiments conducted within the regions of Piedmont and Lombardy in this sector and the ongoing research in the field of CNETO on behalf of the Lombardy Region.
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- 2015
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15. L'Internet of Things per la transizione circolare nel settore delle facciate.
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Giovanardi, Matteo, Konstantinou, Thaleia, Pollo, Riccardo, and Klein, Tillmann
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INTERNET of things ,BUSINESS models - Abstract
Copyright of TECHNE: Journal of Technology for Architecture & Environment is the property of Firenze University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Building Design, Durability, Maintenance: Methodology for the Durability Forecasting
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Riccardo Pollo
- Subjects
Durability ,Life cycle ,FMEA ,Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
The paper describes a research based on the use of the software BIM (Building Information Modeling) which is associated with an experimental procedure of the evaluation of durability and the life cycle based on FMEA (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis), one of the methods for durability assessment indicated by the ISO 15686-1 standard. The study shows the methodology and develops a case study on the refurbishment of an old building and discusses its outcome. The experiment on one side illustrates the utility of the analytical approach of FMEA and on the other side the difficulty to use different data and information to be considered in the durability evaluation carried out by the designer based on the expert assessment. The role of the experts is to design a model and to assess the criticality of each event and to define the relationship between the causes and effects on building elements function. The designer has to define the environmental conditions of the site, the specifications of the material used, the skills of workmanship. The study has shown a quite realistic outcome and significant indications for the designer. Such a result suggests the development of the research.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Trasformazione e Rigenerazione Edilizia e dello Spazio pubblico a Tor Bella Monaca
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Finucci, Fabrizio, Pollo, Riccardo, Calcagnini, Laura, Munoz Veloza, Monica, Giordano, Roberto, Magarò, Antonio, Andreotti, Jacopo, Biolchini, Elisa, Di Guida, Marina, Faruku, Denis, Giovanardi, Matteo, Trane, Matteo, Trulli, Luca, and Valenti, Edoardo
- Subjects
spazio pubblico ,innovazione tecnologica ,facade leasing ,prefabbricazione ,remodelage ,Rigenerazione urbana - Published
- 2021
18. Manifesto per un animalismo democratico
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Pollo, Simone
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animalismo ,etica ,democrazia ,animali ,diritti animali - Published
- 2021
19. Diario di un fumatore di David Sedaris
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Tommaso Pollo
- Subjects
lcsh:American literature ,lcsh:PR1-9680 ,lcsh:PS1-3576 ,lcsh:English literature - Abstract
Recensione di Diario di un fumatore di David Sedaris, Iperstoria, 2007: Blog Series
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- 2020
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20. Intervista a Giulietta Stefani
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Tommaso Pollo
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lcsh:American literature ,lcsh:PR1-9680 ,lcsh:PS1-3576 ,lcsh:English literature - Abstract
Giulietta Stefani ha conseguito il dottorato di ricerca in Storia e Civiltà presso l’Istituto Universitario Europeo di Firenze. Si occupa di storia dell’emigrazione e del colonialismo italiani, con particolare attenzione agli studi di genere, e svolge attività di ricerca sull’immigrazione in Italia. È redattrice di “Zapruder. Rivista di storia della conflittualità sociale“., Iperstoria, 2007: Blog Series
- Published
- 2020
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21. Infrastrutture digitali nei componenti di involucro per la gestione degli edifici
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Giovanardi, Matteo, Giusto, Edoardo, and Pollo, Riccardo
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IoT ,materia articolata (PM) ,sensori ,serramenti - Published
- 2020
22. L’evoluzione culturale umana al tempo dell’Antropocene
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Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
civilization ,Anthropocene ,Dennett ,cultural evolution - Published
- 2020
23. Dai Batteri a Bach di Daniel C. Dennett
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Caruana, F, Morabito, C, and Pollo, S
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Settore M-STO/05 ,filosofia della mente ,mente ,coscienza ,storia delle scienze cognitive ,Settore M-FIL/02 - Published
- 2020
24. A 21st Century reproductive bioethics
