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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.

Green Pea Retail Park in Turin, Italy by Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

 
February 14th, 2021 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

An architecture in which sustainable materials, greenery and natural light are the protagonists. A manifesto built as an experience of the possibilities and beauty of new technologies of conscious building and of the values ​​represented by a vision of respect for the environment and the human being.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

  • Architects: Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti
  • Project: Green Pea Retail Park
  • Location: Turin, Italy
  • Photography: Fabio Oggero
  • Client: Eataly Real Estate/Green Pea
  • Architectural works supervision: Arch. Cristiana Catino and Arch. Carlo Grometto
  • Structural and geotechnical design: Ceas
  • landscape project: ACC Naturale Architettura Cristiana Catino, Negozio Blu Architetti Associati with agronomists Vigetti and Merlo
  • Plant design: Studio Sapi
  • Piazza project: Samep

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

  • Gross floor area: sq.m. 10,500
  • Sales area: sqm. 5,500
  • Sales spaces: 57
  • Surface services, restaurant and wellness: sqm. 4,900
  • Start of construction works: December 2018
  • End of construction works: November 2020

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

A new building to shape a new vision

ACC Natural Architecture Cristiana Catino and Negozio Blu Architetti (Ambrosini, Gatti, Grometto), former designers of the first Eataly, conceived a symbolic architecture to give shape to the strategic vision of Green Pea: a highly sustainable building, a manifesto built with new technologies and natural materials to convey, through architecture, the idea of ​​respect for the environment and harmony with nature. Commissioned by Eataly Real Estate, Green Pea is the final step in the redevelopment of the former Carpano Lingotto industrial area, a pivotal project in the regeneration process going on in the southern area of ​​Turin.

Resilience, eco-sustainability and materials recovery

Green Pea represents a new format of urban architecture in balance between architecture and environment, sustainability and beauty, quality and functionality. Defined by a plot of natural materials and permeated with light and green, it is a resilient and eco-sustainable building in every detail.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

The organic volume, with a particular multifaceted shape, is spread over five floors for a height of 25 m in continuity with the existing building line and extending the façade of Eataly. The North-South orientation and the flared shape of the top floor are designed to adapt to climatic and environmental conditions so ensuring the best distribution of solar radiation.

The external envelope consists of a double level of surfaces. An external shell of wooden sunshade slats, supported by a steel rib, forms a technical “treillage” acting as a filter between inside and outside allowing the building to breathe, open up to the city and protect itself from the sun. The slats, heat-treated for external use and stiffened by a metal core, were made with fir wood recovered from the forests of the Trentino Val di Fiemme and Bellunese, destroyed by the October 2018 storm and traditionally used for the soundboards of musical instruments.

The internal shell, on the other hand, made up of an infill of KVH solid wood sandwich panels, insulated with wood fiber and covered by sheet metal, is marked by large cuts in the glass surfaces flooding the interior spaces with natural light. The fronts of the building define a sequence of paved and garden pedestrian spaces.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

The load-bearing structure is made of steel, a 100% recyclable material, and is entirely dry assembled by bolts, so as to be easily dismantled and removed, allowing in the long term the extension of the building life cycle: a mesh of main (HEA 1000) and secondary (IPE400) beams resting on supporting tubular pillars, reduced to a minimum to allow greater freedom in the design and management of spaces. The system resulting is then light, but at the same time highly resistant. The construction site was organized in vertical sections, from the ground to the last level, optimizing times.

Green primary material for architecture

Greenery is inserted through the organic texture of the wooden façades, becoming part of the architecture. Green, not used in a mimetic way, grows in the terraces where tall trees are planted in large tanks. The building thus appears as a natural organism that vibrates according to light and to the plants growth. The vegetation was selected to be suitable for the climate and microclimate of the different façades, favoring native plants and Italian flora.

Different natural environments start from the base of the building and meet in the large equipped garden roof, characterized by a bioclimatic greenhouse, that becomes the “fifth façade” of Green Pea.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

In this part of the city, heavily industrialized during the twentieth century, green returns to play a central role and to be read in the urban fabric.

A match of plants and hardscape creates the pedestrian square at the foot of the building, an agora of life.

The interiors: natural light and traditional materials

In the interiors, a simple and clear concept involves all the senses and allows a complete experience, immersed in the identity of the Green Pea brand and its values ​​of respect and conscious consumption.

The layout of the various floors creates flexible spaces, immediately identifiable paths and relationship with the external greenery and widely welcomes natural light. The interiors feature traditional materials such as natural lime and wood combined with luxury materials such as leather and velvets. The parquet is made with wood already felled for natural causes and then picked up along the river beds of the Val Varaita.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

The painting material neutralizes pollutants, prevents growth of mold and microbes and eliminates germs.

Geothermal, photovoltaic, wind and solar energy: renewable sources for a lower carbon footprint

From the plant engineering point of view, Green Pea offers a broad panorama of the different ways of producing energy through renewable sources: geothermal wells, photovoltaic panels, solar panels, mini wind turbines, smart flowers, up to piezoelectric floors capturing kinetic energy generated by the passage of users. The plants are intentionally left visible to recall the industrial origins of the site. The combination of these active and passive environmental strategies, aimed at achieving maximum energy efficiency and reducing CO2 emissions, has made it possible to obtain a score of the Italian Itaca Protocol of 3.5 and create a NZEB (Nearly Zero Energy Building) in class A3 .

ACC Naturale Architettura Cristiana Catino

The Green Pea multipurpose center reflects the values ​​that Cristiana Catino pursues with her design research: respect for the environment, the relationship between buildings, materials, nature and people’s well-being. Her journey began with Andrea Bruno in Turin and Renzo Piano in Paris and continued with Negozio Blu, a studio of which she was co-founder and partner and with which she has designed numerous and important works in Italy in more than twenty years, including the first Eataly in Turin. Since 1995 she has specialized in bio-architecture (Casa Clima and National Institute of Bio-architecture) and in 2016 she created ACC Naturale Architettura. Among the most significant achievements, the socio-cultural center Workout Pasubio(Parma,2016 competition), the Fontanafredda widespread hotel (Alba 2017), restoration and interior design interventions, urban and landscape redevelopments.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Negozio Blu Architetti Associati

The studio is currently run by Gustavo Ambrosini, Paola Gatti, Carlo Grometto. They have carried out interventions of urban redevelopment and industrial buildings, innovative retail (Eataly), tertiary (Santander Consumer Bank, Codebò), as well as numerous residential interventions in Turin and in the Alpine area, fittings and interior design; in 2020 they completed the Gesù Maestro parish complex in Racalmuto, winner of a CEI competition. Active for years on the issues of eco-compatibility, they combined sustainable technologies and materials in the construction of an innovative image for the architecture of Green Pea.

Green Pea

Green Pea is a new department store transferring the basic concept born with Eataly for food, in the furniture, clothing, giftware and cosmetics sectors, with the aim of changing purchasing habits. All products for sale are environmentally friendly and respectful of the environment: garments made with fabrics derived from eco-friendly crops, organic cosmetics, furnishings and furniture produced without synthetic glues and built with materials that do not harm the environment, toys, ecological transport and much more. Turin will have the only Green Pea in Italy, while another ten are expected abroad in the next ten years, from London to Paris, from the US to China, Japan, Canada and the United Arab Emirates.

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Fabio Oggero

Image Courtesy © Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

Image Courtesy © Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

Image Courtesy © Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

Image Courtesy © Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

Image Courtesy © Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

Image Courtesy © Acc Naturale Architettura, Negozio Blu Architetti

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Categories: Building, Retail, Retail facilities




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