2014- Rilievo e Gestione delle trasformazioni. Le piazze di Firenze . In Conoscere per progettare. Il centro storico di Firenze. Mariella Zoppi, Gabriele Paolinelli (a cura di), Edizione DIDA Diaprtimento di Architettura, dicembre 2014 (original) (raw)
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The geomatics contribution about knowledge of protection and cultural heritage management, finds its application in the specific topic about belvedere survey, around the Historic Centre of Florence, in order to define and to manage the future UNESCO site buffer zone. The study area is contained in a rectangle, about 15,3 Km x 12,6 Km, and it includes the municipality of Florence, Fiesole, Bagno a Ripoli, Sesto Fiorentino. Among the 63 recorded internally to the site, sights and along the hills around the Old Town, were chosen 18 belvedere, that are deemed significant for the definition, of UNESCO site buffer zone. It was drafted a visual sensitivity map, usefull to evaluate intervention area sensitivity with respect to the potential alteration of the city skyline. The study has helped to create a monitoring and verifying transformations tool in Historic Urban Landscape of Florence, to manage the future buffer zone.
Dal terremoto del 1915 al Piano regolatore e di ampliamento della citta dell’Aquila del 1931: la città muta, 2021
The seismic events that hit the city of L'Aquila many times resulted in a collective culture of earthquakes in its population. The city physically demonstrated the significance of the concept of resilience well before this term became mainstream. The earthquakes represented significant moments of discontinuity and change not only for the population but also for the life of the city itself, which over the centuries has repeatedly renewed itself. Just think of the devastating earthquake that struck L'Aquila in 1703 and destroyed the city to the point that, for a moment, it's abandonment was considered. Obviously, this did not take place and, on the contrary, a long and difficult reconstruction was begun and was expressed in the new Baroque form urbis, in line with the architectural culture of the moment. Another earthquake, one that razed to the ground Avezzano and the Marsica on 13 January 1915, also affected the region of L'Aquila and constituted, in fact, the event that triggered reflection and a lively dialogue involving the whole city, regarding its development in future years. This dialogue produced, in 1916, the first regulatory plan for expansion of the city of L'Aquila by the engineer Giulio Tian. It was never implemented and, over the following years, others followed until finally one was approved by Royal Decree in 1930 and 1931. In the meantime, however, the city had already changed, under the pressure of "progress‟ and increasing demographics, the result of which was the proliferation of "spontaneous‟ building not regulated by any plan; it was also changing because of the "restyling‟ of the city initiated under the Mayoral regime of Adelchi Serena. The role played in the process of change of the city of L'Aquila by the regulatory plans was by no means decisive, given that some were not implemented and others instead did nothing but ratify existing and consolidated situations or take note of political decisions coming from higher than municipal levels. In essence, L'Aquila is an exemplary case of spontaneous urban development, which took place in the post-unification and Fascist period.
2023
Since the late Middle Ages, the highly urbanized area that was once at the heart of the Punic and Roman city, began a slow but inexorable process of abandonment and progressive defunctionalization, until it became, under the rule of the Spanish, a parade ground and today a large green area. Recent archaeological excavations have brought to light stratigraphic contexts pertinent to butti and drains of medieval age, useful not only for the investigation of aspects and details of material life, but also for the knowledge of the urban transformations of the area.