ABSTRACTS
DEL CONVEGNO INTERNAZIONALE DI SCIENZA E BENI CULTURALI
-anno
2006-
PAVIMENTAZIONI
STORICHE
Uso
e Conservazione
Roberto
Bugini, Luisa Folli, Ilaria Marchetti
Primo
studio sui materiali lapidei utilizzati nei pavimenti di edifici Milanesi e
Lombardi.
The
use of stones for pavements was widespread in Lombardy since the Roman time.
Hexagonal tiles or lozenges of sedimentary rocks, as black limestone and Rosso
ammonitico (nodular red limestone), were used together with white marbles to
make geometric patterns. The use increased since the end of 19th century
following the availability of stones coming from the whole country; rectangular
slabs of limestone, travertine, marble and greenstone were generally employed
and mosaic tesseræ too, made of coloured limestones and marbles.
Pavement, Mosaic, Limestone,
Marble, Lombardy, Milan
P.Casati
Migliorini, M.P.
Riccardi
I
pavimenti maiolicati della certosa di Pavia: i materiali e le tecniche di
produzione.
The
ancient floor of the Charterhouse church was built with majolica tiles, either
monochrome or polychrome. This work deals on historical aspects resulting from
the material studies of polychrome tin-opacified lead tiles, now displayed at
the Charterhouse Museum. Investigated tiles are the last witnesses of the
original majolica flooring. The study only concerns glaze compositional and
microtextural features, and was undertaken by a preliminary micro-sampling (few
micron in size), followed by a multi-analytical approach where SEM and EPMA have
been employed.
The
analyses of the dark-blue decoration allows to disclose one of the most hidden
aspects of this flooring, i.e. the age of the tiles making. The absence of As
and the presence of Co, Fe, Cu and Ni in the blue pigment strongly suggest an
age preceding 1520 AD for the tile craftsmanship.
Certosa
di Pavia, majolica tiles, Cobalt blue, tin-opacified lead glaze, majolica floor,
Scanning Electro Microscope, Electron Probe Analysis.
Stefania
Agati, Luca Giorgi, Luca Piccirillo
Il
pavimento della metropolitana di Ravenna ed il reimpiego degli elementi antichi.
The
Ravenna Cathedral, built in 1743/44 on design by Gian Francesco Buonamici, took
the place of one of the biggest churches of the early Christianity: the Ursiana
Basilica, founded by Bishop Orso at the beginning of V century. The present
floor of the church (more than 2000 sq. mt. composed by several panels different
in size) is unique for the nature of its elements: besides the simple relocation
of some parts of the ancient floor, many others, such as corbels, capitals and
pillars of different diameters, were “condemned to be sawed” before being
reutilized. Buonamici used transennas, pluteus, pillars and capitals, sawed “at
the foot of the yard”, as flooring plates for the new Cathedral and disposed
them according to different nature and shape. Starting from the knowledge of the
situation of the previous floors, as determined by the archaeological
investigations of XIX and XX centuries, and on the base of an exact new metric
survey of the present floor, all the parts obtained reutilizing the ancient
elements have been identified. The comparison of shape, size and material of the
elements allowed to define also which architectural elements of the ancient
Basilica, reduced in plates, were reutilized (the nature of capitals, the
probable original location of the columns, subdivided in different classes of
diameter, ...). Preservation conditions and decay processes of the floor have
been analyzed.
Ravenna Cathedral –
Ravenna churches - Ursiana Basilica – Gian Francesco Buonamici – Ancient
marbles - Reutilization – Opus sectile – Marble flooring
Stefano
Musso
Perché,
talvolta, i pavimenti "saltano"!
Starting
from a citation by the paragraph that Vitruvio devoted to the pavements, in his
treatise “De Architectura”, the paper tries to investigate the reasons
because several ancient pavements often “disappear”, or are sacrificed
within our restoration interventions. Rules about safety or technical
requirements are sometimes recalled to justify this attitude and the destruction
of those artifacts. In other occasions, the search for a new comfort, or of a
new “decor”, supports the same destiny. Other times, further on, it is
simply the personal design choice that brings to the same result. The problem,
at the end, it is that no one of these reasons seems to be really compulsory or
without alternative. This circumstance, therefore, imposes a serious
consideration about our choices and our capability in finding new technical and
design solutions, to balance the needs of safety, of strengthening or of
cleanness, with those of the respect for important traces of our past.
pavements,
restoration, conservation, destruction, maintenance
Maria
Grazia Vinardi
I
pavimenti in legno del palazzo tra Sette ed Ottocento
in Piemonte.
The
wooden floorings in the representation environment of the Savoy residences and
of the coeval noble buildings, both of new construction and of renewall, build
up an unique heritage of the architecture in Piedmont for its artistic
historical value and for the characteristic of
longevity. The use of wooden floors on underlying frame develops from the
XVIIth to the XIXth century, and particularly from the half of the XVIIIth,
interesting the castles of Venaria, of Agliè, of Rivoli, of Moncalieri and in
Turin the Royal Palace, the Carignano building, the Villa della Regina and many
noble buildings in the city and in the territory. Their execution moves from an
ideation sometimes of important signature, of court architects and their
collaborators, that find in the specialized workers, the “minusieri” (for
example Carlo Maria Ugliengo and family for the first half the eighteenth
century, Antonio Capello called “Moncalvo” in the thirties of the XIXth
century), men skilled in the complex framework operations. Over their
preciousness, this floors show even an extraordinary flexibility, and they
allowed the underlying network to the insertion like plants and pipings and they
have been sometimes maintained in the time with integrations and sometimes with
their re-employment.
Wooden
floorings, royal and noble palaces, XVII-XIXth century, Piedmont
Alberto
Grimoldi, Laura Guidolin, Daniela Oreni
I
pavimenti lignei a Milano e in Lombardia dal ‘700
all’800.
The
wood floors appeared in Lombardia for the first time in the early XVIII century,
when french treatises reached a wide diffusion in Milan. Some of them were based
on french models, some other were the result of a patient and precise work of
parqueterie that made them either precious and delicate.
Their
use was unusual in the representative rooms and was generally restricted to
private rooms, until the first half of XIX century. Sometimes wood was chosen
instead of stone for its insulating effect also in public buildings, where rough
boards were used to prevent the effect of ‘cold wall’.
In
the second half of XIX century the use of parquet became more diffused also in
the representative rooms of the richest house. This technique consisted in
tablets, sometimes characterized by complex geometric shapes, that were tapped,
nailed to the rafters and placed side by side to compose a pattern.
The
progressive reduction of the thickness and the simplification of the patters
transformed the parquet in a low cost finish, close to a substitute and hard to
preserve.
wood
floor, parquet, technique, Lombardia, XVIII XIX century
Rita
Fabbri, Carla Di Francesco, Fabio
Bevilacqua
Pavimentazioni
in cotto: esempi della Ferrara estense. Restauro e
pratiche manutentive antiche ed attuali.
The
study concern cotto’s floorings realized in Ferrara during XIV and XVI century,
start from archive-keeping documentation, which give us some precious
attestations about some evanished examples, that denote a great technical
ability: from banked pavement to majolica paving. Some floorings build indoor
and outdoor were realized with some kind of tile, in that case the construction
was studied to preserve these elements.
Recently,
in several restoration building site, was possible to make other observations
and researches about the “cocciopesto” floorings, but not only, it was
possible to appreciate some ancient procedures of maintenance.
Started
to executive technics that connote Ferrara’s floorings, the study want to
propose some simple, but appropriate, maintenance procedures.
indoor
and outdoor floorings, cotto, ceramic, cocciopesto, maintenance
Tiziana
Favaro
Il restauro del pavimento
marmoreo della chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta dei Gesuiti a Venezia.
In
the baroque Gesuiti Church of Venice the precious marmoreal floor of the
presbytery is currently under restoration. This floor is composed of large
Carrara marble slabs enriched with inlayings of Antico or Tessaglia marble
forming a flowery pattern.
The
flooring of the nave was already previously restored and is composed of large inserted slabs of
Istrian stone of different shapes, with inlayings of small strips of Verde
Antico or Tessaglia marble forming an elaborate geometric pattern. The entire
flooring of the church presented a bad state of preservation with the presence
of fractures, crackings and loss of material, largely due to the lack of
firmness of the underlaying ground layer, composed of a mixture of debris from
the pre-existing demolished Crociferi Church on which the slabs were directly
laid. First signs of subsidence and
saggings appeared soon after the reconstruction of the church, as proved by the
Nineteenth century documentation which can be
found at the Historical Archive of the Superintendency of Venice.
The
intervention has therefore included the
removal and reinforcement of the heavy stone slabs, the excavation of the layer
of friable ground and the creation of a new footing, then the recovery of all
the green marble inlayings and the integration of the numerous missing parts
that were fixed adopting the traditional technique of the natural resin (colophony).
The
flooring of the first chapel on the right side of the church, with marble
tarsias, has been restored using the same techniques.
Floor,
Venice, Gesuiti Church
Emma
Cantisani, Fabio Fratini, Carlo Alberto Garzonio, Grazia Tucci
Il
pavimento della Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore a Firenze: progetto di
rilievo.
