The Italian pavilion, as a piece of architecture to represent the host country for the 2015 Expo will convey a far-reaching, energetic and vital image.
As well as being one of the most important works of
architecture on the expo site, at the end of the event, will accommodated the
so-called cultural "hothouse", a place proposed for the development
of creative energy, for the growth of thought and innovative ideas.
The elements that distinguish most clearly the
architecture of the pavilion, design by Park Associati, while at the same time
expressing a strong representation of Italian culture and Italy itself are the
20 towers / masts (corresponding to the number of Italian regions),
constituting both the supporting structure for the pavilion as well as soaring
up to create a symbolic element.
The twenty columns
/ towers / masts together with the 23-m-high container, have been conceived to
proportionally represent in terms of height the actual area of the Italian
regions.
These metal masts, cabled inside and made up of
sections of a maximum length of 20
m, at the end of the event will be reused as supporting
elements for future wind-turbines entering therefore into the principle of
recycling in the production process.
We anticipate that the masts in their new role as wind-turbine structures will produce in
3 months the energy consumed by the entire pavilion during the Expo period,
bringing into play the parameters of rebalancing energy consumption to then
become, after this brief period, producers of surplus energy.
The actual pavilion is a large square container 57.5 x
57.5 m
with a height of 23 m
to the top slab. The covered and open piazza that is generated at the base of
the building is clad in a surface of lenticular film that reproduces a field of
grass and this area is particularly flexible and can accommodate events of all
kinds.
A skin made up of aluminium uprights and extruded
terracotta tiles with one side glazed and mirrored with PVD (Physical Vapour
Deposition) treatment gives a particularly bright and vibrant appearance to the
elevations of the whole pavilion, as well as screening and protecting the
indoor functions from direct sunlight.











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