Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development

Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography, Brick, BeamPleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior PhotographyPleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior PhotographyPleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography, Stairs, ColumnPleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - More Images+ 9

Arzignano, Italy
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Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography, Stairs, Column
© Simone Bossi

Text description provided by the architects. The tension between old and new find its realization in the pleonastic stairway – object hanging in the balance within the space.  What is pleonastic is not strictly necessary. The stairway wasn’t necessary in the first place; neither was the strut supporting the stairway. The invention that the stairway brings about is its independence from the slab and the walls. The self-supporting stairway does not touch the beauty and the fragility of the wooden slab and the load-bearing walls. That’s how the stairway from being pleonastic becomes fantastic.

Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Image 8 of 14
Ground floor plan
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Section

Like an Escherian-Piranesian connecting element between two worlds, the stairway is once a rising path, once a scenographic background. It is once embraced by the space and becomes part of it, it is once an intrusive addition where originates the tension between old and new. The stairway rises out of the new concrete ground, which, along its perimeter, reveals a 3 cm interstice from the walls to embrace the natural crumbling away of the surface of the inner wall.

Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography
© Simone Bossi

The building is characterized by thick stone walls and by a timber roof truss, timber beams, and clay tiles. The meticulous restoration involved the assiduous search and the recovery of salvaged materials from other similar local sites to integrate the original roof. 

Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography, Brick, Beam, Windows
© Simone Bossi
Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography, Wood, Brick
© Simone Bossi

The handcrafted rusty steel window fixtures and their handles of small thickness, together with the restoration of the original wooden floor, complete the conservation project.

Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development - Interior Photography
© Simone Bossi

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Project location

Address:Via Alberti, 11, 36071 Arzignano VI, Italy

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Pleonastic is Fantastic Restoration / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development" 22 Jan 2021. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/955528/pleonastic-is-fantastic-restoration-amaa-collaborative-office-for-research-and-development> ISSN 0719-8884

© Simone Bossi

奇妙多体阶梯,建筑修复元素 / AMAA - Collaborative Office For Research And Development

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