The
floor of Florence Cathedral, result of contribution of numerous craftsmen, shows
excellent decorative pattern realized through “white and stained marbles” of
different provenance. The relief project, obtained by digital correction of
images acquired with high resolution, allows the cataloguing of used lapideous
stones and the quantification of their areal extension. The recognition of
material is based on macroscopic observation and for each element a data sheet
containing dimensional, classificative and conservation state’s informations
is produced.
For
the study of the state a conservation, methods able to evaluate altimetric
variations will be used. Scanner system and ortophoto are very useful for the
study of planarity defects and erosion state. These methods allow to know the
general state of conservation of the whole floor and, in particularly, to define
the lithotypes that will need major attention, above all regarding the erosion
phenomena, determined by the presence of a huge number of visitors. These
information can be useful for the planning of the conservation intervention and
for the a sustainable use of the
Cathedral.
floor, Florence Cathedral, relief, stones,
decay.
Cristiana
Achille, Raffaella Brumana, Luigi Fregonese, Carlo Monti, Ettore Vio
Il
pavimento della Basilica di San Marco. Il progetto di rilievo digitale e della
restituzione alla scala reale 1:1.
The
Basilica of San Marco’s floor in Venice is very famous for his
historical-artistic importance, for his undulation, the constituent wealth and
the materials that compose it.
In
agreement with the Procuratoria and the Proto, a digital relief has been placed
in yard to scale 1:1 of all the mosaic to obtain a three-dimensional ortophoto.
The
importance of this type of relief range
to the fine documentation of the object to differents cognitives possibilities
to join the restoration, until the realization of an informatic system of
management , knowledge, future maintenance of the entire pavement. In a test
area of approximately 40 mq in the right transept face of the treasure, has been
tried technologies, elaborations, instruments for the evaluation of the
operative feasibility of a similar
relief.
The
employment of the photogrammetric camera Rollei DB44 Metric with 16 millions of
pixel applied on a sensor with an approximately 4cmx4cm format (1 pixel = 0.009mm), a photogram scale
on an average
The
3D ortophoto, obtained from the DSM, in addiction to give the correct position
of each tessera of the pavement, in a completely automatic way permit to extract,
with two points fixed, the continuous altimetric course included between this
ones and so realize (automatically) the template for the restoration of the
foundation with his characteristic undulation.
SAN
MARCO BASILICA (VE), FLOOR, DIGITAL RELIEF REAL SCALE 1:1
L.
Fregonese, C.C. Monti, G. Monti, S. Moranti, L. Taffurelli, E.Vio
Il
pavimento della Basilica di San Marco . La
realizzazione dell’ortofoto 3D in digitale alla scala reale 1:1.
The
success in terms of feasibility and utility of the 3D ortophoto for the restorers, as well as the
possibility to automatically extract the outlines of the photographed surface,
have seen the extension at all the pavement of photogrammetric shots.
A
team composed by three-four operators, with the help of the Procuratoria members,
has been planned the shots (and the exploit) to realize in a span of six months around Christmas
2004, the entire mosaic surface of the Basilic. In truth the job has been
protracted for others six months because of the higther frequency of religious
ceremonies near Christmas and Easter period and because of the incessant tourist
inflow.
The
project about the shots have suite the routine procedure performed in the area
test (june 2004): totally have been realized more than 2000 digitals frames in
colour and have been topographically surveilled about 2250 GCP (Ground Control
Point).
The
restitution of the block of strips has been started by Nartece Nord and actually
(april 2006), we can see the realization about two thirds of pavement, 1200 mq
of 2000 mq.
The
3D ortophoto is realize with a mesh aside of 0.5mm, than the DSM with a mesh of
10mm aside. The altimetric uncertainty of the DSM, always obtain by image
connection, presents precision of order of millimeter. This one allows to
observe in detail, also in restricted area, the state of the surface and even
the wear of materials. In all Nartece has been opered also a Laser Scanner
survey.
SAN MARCO VENICE, PAVEMENT,
ORTOPHOTO 3D, SCALE 1:1
Raffaella
Brumana, Luigi
Fregonese, Carlo Monti, Federico Prandi, Ettore Vio
Il
pavimento della Basilica di San Marco. La modellazione del pavimento entro gli
alzati architettonici.
The
representation of complex surfaces and the study of the form and colour of
mosaic surfaces in general imply the need to create complex three-dimensional
models because of methods used for their acquisition and for management of the
metric information and the accuracy that needs to be reproduced. The term "reproduce,"
which is used when discussing creation of virtual models, poses some questions
related to its significance: producing an object again means being able to
understand it metrically with a certain definite accuracy, based on the scales
of representation chosen. If the final objective of the understanding is to
execute a copy of the object at a life-size scale, the precision required will
produce a model totally similar to the same reality. Brand-new reproduction
implies an entirely different aspect: the metric understanding must be
accompanied by an appropriate understanding of the colour information (correct
spatial position of the radiometric information) in order to place the elements
that define the entire mosaic floor surface. In the case in point, the floor of
St. Mark's Basilica in Venice, we are faced with a 2000m2 surface whose 3D model
was inserted in between the architectural elevations in order to better
understand the interconnecting relationships between the structure and the floor.
The 3D model of the elevations was done with LIDAR terrestrial technology (Leica
HDS3000 laser scanner) for the geometric part, while the radiometric information
was acquired using a high-resolution photogrammetric camera (Rolleiflex
6008metric and Phase-One digital). The 3D model of the mosaic surface was
constructed using digital photogrammetry techniques of image autocorrelation (sub-millimetre
accuracy defined by the real size of the pixel acquired, equal to 0.5mm) with
SocetSet software. The new form generated in this way has two major advantages:
the first is related to conservation and renovation of the floor, which is
accomplished by using precision templates that respect the form it has assumed
over time. The second advantage is the interactive study and analysis that the
virtual model allows by means of generating a 3D Geographic Information System
(GIS), which can be navigated and consulted directly by the users.
Cultural
Heritage, Reverse Engineering, 3D Model, 3DWEB GIS, 3D Navigation
Thomas Danzl, Elisabeth Rüber-Schütte
I
pavimenti incrostati di gesso (anidrite), terracotta e pietre del dodicesimo e
tredicesimo secolo nella Sassonia-Anhalt. Caratteristiche materiche e tecniche,
proposte per la loro conservazione e manutenzione.
Since
medieval times “gypsum” was an important building material in the region “Harz”,
Saxony-Anhalt (Germany). Based on roman traditions of floor-making a particular interpretation of “opus
sectile” and “incrustatio” works had been developed in the 12th and 13th
century: A jointless floor was scratched in
a figural and/or geometrical way . The scratched lines were then filled by
coloured pastes and subsequently eavened. More than ten pavements have been
uncovered in the 19th and 20th century and often presented without any
appropriate conservation. The knowledge of the gypsum production and therefore
also the “know-how” for repair works is lost since the second half of the
20th century. Nowadays mural paintings restorers together with natural
scientists are looking for appropriate conservation and preservation strategies.
An important aspect of these efforts is to rediscover ancient production and
working methods.
gypsum,
anhydrite, romanesque hard plaster floors, opus sectile, stucco
Giordana
Trovabene
Tessellati
figurati di epoca medievale in Italia e in Francia: affinità e differenze.
The
text analyzes the iconological meaning of some mosaics pavements in medieval
churches (most of them of the 12th century) in Italy (Aosta, Piacenza, Pavia,
Bobbio) and in France (Die, Tournus, Cruas, Sain-Paul-trois-Chateaux), that
introduces cosmographic icons. The theme is very frequent in the Romanesque art,
also in other kinds of material (tapestries, sculptures, paintings), since it
represents the figured transposition of the concepts of space and time in the
medieval religious mentality. Representations of the physical world and the
astral world conjugated him to underline the close relationship between earth
and sky, between man and God, in the intent to point out that the last goal of
the human life has to be the eternal salvation. The medieval mosaics pavements
constitute an interesting artistic reality, especially for the expressive
liberty with which they succeed in translating in images abstract, and often
dogmatic entity. They are more polycrome, even though with limited chromatic
variety, but they don't also miss layouts in to plot white and black, that they
have often enriched also from epigraphic inscriptions that helps to understand
better the meaning of the images.
middle
age; mosaics; pavements; iconography; cosmographies; calendar; months;
Massimiliano
David
Pavimenti
“parlanti”. Iscrizioni pavimentali e/o pavimenti iscritti in epoca romana e
tardoromana.
“TALKING”
FLOORS. FLOOR INSCRIPTIONS AND/OR INSCRIBED FLOORS IN ROMAN AND LATE ROMAN
PERIODS
On
the border between archaeology and epigraphy, the writings (generally made of
tesserae) on internal floors often escaped the interest of scholars, as may be
confirmed by anyone reviewing epigraphic manuals or texts more generally
addressing ancient floors. Yet such inscriptions, in addition to providing
elements that are often crucial in interpreting and determining the chronology
of the buildings associated with them, were neither occasional nor circumscribed.
At Ostia, for example, approximately 11% of the decorated floors found in
excavations bear mosaic inscriptions. Even more since 4th century AD, boosted by
the development of Christianization and adapting quite well to the needs of the
ecclesiastical hierarchy and the faithful people, mosaic inscriptions gained
strong popularity throughout the Roman Empire at least until the time of
Justinian.
