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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Tower B1 – Housing And Offices At The “Porta Di Roma” Shopping Center in Roma, Italy by Valle Architetti

 
November 14th, 2012 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Valle Architetti

Tower B1 is part of the Porta di Roma shopping centre, designed by Valle Architetti. This large multi-functional centre is part of the Urban Plan of the Bufalotta district, a settlement of 10,000 inhabitants with housing and services situated along the GRA ring road to the north of Rome and was also designed by Valle Architetti.

South-West elevation with the shopping mall in the foreground.

  • Architects: Valle Architetti
  • Project: Tower B1 – Housing And Offices At The “Porta Di Roma” Shopping Center
  • Location: Roma, Italy
  • Design team: Servizio Ingegneria Lamaro Appalti Spa Unipersonale, arch. Rossella Capri. With Valle Architetti
  • Associati: arch. Piero Valle with arch. Ugo Tranquillini and arch. Stefano Bindi.
  • Structures: SBG & Partners: biggiguerrini ingegneria Spa, ing. Massimo Guerrini, ing. Luciano Gioacchini.
  • Mechanical systems: ENETEC Srl – Ingegneria Energetica e Realizzazione Impianti Roma, ing. Renato Tito, arch., Giorgio Landolfi.
  • Client:Porta di Roma Srl.
  • Building contractor: ELLEPI S.C.A.R.L., Roma
  • Photographer: Giuseppe dall’Arche

Photovoltaic façade.

  • Program: 14-floor tower with offices, apartments, parking garage
  • Apartments: 3.922 mq
  • Cellars: 447 mq
  • Gardens: 381 mq
  • Apartment balconies: 842 mq
  • Offices: 3.437 mq
  • Office balconies: 625 mq
  • Parking garage: 4.005 mq
  • Project: 2007-2009
  • Ground breaking: 2009
  • Opening: 2011
  • Total cost: € 14.000.000

View from West.

The shopping centre is a large multi-storey building with two levels for underground parking and two floors above for shopping arcades and offices. On the outside the building is organized into a series of external terraced squares that join the various shopping areas. The entire structure is covered by tufo sandstone-coloured prefabricated concrete panels and seems to be a kind of artificial terrain from which towers of skylights jut out and light the interior arcades and, of course, Tower B1, all finished with metal cladding that stands out in the general skyline. Tower B1, the last construction of Porta di Roma, was initially planned to accommodate a hotel. Its intended use was later changed during works following the rediscovery of important archaeological remains in another plot of land which was to be used for accommodation and offices in the Bufalotta Plan, which led to the transfer of the planned facilities to the present building when its structures had already been completed. This random incident led to an important review of the design but it was absorbed well by the flexibility of the standard floor already designed to accommodate various functions and the addition of loggias that enlivened the façades.

View from South.

Tower B1 has parking areas in the basement shared with the shopping centre, as well as a floor with entrances, common areas and three apartments with a garden, five floors of offices and 7 floors with residential apartments of various sizes. The standard floor, designed with a communal staircase, central corridor and studio flats of 32 square metres, was transformed into two-room apartments of 60 square metres that take the place of two hotel rooms from which a bathroom is subtracted. On the west side there are two larger two or three room apartments on the side with the best view. On the floor of offices, one office unit takes the place of three hotel rooms. The distribution of the standard floor is therefore flexible and can be adapted for different functions and sizes.

North elevation, night view.

On the façades the transformation into residences and offices has been characterized by the addition of terraces for the new apartments. To avoid a series of repetitive isolated terraces, the exteriors have been grouped into volumes of loggias clad with micro-perforated sheets and characterized by a pattern of alternating bored-holes on each level. They create a pierced screen that has the appearance of a fabric on the façades and cross-stitching on the corners of the larger apartments to the west. White screens cover blue loggias, while the main volume is metalized silver: all the exteriors are clad in high density HPL in these two colours. On the southeast façade, where there are no terraces, instead a graphic motif has been created similar to that of the loggias in blue crystalline photovoltaic panels: this is the first entirely photovoltaic façade in the city of Rome, with photovoltaic panels connected to electrical sensors that power the condominium water heating and electricity systems. An additional triangular volume covered by photovoltaic panels can be found on the roof covering the technical volumes. Tower B1 at Porta di Roma is characterized by functional flexibility, volumetric organization, different spatial planes on the façades, and energy innovation.

The loggias.

The loggias.

The loggias.

View of the photovoltaic façade from the roof of the shopping mall.

View of the photovoltaic façade from the roof of the shopping mall.

View of the photovoltaic façade from the roof of the shopping mall.

The loggias on the first floor.

Loggia.

Loggia.

One of the apartments.

One of the apartments.

One of the apartments.

General view from the Bufalotta district.

General view from West.

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Categories: Apartments, Offices, Shopping Mall, Tower




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