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Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
new reproductive technologies ,reproductive rights ,frontiers bioethics ,everyday bioethics ,genetic engineering - Published
- 2020
25. Scienze del vivente, democrazia e questioni di genere
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Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
life sciences ,democracy ,evolutionary biology ,gender issues ,naturalism - Published
- 2020
26. Increasing the value of the Public Building Assets: the former military sites redevelopment
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Riccardo Pollo
- Subjects
Military sites ,Building survey ,Aesthetics of cities. City planning and beautifying ,NA9000-9428 ,Architectural drawing and design ,NA2695-2793 - Abstract
The sale of public real estate assets is one of the main issues in the governments agenda. The goal is to find resources and improve the management of the building stock. Such assets are different from each other and transformation involves issues of urban and regional importance. Former military sites are mainly characterized by: different types (barracks, military airports, military bases, military hospitals, firing ranges, powder magazine, ports), spread out, obsolescence and environmental liabilities. Also historical buildings are relatively few in the military building stock. It follows that these assets cannot be converted to other uses without a technological knowledge. The paper discusses the key issues in rehabilitation of the military sites with particular attention to recent international experiences. The paper then goes on to focus the role of the research institutions in the screening required of the military real estate to be divested.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ninna nanna per piccoli criminali, by Heather O'Neill
- Author
-
Tommaso Pollo
- Subjects
American literature ,PS1-3576 ,English literature ,PR1-9680 - Abstract
Review of Ninna nanna per piccoli criminali, by Heather O'Neill.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Intervista a Giulietta Stefani
- Author
-
Tommaso Pollo
- Subjects
American literature ,PS1-3576 ,English literature ,PR1-9680 - Abstract
Giulietta Stefani ha conseguito il dottorato di ricerca in Storia e Civiltà presso l’Istituto Universitario Europeo di Firenze. Si occupa di storia dell’emigrazione e del colonialismo italiani, con particolare attenzione agli studi di genere, e svolge attività di ricerca sull’immigrazione in Italia. È redattrice di “Zapruder. Rivista di storia della conflittualità sociale“.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Diario di un fumatore by David Sedaris
- Author
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Tommaso Pollo
- Subjects
American literature ,PS1-3576 ,English literature ,PR1-9680 - Abstract
Review of Diario di un fumatore by David Sedaris
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Green Procurement e architettura: nuove competenze professionali
- Author
-
Pollo, Riccardo and Carbonaro, Corrado
- Subjects
Green Public Procurement ,Criteri minimi ambientali ,Ecodesign tools ,New professionalism ,Building life cycle design - Published
- 2019
31. L'identità umana dopo Darwin
- Author
-
Pollo, S.
- Subjects
identity ,Darwin ,naturalism ,animal cognition ,ethology - Published
- 2019
32. Le filosofie della modernità industriale
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
John S. Mill ,Jeremy Bentham ,Auguste Comte - Published
- 2019
33. Il sentimentalismo etico e il mondo vegetale
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
ecologia ,Sentimentalismo etico ,piante ,etica ambientale - Published
- 2019
34. Charles Darwin
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
Charles Darwin ,biologia ,teoria dell'evoluzione - Published
- 2019
35. Filosofia, ecologia ed etologia
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
ecologia ,etologia ,biologia evoluzionistica - Published
- 2019
36. Nuove tecnologie e progetto: strumenti innovativi per il co-design
- Author
-
Cocina, GRAZIA GIULIA, Peretti, Gabriella, Pollo, Riccardo, and Thiebat, Francesca
- Subjects
architettura per la sanità ,Tangible user interface ,co-design ,progettazione partecipata - Published
- 2019
37. La bioetica
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
eutanasia ,suicidio assistito ,bioetica ,consenso informato ,riproduzione umana - Published
- 2019
38. Il recupero del Moderno: da problema a risorsa
- Author
-
Pollo, Riccardo
- Subjects
Riqualificazione energetica, circular economy, green economy, recupero del patrimonio edilizio esistente ,green economy ,Riqualificazione energetica ,circular economy ,recupero del patrimonio edilizio esistente - Published
- 2019
39. Darwinismo e società
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
Charles Darwin ,teoria dell'evoluzione ,eugenetica ,scienza e società ,sociobiologia ,biologia - Published
- 2019
40. Introduzione al Forum 'Identità: storia, teorie ed esperienze'
- Author
-
Pollo, S.