PAVEMENTS - INSCRIPTIONS -
MOSAICS – EPIGRAPHY – ARCHAEOLOGY
G
Cavallo, S. Jorio, M.
Moresi
Le
pavimentazioni della chiesa di San Alessandro a Lasnigo (Como). Primi dati su
materiali e pratiche costruttive dal XII al XVIII secolo.
The
archaeological excavations of St. Alessandro Church in Lasnigo (Como, Italy),
aimed at bringing to light the original Romanesque structures, showed the
stratigraphy of the floors running from 12th century until to 18th century.
A
lime mortar with addition of silicatic sands and pottery fragments was the most
ancient floor called pavimentazione continua. It was 4-
The
enlarging works of 16th century required a new lime mortar floor with addition
of silicatic and carbonatic aggregates. In this case the aggregates size varied
in a large range up to cobble-stones; it was about
A
tiled floor was required during the last 18th century works.
Petrographic
and mineralogical analyses integrated with field-examination allowed to bring a
contribution for the knowledge of the materials and the traditional technique
used in this architectural context.
archaeological excavations, St.
Alessandro Church in Lasnigo, lime mortar floors, tiled floors.
Benedetta
Alberti, Livia Giammichele,
Lucia Morganti, Gianluca Tancioni
Il
mosaico sommitale del mausoleo rotondo sulla via
Appia Antica: diffusione di una tipologia e intervento conservativo.
A
Roman floor mosaic, recently found on the top of the round sepulchre so called
Mausoleo rotondo, located along the Appia Antica, represents a rare example of a
top decoration in this architectural typology and an interesting case of
conservation in situ, in the course of maintenance program that Soprintendenza
Archeologica di Roma has run since
Mosaic;
Pavement mosaic; Mausoleum; Appia Antica; In situ; Restoration; Reburial;
Maintenance.
Federico
Guidobaldi, Fulvia Olevano, Daniela Trucchi
Una
banca dati dei pavimenti a commesso marmoreo (sectilia pavimenta) di eta’ romana.
Sectilia
pavimenta
is the name that in ancient Roman time was attributed to the floors obtained by
joining small tiles of polychrome stone, usually marble, arranged in geometric
patterns.
These
were the more expensive and representative type of ancient pavements of the time
and hey can give us a lot of information on the functions, the owners and the
decorative levels of the buildings to which pertains.
To
increase our knowledge of this important category of pavements a research
programme, which started as a part of the “CNR-Progetto Finalizzato Beni
Culturali”, is still carried out for a more detailed analysis in the Roman
section of the CNR-ICVBC.
A
specific software was elaborated and then applied to study not only the
typological aspects but also the conservation methods used both in the past and
in the more recent times.
The
methods of data collection and elaboration are described and the results of some
applications are discussed.
marble, ancient pavements, archaeology,
data base
Antonella
Altieri, Carlo Cacace, Maria Concetta Laurenti, Ada Roccardi
Il
rinterro temporaneo: dalla sperimentazione verso una metodologia analitica normalizzata.
Among
the strategies of preventive conservation aimed to maintain the archaeological
mosaic pavements in site, temporary (seasonal) reburial is one of the most used.
Recently,
ICR carried out some investigation to evaluate the efficiency of different
material and reburial methods, in archaeological sites, in Italy and Malta. From
these studies it results the need to plan observations and analyses for
recording the reburial over time and to verify the conservative criteria applied.
Moreover a form has been scheduled to standardize the information and, by the
increasing of this know-how, to address the management of archaeological sites.
archaeological floors; temporary reburial;
Tas Silg (Malta); Terme Taurine (IT); villa romana Casignana (IT)
Fabiano
Ferrucci, Antonella Fiamminghi, Maria Letizia Amadori, Sara Barcelli, Giuliana
Raffaelli
Aspetti
tecnologici e problemi di conservazione delle pavimentazioni della casa degli
affreschi di Velia.
Il presente contributo
prende in esame i rivestimenti pavimentali della Casa degli Affreschi,
recentemente riportata in luce presso Velia, l’antica Elea fondata dai Focei
in Campania. Dal punto di vista tipologico essa è inquadrabile in un ambito ben
rappresentato, quello delle abitazioni ad atrio, mentre dal punto di vista
tecnologico mostra caratteristiche decisamente peculiari nel panorama delle
tecniche costruttive romane. L’edificio che costituisce, per Velia, il primo
esempio di unità abitativa romana indagata in maniera sistematica, sta
rivelando un esteso utilizzo di impasti terrosi, sia per la realizzazione delle
pavimentazioni litiche tassellate o in laterizio, sia per le strutture degli
elevati e dei rivestimenti parietali. Sono state, inoltre, scoperte
pavimentazioni in mattone velino (una tipologia di laterizio di produzione
locale che per dimensione e forma non ha riscontro in altri luoghi) e
decorazioni pavimentali, collocabili entro il I
secolo d. C., realizzate con tessere in laterizio e calcare, inserite nel
battuto di terra.
Per avere informazioni sui
materiali costitutivi e sulle tecniche esecutive sono state indagate malte
provenienti dalla Casa degli Affreschi e da altri edifici presenti nel sito, che
sono state successivamente confrontate con terreni archeologici prelevati in
aree limitrofe. I campioni sono stati sottoposti ad osservazioni al microscopio
ottico e ad analisi in diffrattometria di raggi X (XRD). I risultati delle
indagini hanno evidenziato la presenza di malte parzialmente argillose,
caratterizzate dalla mancanza di calcite, riconducibili al probabile utilizzo di
impasti terrosi disponibili nel sito. L’uso così esteso di una tecnologia a
base di terra cruda pone non poche difficoltà nelle scelte di intervento,
rendendo necessaria, in fase di restauro, sia l’applicazione di soluzioni
tecniche mirate, sia una riflessione di ordine generale sui limiti degli
strumenti che la scienza può oggi offrire per frenare il degrado di un
organismo architettonico che ha ormai perso irrimediabilmente la propria
integrità. Di fronte ad una tecnologia che non può tollerare minimamente il
dilavamento, diventa difficile intendere il restauro di un rudere da scavo
archeologico come “mantenimento dello status quo”. Vanno quindi
necessariamente vagliate anche scelte più difficili, quali la costruzione di
coperture ed il reinterro parziale, mirato e ragionato.
Velia, terra cruda,
laterizio, cocciopesto, pavimentazione, rudere, XRD, microscopia ottica.
Maria
Concetta Laurenti , Annamaria Giovagnoli, Sandra Ricci
Valutazione
dello stato di conservazione di pavimentazioni musive archeologiche protette da
coperture definitive. Tre
casi a confronto.
The
effects of protective shelters in three archaeological sites have been compared.
The state of conservation and the alteration forms of pavimental mosaics have
been studied to obtain data useful for the evaluation of the shelters presence. The chemical
and biological phenomena of alteration have been related to the presence of
water and light and to the inadequate maintenance. A specific project for the shelter and
the knowledge of the environment are the main steps to realize the correct
conservative conditions.
archaeological
sites, mosaics, protective shelters, biodeterioration, efflorescences.
Daniela
Pittaluga, Ida Chiappe
Pavimentazione
in siti archeologici. Il quartiere dei conciatori a Savona.
A Savona, nei pressi della
fortezza del Priamar, da anni si stanno conducendo campagne di scavo che hanno
tra l’altro riportato alla luce un intero quartiere medievale: quello dei
conciatori. In particolare la successione e la sequenza delle pavimentazioni
individuate hanno permesso di acquisire una notevole quantità di dati riguardo
a questo interessante sito cittadino.
Le sollecitazioni emerse da
questo studio sono numerose e riguardano in particolare il ruolo che la
pavimentazione gioca nell’analisi stratigrafica di scavo, di superficie e di
elevato. La specifica destinazione d’uso dell’area porta inoltre ad
interrogarsi circa la fruibilità di questi specifici siti e nello stesso tempo
alla loro necessaria e doverosa conservazione.
pavimentazioni medievali, archeologia d’elevato,
archeologia di scavo, conservazione, fruibilità
Alberto
Arenghi, Michele Pezzagno
L’accessibilità
delle pavimentazioni antiche.
Pavements
accessibility is one of the most important themes in public and private space
use. This subject can be treated as a design detail in a building project or can
be extended to town planning problems of urban public spaces intended as a whole.
The
inside pavements are accessible to disabled people, problems caused by
thresholds usually could be solved joining together the two different paved
levels.
Instead
in urban open spaces historical pavements often are un-accessible due to the
texture and / or the material used. The paper, trough good practices, presents a
problem-solving methodological approach to pavements.
accessibility, pavements, urban spaces,
disability, good practice.
Carlo Giavarini, Maria Laura Santarelli
Pavimentazioni
storiche: 6000 anni di asfalto.
Natural
asphalt has been known and traded for at least 6000 years. It was used to build
the Processional Way in Babylon (about 1000 b.C.). The most common natural
asphalts are rocks soaked with bitumen; they are present in different areas of
the world; a well known ancient quarry was located in Dead Sea.
