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Scuderie Aldobrandini
Rome, Italy
Massimiliano Fuksas architect
A new museum and exhibition space reveals
the layers of history in the hills south of Rome
© Giovanna Piemonti
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For more photos click on 'photos
& drawings' above.
To see the people and products
behind this project click on 'people & products.'
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By Paul Bennett
With its facade faded to a patina and
large patches of stucco missing to expose raw brick and concrete
underneath, the reborn Scuderie Aldobrandini in Frascati,
Italy, makes a varied statement about history and architecture.
Transformed by Massimiliano Fuksas into a museum, gallery,
and conference center, the Scuderie was once the horse stable
of the Villa Aldobrandini, a masterwork of the late Renaissance
by Giacomo della Porta. The stable has traveled on a sine
curve of ruination and reinvention: The Germans used it as
a regional headquarters during World War II; wine makers made
it a fermenting house in the 1950s; and when Fuksas arrived
in 1999, the structure was being used as a makeshift parking
garage.
The client wanted space for exhibitions,
lectures, and conferences, as well as for displaying its collection
of archaeological artifacts. At any given time, the building
might play host to a lecture on astrophysics, an exhibition
on Bernardo Bertolucci, and a display of pottery shards from
the 2nd century B.C. The architect was faced with a building
shell requiring extensive reinforcing, as well as the challenge
of integrating these diverse programs into a single structure.
Fuksas gutted the interior to expose
the buildings raw structurebrick, stone, and plaster
walls that date to the 1600s. The plaster was stabilized and
a new steel truss apparatus added to tie the walls together
and support a restored wooden roof. The architect then created
two voids in the interior by inserting a three-story structure
in the middle for service spaces. Each void was divided into
two floors, for a total of four roomsthree for exhibitions,
one for conferences. Museum director Giovanna Cappelli sits
in a glass-and-steel office at the top of the central service
space and enjoys views down through the glittering interior.
Splitting both first-floor exhibition
rooms is a glass-enclosed trough that acts as a spine and
contains individually mounted artifacts from Tuscolo, an ancient
settlement nearby. Beneath the stands, artifacts are displayed
in a glass-capped trench dug into the buildings floor.
Unfortunately, the trench is not climate-controlled, resulting
in an unintended (yet nonetheless interesting) murky subterranean
cavern.
Adding a second story both increases
the floor space and creates a dialogue between old and new.
The new floor of glass and steel rests on a raw, rusting armature
of structural steel. It seems to float aloft, separated from
the old walls by a gap of several feet, which symbolizes an
important design concept. Details like the Pompeii-red painted
walls provide a skein of continuity for the disparate programs
within the building.
See the July 2003 issue of Architectural
Record for full coverage of this project.
Formal name
of Project:
Ex Scuderie Aldobrandini (Museo Tuscolano)
Location:
Frascati, Rome, Italy
Gross square
footage:
4,921 sq ft (exibition area)
721 sq ft (auditorium)
Total construction
cost:
$2,3 million
Owner:
Municipaly of Frascati
Architect:
Massimiliano Fuksas architect
Piazza del Monte di Pietà, 30
00186 Rome (Italy)
Tel: +39 06 68807871
Fax: +39 06 68807872
E-mail: office@fuksas.it
www.fuksas.it
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