- Subjects
normativity ,identity ,ethics ,politics - Published
- 2019
41. SMART CONSTRUCTION OBJECT: Strumenti per riprogrammare la città.
- Author
-
Pollo, Riccardo, Giovanardi, Matteo, and Trane, Matteo
- Abstract
Copyright of Agathon: International Journal of Architecture, Art & Design is the property of DEMETRA CE.RI.MED and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. La manutenzione del patrimonio edilizio residenziale pubblico - Attività di ricerca del Politecnico di Torino con l'ATC del Piemonte centrale
- Author
-
Pollo, Riccardo and Giovanardi, Matteo
- Subjects
Manutenzione, Edilizia Residenziale Pubblica ,Manutenzione ,Edilizia Residenziale Pubblica - Published
- 2018
43. Etica e animali
- Author
-
Pollo, S.
- Subjects
Etica animale, Benessere animale, Sperimentazione animale, Allevamento ,Allevamento ,Benessere animale ,Sperimentazione animale ,Etica animale - Published
- 2018
44. Umani e non umani: un legame di somiglianze e diversità
- Author
-
Pollo, S
- Subjects
ethology ,ethics ,human/animal relationships - Published
- 2018
45. Umani e animali: questioni di etica. Replica a Magni e Rescigno
- Author
-
Pollo, Simone Flaviano
- Subjects
relazioni umani/animali ,etica ,progresso morale ,diritto - Published
- 2018
46. 'Qualcosa di invisibile': l’esperienza del senso della vita
- Author
-
Pollo, S
- Subjects
senso della vita ,etica ,sentimentalismo ,simpatia - Published
- 2018
47. Bioetica e trasformazioni morali: una prospettiva naturalizzata e sentimentalista
- Author
-
Pollo, S
- Subjects
sentimentalismo ,naturalizzazione ,Bioetica ,trasformazioni morali - Published
- 2018
48. Tassi di sopravvivenza dell'Usignolo di fiume Cettia cetti nella Palude Brusà-Vallette (VR)
- Author
-
Pollo, Roberto, Bazzani, Luigi, Balasso, Elvio, Vicenzi, Cristina, and Birchall, David
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Innovazione tecnologica, industria e ricerca universitaria
- Author
-
Pollo, Riccardo
- Subjects
Ricerca tecnologica nell'architettura - Published
- 2018
50. Urban Metabolism, modelli interdisciplinari e progetto a scala microurbana.
- Author
-
Pollo, Riccardo, Trane, Matteo, and Giovanardi, Matteo
- Subjects
- *
ARCHITECTURAL design , *SCIENTIFIC community , *METABOLISM , *METAPHOR - Abstract
The architecture and the microurban scale design are elected to disciplines capable of materializing society's perennial and rapid evolution demands. The design quality derives from its characteristic of opening up to external contamination, making work on the frontiers of knowledge and the hybridization of knowledge crucial. The contribution re- flects on the Urban Metabolism's (UM) role as a boundary metaphor, within which interaction among the scientific community, stakeholders, policymakers, and designers is possible. This metaphor could then be understood as a potential investigation and design tool for the Urban Ecosystem. UM's possible relationship with architecture and environmental design is investigated, starting from models and approaches typical of other disciplinary fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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