Natural
asphalts were used since the XIX century when they were applied on the urban
streets of Paris, London and Washington D.C.. In Italy the most ancient quarries
of natural asphalt were located in Abruzzo and Sicily. The “Pietra Pece”
(the name of the Sicilian natural asphalt rock) was largely used since 1850 to
make indoor floors and stairs in palaces and churches and to pave roads and
pavements.
We
have little information on the physico-chemical properties of such materials as
well as on their ageing characteristics.
The
aim of our studies was to identify and a useful analytical technique to
recognize and characterize natural asphalts and their properties.
MTDSC,
Natural Asphalt, Pece Stone, Urban Pavement
Anna Decri, Barbara Volpato
Pavimentazioni
di strada a Genova: percorsi, materiali e disposizioni.
The
aim of this paper is to report the kind of the streets realized during the XVIII
century in Genoa. This matter has been studied on written sources, from which it
has emerged that in Genoa the care of the streets was applied not only for the
city ornament, but also for the safety of pedestrians and carriages. The citizen themselves had a
particular attention for the pavements; in fact they contributed to support the
expenses both for maintenance and for new construction of streets that were in
front of their houses. Moreover, since the end of the XVIII century, rigorous rules about the transit through
the city were in force, so Genoa
resulted a city prevalently oriented for pedestrians streets paved with
cobble-stones and with a central line of bricks. But with the diffusion of
transports, it was felt more and more necessary
to open and build new streets, so new type of paving began
to be realized with paving-sandstones of La Spezia. Anyway the use of
cobble-stones and bricks was not abandoned and it is possible to find various
combinations of them. Every
space is characterized from a special kind of pavement easily identified and recognizable. The ancient street,
therefore, sends back to a particular kind of structure where the construction
knowledge, materials, territory resources, contribute to constitute the image of
the city and to characterize a space of the route of the human work.
pavements,
history, street, construction knowledge.
Tiziano
Mannoni, Ester Bertorello, Caterina Gardella, Daniela Pittaluga, Alessandra Rotta
La
pavimentazione viaria elemento conoscitivo per la tutela dei nuclei storici
liguri.
The
preservation and cultural exploitation of historical route pavings is serious
issue in the restoration of historical centres and hinterland of Liguria. The
public roads along the coast and the ones connecting to padana valley still
contain original paving materials, but current restoration projects lack for
verifiable and homogeneous scientific contents.
This
is an interesting case for building a database of such elements for planning and
maintenance activities, including also related analyses and knowledge on
pre-existing materials. Beyond this target there is a proposition as a kind of
“school of historical building” for the formation of local workforce on such
ancient constructive techniques.
The
results of the search can be used such supports of territorial planning and
sustainable management historical cost centres and rural burghs.
restoration,
local and natural materials, urban and rural road, historical centres, masonry
bridges
Stefania
Argiolas, Gianfranco Carcangiu, Deborah Floris, Luigi Massidda, Paola Meloni,
Antonio Vernier
Idoneita’
funzionale di alcune piroclastiti sarde nella realizzazione di pavimentazioni.
The
pyroclastic rocks have been widely used in the past and are still exploited
because of their low quarrying cost, large availability and easy workability.
These lithotypes characterize not only the hystorical centers of villages risen
in the mining districts, but also important hystorical buildings constructed in
various towns of Sardinia.
This
paper provides the results of chemical, mineralogical and technical
characterization of some Sardinian pyroclastic rocks, belonging to the
Fordongianus-Ruinas (central Sardinia) and Serrenti (southern Sardinia)
districts. In these areas the pyroclastic rocks are extensively used in form of
regular blocks for buildings, as decorative architectural elements and ashlers,
generally as telford pavements. Therefore suitable technological features, as
abrasion resistance and impact strength, are requested. The results of this
investigation point out the particular behaviour of different lithofacies
towards the specific decay agents.
Another
important factor is “hystorical compatibility” of materials. A wise use of a
“poor” material, so having low mechanical properties, can allow valuable
interventions also contributing to conserve the hystorical characteristics and
traditional building technics.
pyroclastic
rocks, welded tuffs, microstructure, durability, abrasion, rupture energy.
Stefano
Della Torre
La
conservazione dei pavimenti: dall’evento al processo.
The
implications are here discussed of moving the focus from restoration as an event
to conservation as a process. The shape of this process is circular, so that
there is no origin, but a continuous activity of prevention, maintenance, and
sometimes restoration, just when needed. It
becomes necessary to think of cultural heritage (e.g. of floors) in different
perspectives, and restoration itself has to be thought in terms of coherence and
coordination with previous and subsequent phases. Such a change implies less
importance for old questions, giving freedom and responsibility to any project;
but it also implies new epistemological references for theoretical research.
Floors,
Conservation, Study, Prevention, Maintenance, Restoration
Sandro
Colagrande, Raimondo Quaresima
Metodologia
per l'identificazione delle cause di degrado di pavimentazioni stradali in
pietra nei centri storici.
In
the present paper a methodology for the evaluation of the decay of the stone
paving used in the historic centre of the city of L’Aquila is presented.
The
loss of efficiency of the cobblestone paving brings both the road to lose their
features (comfortable driving and safety) and to increases the risk of accidents
as well as the costs of management and maintenance.
In
order to identify the causes of decay,
The
results obtained shown that the main cause of decay is the heavy and the
intensity of the traffic. Furthermore an inappropriate design and maintenance is
responsible of the progressive loss of efficiency of the road and concern the
materials used for the sealing joints, those employed for manufacturing the road
foundations and how and many underground service are realised.
At
least the ancient white cobblestones, realised with local limestone, are
replaced with porphyry ones.
Cobblestone,
road pavement, degraded road pavement, road maintenance.
Enzo
Bentivoglio
Materiali,
struttura e disegno delle pavimentazioni stradali di
Roma : un caso di ardua conservazione/manutenzione e l’illusione delle riproposizioni di
una immagine fuori dal tempo.
Essay
concerns Roman historic paving stones so called “sanpietrini” and the
difficulty to maintain and re-make them at present time.
In
historic centre there are few pedestrian zones and the remaining streets are
involved in heavy car traffic, than re-make of Roman paving stones must be done
in an hurry, adopting fastest techniques different from the original one. Result
is that formal appearance is also different from historical images.
There
are some experiences of imitative substitutions but outcomes are trivial because
of low quality of replacement material and too short time for construction.
An
alternative and clever solution should be the use of “modern” materials and
techniques, more appropriate in: avoiding the deformation of street shape and
profile caused by the heavy car traffic; lower the noise; satisfying the human
perception.
The
ancient Roman historic paving stones should be exactly replaced and conserved in
pedestrian zones of Rome historic centre, as well as in vehicle street where car
traffic is limited and light.
Essay
develops an excursus, based upon 16th century unpublished documents, concerning
history of paving stone use in Rome.
Maria
Rita Pinto, Stefania Oppido
Fruibilità
e sicurezza nel recupero di antichi percorsi ambientali della penisola
sorrentina.
During
the past few years, tourism promotion in the Sorrento Peninsula has been set
towards a new position: the rediscovery of pathways. In fact the ancient
pathways are once again preferential routes for the appreciation of
environmental heritage.
The
paper proposes guidelines for the recovery and maintenance of pedestrian
environmental paths of the Sorrento Peninsula, in order to provide the
municipality with normative tools which can protect the local structural
features and guarantee the safety and use requirements.
In
the Sorrento Peninsula, as a matter of fact, the renewed interest of tourists
and local people for the ancient environmental paths imposes on Authority the
need to guarantee a safe exploitation.
The
recovery and maintenance of the ancient pedestrian paths, therefore, are
strategies directed towards a safe use of them, protecting, at the same time,
their cultural identity and environmental quality.
accessibility,
maintenance, management, normative tools, safety, usability.
Teresa Perusini, Elisabetta
Zendri, Ilaria Nardini
I
pavimenti dipinti (1999-2003) di Leon Tarasewicz: tecnica esecutiva e problemi
di conservazione.
Leon
Tarasewicz (n.1957) è uno dei più importanti pittori polacchi degli ultimi
venti anni. Fin dalle sue prime esposizioni (1985), oltre che su tela o carta,
dipinge su muro, pilastri, soffitti, strutture architettoniche preesistenti o da
lui appositamente costruite. Nel 1999 fa la sua prima pittura su pavimento. Non
è certo il primo artista contemporaneo che scopre il valore figurativo delle
opere sui pavimenti (cfr. W.De Maria, G.Alviani ,L.Benglis,Carl
Andre et al.), ma di certo è uno di quelli che maggiormente sviluppa il tema
con il medium pittorico(L.T. è infatti sempre un pittore, non usa video o
composizioni polimateriche).
Tarasewicz
declina il motivo in modi diversi: con solchi ricchi di materia giustapponendo
colori puri a rilievo, con colori ad impasto mescolati su un piano sia al
livello originale che su piani rialzati che drammatizzano gli spazi creandone
una nuova percezione.
Dal 2003
Tarasewicz usa anche cementi colorati in pasta ottenendo composizioni
tridimensionali di impatto monumentale: il colore non riveste più solamente le
cose, ma è la sostanza stessa che le compone. Una potente metafora della
visione del mondo sub specie coloris di cui parla l’artista riferendosi alla
sua percezione della vita ed al suo lavoro.
