Urban Investigations in the Heart of Rome: The Rome Transformed Project (original) (raw)
Related papers
The urban structure of Rome between history and modern times.
The increasing use of computer technologies in projects involving the acquisition, documentation and communication of cultural heritage has led to a fast and ever more high demands of standards and methodologies in order to create best practices models. In the past years, in Europe it has been recorded a considerable interest in the digitization of Cultural Heritage and the creation of databases shared on the network (EUROPEANA, CARARE, 3D Icons), in the implementation of policies for the identification of shared global standards (EPOCH, MINERVA) and in the application of Web Gis (MAPPA, Mapping Gothic France). The research we project suits with this debate by proposing an innovative methodology for the investigation of the urban heritage. It should be able to document and represent the transformations that the city had during the time and the aim is to experiment a new methodology of knowledge and representation of the city.
Rome under Rome: survey and analysis of the east excavation area beneath the Basilica Iulia
2018
The Forum Romanum in Rome (Italy) represents one of the most iconic places of our history. The complex stratification of the area allows us to read how it changed continuously over the centuries. The research here proposed aims to underline the importance of an integrated approach towards the analysis and the comprehension of archaeological contexts in order to document what is still tangible and to reconstruct their original features and transformations.
Urban Archaeology Enhancement / Valorizzare l’archeologia urbana
2013
Gli autori hanno lavorato all’interno di un progetto di ridendo esiti di studi che hanno trovato riscontro in monoIn their various and distinct ways, there are many European cities that have archaeological remnants buried in ground where the passing of time has left its sedimentary traces, and this renders urban archaeology a topic of a relevant interest, at the same time raising issues of great ness of history and the wish to conserve these vestiges and communicate them, whilst assimilating the dynamic aspects typical of contemporary transformations. The articles collected together in this publication tackle the subject in its technological, structural, conservational, museological and museographical aspects. The examples provided include instances of re-interred or scarcely visible archaeological constructions as well as items conserved in the open air or protected by appropriate enclosures. Further examples have the archaeological construction today housed in an actual museum, ti...
Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies, 2012
Simultaneous with on-going archaeological excavations of the Roman town site of Ammaia in South-Central Portugal, a group of researchers acting within the EC funded project "Radiography of the Past (Radio-Past)", have during the past two years, achieved a full coverage geophysical survey of the intra-mural part and large tracts of the extra-mural areas of this abandoned ancient city in Lusitania. Using a wide array of instruments, for prospections with GPR, earth resistance and magnetometers, this approach allowed an in depth analysis of an abandoned Roman centre, linking the excellent survey data with stratigraphic information, obtained via earlier excavations and via focused ground truthing operations, including small trenching and augering. Together with data from remote sensing and fine DGPS surveys this now allows to study the urbanism of a very systematically and ex novo built Romano-Lusitanian town. Part of the field project also leads to a tentative reconstruction of many aspects of the urban pattern and structures, providing a unique high resolution survey-based approach to visualising ancient cities. This paper presents aspects of integrated methodology of survey, high resolution mapping results and discusses the process of visualisation of the site in Roman times.
The street is the outside space that shapes our daily life. Its study means to understand the most important public space of the city. The research project described herein attempts to understand how the street becomes an urban space -a livable space-, its importance as a social realm and the design elements that make it a successful space in the city. The scope of the research goes from a general overview of the street to the study of the specific case represented by Via Flaminia, one of the most important historical axes of Rome. The approach to the research is divided into two parts; first a theoretical, historical and referential investigation; and a second part that includes a focused analysis of Via Flaminia and concludes with the application of this analysis to the design of an urban and an architectural project for this chosen street. The proposed project seeks to solve the limited permeability of the street and attempts to provide continuity to its image. It explores the repurposing the existing building typologies with new social, cultural and recreational functions. One of the main goals is to transform this street into a revitalized cultural node of the city, to transform Via Flaminia from a road infrastructure to a quality urban space of the City of Rome, seeking that it becomes the new cultural axis of the city. The architectural project focuses on a critical point of the street, addressing the connection of the city with the surrounding nature, developing a Cultural and Educational Center.
Proceedings of IWA Regional Symposium on Water, Wastewater and Environment, Patras, Greece, 22-24 March 2014, 2014
The study of ancient hydraulic infrastructures (e.g., aqueducts) is usually tackled in terms of their technical features and of classical texts and archaeological evidences while insufficient attention is devoted to the framing of the structure in the social, economic and political context of the crossed territory or of the cities and activities served. This method was applied in this study to one of the biggest ancient Roman aqueduct complex: the Augustan aqueduct in the Campania region of Southern Italy. The paper highlights which civitates or settlements were served and why some civitates, although in the same regional area, were instead excluded. The main roads and the centuriationes of the zones crossed are mentioned. This allows to clearly realize as great works, such as the Augustan aqueduct, were not isolated monuments but integrated in a context of very detailed, widespread and planned governance and organization of that territory.