La
conservazione di queste opere da un lato va affrontata in modo tradizionale:
studiando il loro significato, i materiali utilizzati, la loro tenuta nel tempo,e la possibile interazione con materiali di restauro ecc.
In questa fase è importante la testimonianza dell’artista per chiarire il
significato dell’opera, la natura dei materiali impiegati e anche per la
testimonianza dell’uso di particolari accorgimenti tecnici.
Per
intervistare l’artista si sono utilizzate le raccomandazioni INCCA, così le
informazioni potranno poi essere facilmente messe in rete per formare l’ormai
improrogabile banca dati sull’arte contemporanea promossa dall’icn di
Amsterdam e dalla Tate Gallery di Londra.
Ma
d’altra parte questi “pavimenti”pongono una serie di interrogativi nuovi
sulla loro conservazione per il diverso rapporto che essi, come molte opere
contemporanee, hanno con la materia che li compone. Ad esempio: basta conservare
la memoria fotografica o bisogna conservare anche la materia di installazioni
come queste? Ha senso conservare in verticale, come quadri, i pezzi resecati di
queste installazioni? Che senso ha l’autografismo in queste opere create in
larga parte da assistenti? E quindi come vanno trattate le eventuali lacune?. Non tutte le considerazioni fatte da Brandi sul restauro
dell’arte antica sono utilizzabili per l’arte contemporanea e nella
deregulation produttiva dell’arte d’oggi è difficile enucleare
prinicipi-guida generali. Di questo si discute nella seconda parte del saggio
pensato comunque come premessa metodologica al successivo lavoro analitico e di
restauro.
Leon Tarasewicz, conservation of
contemporary art, painted floors, conservation of
installations
Giulia
Beltrami, Guido Risicato
Le
pavimentazioni a mosaico di ciottoli in Liguria. Il progetto di restauro
conservativo del sagrato di Santa Chiara in San Martino d’Albaro a Genova dall’analisi
all’intervento.
Pebble
mosaics in Liguria, though their acknowledged historical and estethical values,
have not been accurately studied and maintained. Only recently the University of
Genoa, substained by Province of Genoa, has analysed these manufacts to preserve
them. These studies point out how is important to
quanto define and apply a specific methodology to analyse and intervene
on these historical pavements, to maintain and restore them respecting their
original features such as structures, compositions, materials and esecutive
techniques.
This
paper speaks about a conservative restore of an ancient pebble mosaic pavement
(1654) in Genoa, trying to explain both from a methodological point of view (describing
the analisys phases such as pre-diagnostic, MSR shots, decay analisys) and
project, both with its applicative results, describing the techniques of
intervention.
mosaics,
pebbles, Genoa, Liguria
Gloria
Brocchi , Stefano Della Torre , Mariachiara Faliva
Il
sacro monte di Ossuccio: conservazione e fruizione di un percorso sacro.
The
“Sacro Monte della Beata Vergine del Soccorso”, in Ossuccio was created
between 1635 and
Causes
of paving decay have been studied: they are connected with a disrespectful use
of site and lack of maintenance.
Some
guidelines for paving conservation and improving usability are specified. Every
decision is based on the criterion of minimum intervention, connected with the
needs, first of functional and effectual project, second of preservation of
traditional materials and constructive techniques.
Pavement,
Maintenance, Constructive techniques
Federica
Carlini, Rossella Moioli
La
Cappuccina Nuova di Villa Sottocasa in Vimercate - Interventi di sovrammissione
delle pavimentazioni dal XVII al XIX secolo: conservazione delle stratificazioni
e restauro delle superfici.
The
analysis of preservation site as a chance to verify data and hypothesis arisen
during the phase of historical research permitted a diachronic reading of
stratification of terracotta flooring and confirmed the archive documentation
truthfulness.
This
paper describes floor covering uniformity in the whole building and it focuses
on use through centuries of
traditional building techniques in new flooring realisation, as well as their
foundation.
Moreover
it is interesting to analyse the ways with which, in the XIX Century, facing a
change in the use requirements, terracotta tiles were abandoned in favour of “modern”
technique and more precious material: a new flooring made of two-coloured wood
fillets was overlayed on the
terracotta flooring.
Techniques
and materials conservation passes through: maintenance of the archaeological
traces; restoration of original terracotta tiles removed; treatment of all
floorings surface and specific intervention on wooden flooring. All these
operations have to be compatible both with traditional building techniques and
with needs of maintenance, in current meaning of planned conservation.
Archaeological
survey, stratigraphy, permanency, plan, maintenance.
Mario
Massimo Cherido, Elisabetta Ghittino, Luca de Bonetti
La
conservazione della pavimentazione rinascimentale della Loggia del Romanino al
Castello del Buonconsiglio.
The
Loggia del Romanino at Buonconsiglio Castle, famous for its precious cycle of
frescos, is also important for the essential architecture in red and white local
calcareous stone: the floor in this part of the castle, owing to the central
position of this area, remains one of the zones of major transit and is
consequently subject of deterioration through use as well as ageing.
For
this reason, the study of this area, in relation to the restoration of the stone
arrays of the loggia, has become part of a programme of maintenance and
restoration of the floor which reflects the magnificent decorative display of
frescos.
The
tests now in progress are meant to experiment inorganic, compatible and renewabe
on the basis of analysis of stone materials used and in consideration of
problems related to common organic protective agents.
Buonconsiglio Castle;
Loggia del Romanino; Ammonite red; Verdello; Ammonium Oxalate..
Roland
Lenz
Die
wiederentdeckung einer verlorenen materialkultur: hochbrand-gipsböden in
Sachsen-Anhalt zwischen konservierung, restaurierung und rekonstruktion
“La
riscoperta di una cultura materiale persa: i pavimenti di gesso anidrite
Sachsen-Anhalt tra conservazione, restauro e ricostruzione.”
In
the region of Sachsen-Anhalt a lot of historical hard plaster gypsum floors have
overcome until today. The production of high calcinated gypsum has been going on
until the 1960s. With the end of the production also the repair tradition of
hard plaster gypsum floors stopped or other noncompatible materials have been
uesed. The article will show some points of the research in Germany about this
floor material and the use of new burnt high calcinated gypsum for the
restauration and the repair of old hard plaster gypsum floors.
gypsum,
anhydrite, high calcinated gypsum, hard plaster floors, gypsum mortars, stucco
Teresa
Ferreira,
Esempi
di conservazione e trattamento di pavimenti storici in edifici religiosi.
Soluzione del problema dell’umidità attraverso il drenaggio e ventilazione
sotto i pavimenti.
Moisture
is the main problem affecting the churches protected by the Direcção Regional
dos Edificios e Monumentos Nacionais (DREMN), in the North of Portugal.
The
main cause is the humid clime and soil of this area and the lack of natural
ventilation connected to the sporadic use of these buildings.
The
churches usually have local granite stone pavements, directly laid on the ground
or over a nineteenth century cement mortar layer; somewhere also combined
stone-wood pavements.
This
presentation illustrates some projects and realisations by the DREMN, where the
solution of moisture problems has been integrated with the conservation of the
historic pavements.
After
careful relief, survey and diagnosis, specific conservation proposals have been
developed and adapted to each circumstance. They essentially focused on the
realisation of a natural ventilation system.
Granite
stone floor, Conservation, Moisture, Drain, Ventilation.
Keoma
Ambrogio, Lucio Tomei, Rita
Fabbri
Le
pavimentazioni storiche Fermane: la ricerca storica e l’analisi dell’esistente
per la conservazione e manutenzione.
Fermo
is a pre-Roman town which has been one of the most important centres of the
southern Marche for a long time. It is also characterised by a close-packed and
stratified building structure that is enriched by historic pavements which
deserve a higher degree of attention and preservation. The present paper aims at
describing the development of the different typologies, materials and techniques
for laying brickwork through an unpublished in-depth historical research we have
carried out on documents belonging to the State Archives in Fermo.The paper also
presents a classification and analysis concerning the preservation conditions of
these valuable pavements. Their actual status mainly depends on the poor quality
of conservation actions which do not respect traditional materials and
techniques (i.e. a very refined dry laying that also allowed the conservation of
the overall hydrogeological equilibrium of the hill). Consequently, historic
pavements are denied their leading role as one of the aspects that enhance the
urban quality of the town.
historical
research; brick pavements; squared-stone pavements; cobble pavements; quality of
conservation; cataloguing methodology.
Valeria Brunori, Maria Pia
Rubolino
Pavimenti
alla Veneziana e a mosaico nei villini Boncompagni Ludovisi, attuale sede dell’Ambasciata
degli Stati Uniti d’America a Roma.
The
19th century Venetian terrazzo floors framed by decorative mosaic bands, which
are the object of this contribution, are located inside the two villas that
today are a part of the United States Embassy in Rome. The main building and the
twin villas were built by Prince Rodolfo Boncompagni Ludovisi between 1886 and
1890, on the project and under the direction of Gaetano Koch on the site of the
ancient Villa Ludovisi. The villas have changed their function in the course of
time, being born as residences, then transformed in hospitals and finally into
offices, with consequent deterioration of the original finishes and carpeting of
the floors. The “rediscovery” of the original floors and the conservation
project aimed at the restoration of the floors in their material aspect and in
their functionality, taking into consideration that the rooms would continue to
function as office spaces. The
problems connected to the use of the floors led, in the planning phase and
during the project, to methodological choices, which combined conservation,
practical use and knowledge of the original techniques. In this regard, the
comparison with the documentary evidence found in the family archives is
particularly interesting. The protection and maintenance of these floors is a
particularly engaging topic, considering the condition of the terrazzo and the
impact resulting from the daily use of the rooms as modern office spaces. A few
years after the first treatment the results of the restoration could be
evaluated and new restoration techniques could be introduced to improve its
effectiveness.
Terrazzo; Venetian floors;
mosaic; restoration; Boncompagni
Simona
Sajeva
Un
sistema storico di pavimentazione di interni, funzionale
ad una salubre fruizione dell’edificio ed alla sua conservazione materiale.
The
historical interior floorings are sometimes considered like parts that can be
disassembled from architectonic whole and are mainly analysed for the some major
aspect related to the materials they are made of. Some flooring systems cannot
be analysed with this methods, because their own structure is a main element of
the architectonic whole, not only as an historical/aesthetic unity of materials,
but mainly for its functional preservating features of the structure itself.
This study analyses the site of Voskopojë
(Albania, Korça), where 5/26 churches of the post Byzantine age, have been
built. During the ongoing safeguard and European projects a very complex system
of flooring has been discovered in 3 of the above mentioned churches. This
system, besides the upper flooring includes drains.
Albany,
Voskopojë, church architecture, post Byzantine age, flooring, conservation,
water drains
Giuseppina
Spatafora, Franco
Tomaselli, Gaspare MassimoVentimiglia
Conoscenza
e diagnostica per il progetto di conservazione delle pavimentazioni maiolicate.
Applicazione di un sistema d’indagini non distruttive sulle “riggiole” di
Attanasio nel palazzo Comitini a Palermo.
Floorings
made in majolica tiles are frequently requested in the noble’s palaces, in
churches and convents since the end of the XVIII century, but ancient documents
reveals that the demands of painted enamelware and tiles begins since XV century
in Sicily, with many cultural interactions
with Faenza, Vietri and Naples. In the XVIII century the construction of
sumptuous palaces starts after the destruction due to earthquakes in Palermo and
artisan laboratories of Palermo and Naples provided painted tiles of majolica
introduced in the salons and in the most important rooms. The essay also
introduces the results of chemical and physical analysis of tiles and above all
non destructive tests on tiles pavements implemented with surface penetrating
radar, and ultrasonic survey. The indirect investigation of the Comitini palace’s
flooring is conducted by the experimental method developed by the research
laboratory L.I.R.B.A. “Salvatore Boscarino” of “Storia e Progetto nell’Architettura”
Department (University of Palermo).
enamelled
clay, majolica tiles, flooring, ultrasonic survey, radar investigation.
Antonio
Monte, Giovanni
Quarta
Note storico-tecniche
sui pavimenti in “Litocemento armato effetto mosaico” dei Fratelli Peluso di
Lecce: materiali costituenti, produzione e conservazione.
Between
1890 and 1935, the factory run by brothers Michele and Giuseppe Peluso in Lecce
produced numerous mosaic floors for some of the most distinguished mansions,
villas and churches of the Salento.
In 1904 they patented a system for producing floors with the technique known as
“Reinforced Litho-concrete with a mosaic effect”, which they had been
experimenting with since the end of the nineteenth century. This paper presents
the results of a study carried out in the national and church archives with the
aim of finding out about the execution techniques and cataloguing their
production of mosaics. In addition, the constituent materials of certain floors
have been studied, and the conservation issues encountered, especially in
environments used by the public and most exposed to processes of decay, are
highlighted.
historical
floorings, “litocemento”, mosaic, execution tecniques, reinforced
litho-concrete, idustrial achaeology
Tiziana De
Lillo, Antonio Monte, Giovanni Quarta
Storia
e tecniche di produzione di pavimenti policromi in pasta cementizia.
This
paper arose from the need to disseminate knowledge of the history and the
production techniques of polychrome cement floor-tiles, given that until now
these have been appreciated only from a functional and utilitarian point of view,
while their historic and cultural value has tended to be neglected. The joint
analysis of the product and the production process has enabled us to show how
these cement floor-tiles, which began to be produced in the later decades of the
nineteenth century, as well as reflecting the socio-cultural and artistic
changes that took place in those years, are the fruit of a slow but continuous
evolution of ancient flooring techniques that employed similar materials and
methods of execution. Clearly, every productive process and its product are
destined for obsolescence at some stage, which will depend on technical,
economic, ecological and social factors, and the knowledge relating to a product/process
that has been abandoned will form the basis of new inventions. It is precisely
in this way that we have progressed from the primordial technique of gravel
flooring to the various forms of mosaic, and from this to inlaid stone and
marble. Between 1500 and 1600 inlaid stone was superseded by the random mosaic
seminato flooring technique, also known as Venetian or Palladian flooring.
Subsequently, with the discovery of cement, seminato underwent firstly technical
modifications and then, with the rise of machines, fell from favour and was
replaced by polychrome cement floor-tiles of various kinds.
historical
floorings, polychrome cement floor-tiles, constructive practce, industrial
archaeology
Valeria
Ghezzi, Barbara Scala
Il
destino delle pavimentazioni Liberty nell'architettura gardesana di inizio
secolo: il caso dell'hotel Laurin a Salo'.
In
this article we would like to present our study regarding a building called
Villa Simonini, which lies near Lake Garda and dates back to the beginning of
the 20th century it was designed by the architect Ulisse Stacchini and now it is
called Hotel Laurin. The conservation of the original floors inside the rooms
and outside in the gardens and terraces was guaranteed through frequent
maintenance work. The floors are composed of tiles mark of coloured cement, wood,
ceramic tessera, Venetian seminato. We would like to describe both the laying
techniques, the original materials, and the ways and means used to lead the
maintenance work. So we analysed the products used and the methods of the
intervention to reintegrate the damaged parts and those transform the Villa into
a Hotel.
Pavimenti in legno, restauro, manutenzione
Michela
Catalano, Anita
Guarnieri, Mariachiara Faliva
Repertorio
delle pavimentazioni storiche in Puglia: il rapporto tra conoscenza e
conservazione in Terra di Bari e nel Salento.
Authors,
through this research, want to present a selection of the most diffused floors
in Terra di Bari and in Salento, which characterize private buildings and public
space. The aim is knowledge of the constructive techniques, the materials and
the using ways of different floors. Stone supplying is simple because of the
diffusion of quarries, so we find floors made with local stones: Pietra di Trani
in Terra di Bari and Pietra Leccese and Tufo in Salento, cut down as slabs.
Other floors were made by ceramics and during the XIX century, decorated cement
tiles become very popular, as the mosaic floors with cement. A final
consideration is that knowledge is necessary to preserve ancient floors, in
order to avoid easy changes and removals.
historical
floors in Puglia, stone floors, constructive techniques, knowledge, conservation.
Valeria Pracchi,
Elisabetta Rosina
Effetti
della temperatura superficiale della pavimentazione sul degrado dei rivestimenti
e sul microclima.
Thermal
anomalies of sufaces imply risk factors for their conservation at severe ambient
condition (high RH and low air temperature), without HVAC system.
Evaluation
of thermal unbalance of the surface, has to take in account daily and seasonal
climatic variations, because of their affection on the microlimate inside the
building. Monitoring is the best pratice for measuring such variations and their
effects on structures.
Temperature
of paving affects temperature distribution at the basis of masonry: without this
contact, different materials of masonry and their location over the ground
should ensure a higher temperaure distribution than the floor’s one. Moreover,
also the air layers, near to the colder paving, have a lower temperature and
this affects temperature distribution of the air layers, increasing the
elevation.
The
paper describes testing procedures for verifying thermal umbalance of surfaces,
and the evaluation of real condition of risk for damage.
Condensation,
evaporation, plaster, masonry, paving, cold side, RH, air Temperature
Giorgio Serafini,
Giovanni Gnoli
Distacchi
e sollevamenti di una pavimentazione del primo Novecento.
Si analizza il
comportamento di una pavimentazione realizzata nei primissimi anni del novecento
che ha manifestato, nel tempo, fenomeni diffusi di distacco rispetto allo strato
di sottofondo. Dopo oltre un secolo dalla posa si è verificato, poi, il
sollevamento di una parte cospicua della pavimentazione rispetto al sottofondo.
Nel seguito si approfondiscono alcune problematiche connesse ai problemi di
distacco, di scorrimento e di sollevamento tra rivestimento e strato di posa al
fine di fornire un utile contributo ad una miglior comprensione del fenomeno
verificatosi. Ci si sofferma, in particolare, sulle sollecitazioni tangenziali
che nascono all’interfaccia tra piastrella e caldana per effetto dei
differenziali termici dovuti al soleggiamento parziale, presentando una
modellazione numerica agli elementi finiti del comportamento della
pavimentazione; si cerca, poi, di fornire una spiegazione che giustifichi il
manifestarsi del fenomeno di sollevamento in una pavimentazione che non aveva
mostrato segni premonitori visibili per tante decine di anni.
historical
tiled floor, thermal expansion, pavement
Carlo Dell'Aquila,
Rocco Laviano, Filippo Vurro
Pavimenti
maiolicati pugliesi: indagini chimiche e mineralogiche.
Chemical
and mineralogical investigations have been carried out in order to characterize
the ceramic body, glazed coating and pigments of tiles of Apulian majolica
floors. Materials have been investigated using polarized light microscopy on
thin sections, Scanning Electron Microscopy, X-ray Fluorescence and X-ray powder
diffraction. Our interest to majolica tiles begins from a study, carried out ten
years ago, on a majolica-tiled floor of the castle chapel at Palagianello, near
Taranto (southern Italy). Majolica tiles of this floor, made at Laterza, near
Taranto, in the second quarter of the 18th century, show decorative drawings in
blue and yellow. Si, Pb and Sn are the principal elements in the tin-glazed
coatings. The yellow colour is due to a Sb-Si-Pb compound, blue to Co, Fe and As,
with minor Ni. The mineralogical analyses of the ceramic body have revealed the
presence of diopsidic pyroxenes and gehelenite, which allows us to estimate
firing temperatures ranging from 850 to
majolica,
floor, Apulia, Italy, mineralogical analyses
Giacomo
Casaril, Annalisa Gobbi, Leopoldo Repola, Carlo Sassetti, Fioravante Vignone
Dal
modello digitale al modello reale. Il progetto per lo studio e la ricomposizione
del pavimento in opus sectile della cappella di Santa Restituta nel sito
archeologico di San Vincenzo al Volturno
(IS).
A
preliminary project for the study and re-composition in opus sectile of the
floor in the chapel of Saint Restituta (XI-XII cent.) has been elaborated within
the scope of the research and preservation activities concerning the
archaeological site and related components that have emerged pertaining to the
early Medieval abbey of St. Vincent in Volturno (Isernia, Molise). Such
activities were jointly organized by the Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici
for the Region of Molise and the Università Suor Orsola Benincasa in Naples.
The project’s objective is the restoration of chapel’s floor bedding as well
as the reconstruction of the decorative floor design in the nave through the
re-composition of fragments salvaged during the excavations. The operation will
be carried out through the application of 3D laser scanner technology and Rapid
Prototyping, with which, by means of digital elaborations and mathematical
models, it will be possible to create a virtual model in resin of the imprint of
the flooring upon which the recovered slabs and tesserae can be placed. Through the same methodology and thanks
to the identification of their exact form in the negative, copies of the
sectilia and lost tesserae can be obtained. The recomposition of the recovered
material upon the model will make possible a faithful reproduction of the object
of interest while avoiding any alteration or damage to the original which
remains in situ.
Sectile pavement,
Tridimentional Laser Scanner, Subtractive Rapid Prototyping, Reverse Engeneering
Mario
Massimo Cherido, Silvia Boel
Il
restauro conservativo della pavimentazione maiolicata della chiesa di San
Michele in Anacapri.
The
big floor of the Church of St. Michael in Anacapri, on the gulf of Naples, is
one of the best examples of eighteenth-century majolica art.
The
restoration entailed the solution of problems related to its preservation in
time, considering the frail material and the extensive use of the monument.
Majolica
floor; St. Michaels Church; Anacapri (Naples)..
Giuseppe Giannini, Tommaso Maria Massarelli
Studio
e conservazione delle antiche pavimentazioni nelle chiese di S. Paolo e S.
Giovanni a Bitonto e nella Grotta di S. Oronzo a Turi (Bari).
Some
study and project experiences on the restoration of Apulian religious building
ancient floors show significant data on this argoment. The first case relates to
the Church of San Paolo Apostolo in Bitonto (near Bari), in whose palimpsest one
can recognize a peculiar stratification of majolica tiles and calcareous
paving-stones from different time. There are similar floors in the ancient
Church of San Giovanni ad Muros, in Bitonto, where, moreover, samples of
archaeological excavations find further medieval paving-stone surfaces. Starting
from the materical study of paving elements and specific problems of the case (gaps,
trims, tablets,...) the conservation project arranges targeted reintegrations
and the introduction of a sub-pavimental diaphragm to enable the vision of the
underlying ancient pavement. In the Church of Grotta di Sant’Oronzo in Turi (near
Bari) there is an important eighteenth-century floor which is constituted of 238
different majolica tiles. This church was built on a calcareous cavern (where
there is the majolica paving) and which on one hand protects the floor from
umidity, on the other hand it prevents the physiological drip of the cave, so
essential to its environmental balance. To restore its life-support conditions
means to let water destroy the floor. As a consequence the question is to
preserve the cavern or the paving. A recent geological investigation has
discovered a tunnel under the floor, that will be used to get a system of
dehumidifying of the base of majolica tiles.
Restoration
of historical architecture. Conservation
of ancient floors. Constructive
techniques. Investigation on
traditional pavings. Architetcture
and materials. Restoration and
archaeology.
Luca Giorgi,
Marcello Assenza, Stefania Amore
Le
pavimentazioni in pietra asfaltica e calcare nella contea di Modica.
Asphalt
and limestone inlay flooring in the County of Modica.
In
Southern Sicily, between XVII and the beginning of XX century, many religious
and civilian buildings of the County of Modica were decorated by bicolour floors
made with the combination of white and black limestone. The latter is an asphalt
impregnate limestone (usually called pitch stone), easily workable and mined in
the large number of quarries of the area.
The
floors were made usually with a white stone background and inlaid black stone
decorations, but a few examples of black background floors survive too.
The
recurring decoration themes were generally vegetable and floral, kept in
geometrical patterns. Each flooring is unique and the decoration is never
repeated, thanks to skilled workers which were able to realize these
extraordinary handmade floors. Their conservation problems, besides the typical
inlaid floor problems, depend on the decay of the organic part impregnating the
stone, whose oxidation whitens the floor.
Inlay
Floors, Pitch Stone, Bicoloured Floors, Sicily, Modica
Carla
Benocci
Le
ville storiche romane e le pavimentazioni: le “cordonate” tra materiali
tradizionali, inserti eterogenei e problemi di conservazione.
The
most commun material used for roads and paths in the historical roman gardens is
the gravel. In case of different levels of the ground, we observe some
particular stairs, called “cordonate”, which present floors with specific
designs maken by bricks, cobbled surfaces, porphid cubes called “sampietrini”
and other different materials. In the general opinion the “cordonate” don’t
been considereted like cultural heritage and they are destroyed. But now the
knowledge on their historical and artistic meaning takes to restauration of them
at Villa Doria Pamphilj for the Jubilee of 2000 and it’s already the project
for the “cordonate” of the roman Villa Carpegna.
Cordonate, gravel,
sampietrini, Villa Doria Pamphilj, Villa Carpegna
Claudia Conti,
Beatrice Moroni
Aspetti
tecnologici e significato storico-artistico del pavimento in ceramica della
chiesa di San Francesco (Deruta, 1524): risultati di uno studio
petroarcheometrico.
The
floor of S. Francesco Church is considered the masterpiece of derutese majolica,
cause of aspects that make it unique with respect to the rest of the ceramic
production. The aim of this work is to point out these particular aspects. The
study is focused on historical-artistical floor features, by the light of recent
discoveries made by expert researchers, and on material features used to make
the tiles. A comparison with different raw materials and with local ceramic
finds highlighted analogies and differences, and allowed some hypothesis on
provenance of raw material and techniques of production of this floor.
“Co”
di Deruta; X-Ray fluorescence; clay raw materials; tiles; wares
Davide del
Curto, Carlo Manfredi
Origine
e (alterne) fortune dell’Ipocausto - il pavimento caldo.
Romans
used to warm public buildings by hypocaust since 1st century a.c. and we have
famous examples at Ostia, Pompei, Weissenburg. The idea of the warm floor was
employed again since 19th century as proper confirmation of neoclassical style
and sophisticated application for metal pipes. Warming and ventilation proceed
together according to the old idea of comfort strictly connected to renewed air.
The main examples have been described by technical handbooks in Germany and
England and, later, in Italy.
During
last century hypocaust changed in radiating panels and was widely employed for
monuments restoration too while, presently, the problem of their conservation
begins.
hypocaust
– heating – warming – floor – ventilation - diagnosis
Rita
Fabbri, Gian Carlo Grillini,
Stefania Ferracini, Claudia
Lodi
Pavimentazioni
nella Villa Rabboni–Cassini (Sant’Agostino, FE). Piastrelle in graniglia ed
altri pavimenti interni di un’architettura tra fine
Ottocento e primi Novecento.
Rabboni-Cassini’s
Villa, in Sant’Agostino near Ferrara, was built in 1882 and was enlarged in
1911: the two building phases were characterized by a series of floorings,
different for material; these pavements are one of the most value of the
building.
Some
interesting are the grit floorings, too fine, realized in 1911, situated in nine
rooms of the villa. The floorings are produced with different drawing’s bricks
characterized by rich and bright colours. The geometric and chromatic result was
obtained thanks to an elaborate productive technique: the fine grit’s mixture,
composed with concrete and coloured loam, was plastered into moulds, through the
use of stones combined with cement.
In
Rabboni-Cassini’s Villa are also present two valuable wooden floorings and
some terracotta’s pavements.
floorings,
brick for pavement, grit
Giulia
Facchini
I
mosaici di Nora (CA) e il cosiddetto Ninfeo. Interventi
e nuove acquisizioni.
:
In Nora, roman city nearby Cagliari, was collected very few documentation during
the 10 years of archaeological excavation. The discovered structures have been
restored and consolidated towards the end of the Sixties. The project pointed
out to make the site accessible as a resource for tourism. Works have been made
upon the rich mosaics of Severian Age, to give them back the visibility in situ:
some of them were risen, to restore them with reinforced concrete, while, for
others, the lacunas were filled with cement. In the next 40 years, the works
made on these structures showed great limits by the technological-conservative
and archaeological point of view. More than the damage caused by atmospheric
agents on the pavements left uncovered, what compromised the stratigraphic value
of the pavements was the removal and the recollocation. To get round to this
loss of information the Università degli Studi of Milan tries to rebuilt the
evolution of the single constructions searching strips of pavement that haven’t
been touched by the works for the restoration, mapping the ornamental pattern
thought photogrammetry and elaborating it in the context of the building using
total station and CAD. In fact some of the changes of the patterns-theme in the
floral-geometric type were given by modifications brought to building during the
ages.
Archaeology, Mosaic,
Conservation
Luca Giorgi,
Barbara Monica
Il
pavimento della sala Leone X in palazzo Vecchio e la
bicromia laterizia.
Arte,
tecnica e stato di conservazione.
In
XVIth century two colour bricks made more precious traditional brick floors. In
Florence, the technique was employed in the floors of Biblioteca Mediceo
Laurenziana (1552-53), based on Tribolo’s design, of Grotticina di Madama in
Boboli Gardens (1555), and later in the Monumental Apartments in Palazzo
Vecchio, where many floors were made by Sante Buglioni, as stated by archival
documents. The latter floors have
been studied, starting from a detailed metric survey and developing the analysis
of Renaissance decoration patterns, execution techniques, mineralogic and
chemical composition of the material. Two kinds of brick, different in
composition, colour and hardness, have been found: red brick, from Impruneta,
used as background, and ochre-whitish
brick, often rosy, in decorations. Specimens of both colour bricks from the
floors of Cosimo the Older and Leone
X Rooms in Palazzo Vecchio have been analysed. The first matter of red brick was
detected in clays from Arno Valley; whitish bricks, with a high rate of CaO and
probably made from an artificial mix, resulted chemically very similar to white
core ceramics made in Montelupo Fiorentino in XVth century.
Florence, Palazzo Vecchio, Sante Buglioni,
Cosimo I, XVI Century Floors, Brick
Floors, Bi-Coloured Brick Floors
Olimpia
Niglio
Opus
tessellatum a
Pisa e nella chiesa di San Pietro
in Vinculis.
It
is known that the first floor cosmatesco has been realized in Italy at the end
of the XI century, between the 1066 and the 1071, when the Abbot of Montecassino
invited some workers of marble, coming from Costantinopoli, to build a new floor
in the Cathedral. The floor cosmatesco realized in S. Pietro in Vinculis (XII
century), in Pisa is certainly the most valuable and ancient and is further very
well preserved. The marble that composes this floor is even “reused” and a
part of it come from roman factories. Today the attention is mainly focused on
its preservation and use.
Restoration,
Mosaic, Conservation, Tesserae, Reused, Preservation.
Giacinta
Jean
Pavimenti
cremonesi tra Settecento e Ottocento.
In
the history of construction, we can notice the wide use of cotto for the floors.
To this uniformity of the material does not correspond that of dimensions,
shapes and variety of colours and, especially from the middle of the Eighteenth
century, new types of cotto come into use, getting a quick success for the
better performances in order of resistance and appearance. The case of Cremona
will be analysed through the descriptions of the buildings, the contracts of
construction and the interesting correspondence between a patron and the
producer of the famous “cotto del Conte Lana”.
Cremona,
bulidings descriptions, contracts of construction, tavelle, conte Lana
Floriana
Petracco
Pavimenti
cremonesi tra Quattro e Seicento.
The
original Cremona floorings of the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries are almost
all disappeared with the exception of a few cases. Nevertheless the archive
research has brought to light precious information contained in the construction
books and contracts. Even the “Ordini per i misuratori” of the city of
Cremona of 1590 and the information reported by Alessandro Capra in its“Geometria
Famigliare” of 1671 give us a general picture - although not exhaustive – of
Cremona floorings. The study of these documentary sources has allowed to
identify the flooring typologies employed by the Renaissance architecture and to
compare them with the few examples survived until today. The most common
floorings were composed by squared brickworks (“madoni”), in some cases cut
and dressed as to create geometrical patterns, treated with oils and paints in
order to obtain polychrome elements. There were special floorings done in
terracotta tiles at two layers or with the perimetric bricks embedded in the
walls – for service rooms or spaces with a specific use - while floorings done
in “pietre feragne” placed “di coltello”, or “salicature” of
cobblestone were used on the outside. The stony floorings were absolutely rare
and dedicated to buildings of higher monumentality like the Cathedral and the
College of Nobles.
Cremona
floorigs, Renaissance architecture, historical construction, archive research,
XV-XVII centuries.
Stefano Vassallo,
Orietta Doria
Le
pavimentazioni storiche del Palazzo Reale di Genova. Storia
Tecniche problemi di conservazione.
Palazzo
Reale (The Royal Palace) was built by the Genoese nobleman Stefano Balbi between
1643 and 1655. The residence then underwent successive phases of architectural
extension and enrichment of decorations, in particular after it became property
of the Durazzo family in the late 17th century. ìIn 1824 the sumptuous
residence was acquired by the Savoia family, thus becoming the Royal Palace in
Genoa. Consequently, the Palace underwent various decorative phases during its
350 years’ life: the floors of the piano nobile (main floor) halls and the
mezzanines show an extreme variety of types of construction and decoration,
evidencing how the taste changed in the course of time and the different uses of
the rooms. The historic floors of Palazzo Reale may essentially be grouped into
four categories: granolithic floors, wooden inlay floors, marble inlay floors,
pebble mosaic floorings in the gardens.
granolithic
floors, wooden inlay floors, marble inlay floors, pebble mosaic floorings, Henry
Peters, Graniglia, Savoia, Genova, Palazzo Reale.
Barbara
Vinardi
Le
mattonelle in cemento nelle pavimentazioni degli spazi pubblici in Piemonte. La
produzione tra Otto e Novecento: temi per la conservazione.
The
essay looks at the problems list to the maintenance of the floorings in cement
tiles, proper to be used either in new or in consolidated contexts, complex for
the nature of the material and for the particular building technique often, by
now, obsolete. These floorings have often been underestimated because not
appreciate, despite their great qualities, as it shows their diffused employment
in the public spaces: for instance, in Turin in some lines of the porticos of
Via Pietro Micca or of Via Sacchi. They were diffusedly employed besides in a
lot of meaningful churches of the architecture at the end of 19th century and
beginning of 20th, as, for instance, the Crescentino Caselli chapel inside the
hospice of Charity or the Carlo Ceppi Holy Heart of Maria church. The missed
recognition of their values has often caused their demolition, with an
incongruous substitution with material amiss held more “proper”, when,
instead, the cement tiles were wisely been used for different restaurations in
substitution of brickwork by now irrecoverable, for instance in the St. Pietro
in Vincoli church in Settimo torinese. The essay intends to broadly confirm this
diffused technique, that has been publicized by albums and treatments at the
beginning of 20th century.
Cement
flooring, cement tiles, building technique, albums, treatments, Piedmont,
XIX-XXth century, conservation.
Annunziata
Maria Oteri, Fabio Todesco
Architetture
di sacrificio: le alterne fortune del pavimento cosmatesco nella chiesa della SS. Annunziata dell’Arciconfraternita degli Ottimati
a Reggio Calabria (1908-1934).
The
proposed study is placed in continuity with an essay, already published,
inherent the reconstruction of the city of Reggio Calabria as a result of the
earthquake of 1908 with particular reference to the complex, how much singular
vicissitude dealing with the demolition of the church of SS. Annunziata degli
Ottimati - conserved perfectly integral in spite of the telluric event - and the
rescue of the precious cosmatesco pavement that adorned it. The pavement was
detached and re-used, some years later, in a new church purposely built up in
order to accommodate it.
In
particular, this new study - taking a line of the thematic of the convention -
intend to inquire those aspects dealing with the ancient paving. It analyzes, on
one side, the cognitive aspects in order to materials and techniques. From the
other side this study inquires the vicissitudes of the pavement from the delicate phase of the taking
apart (in 1917) - moreover very documented - until the contemporary use. It is
an atypical case of recovery that does not imply - common destiny more rather to
the artistic materials collected in the difficult moment of reconstruction - the
choice of the usual exposition but, more rather, the re-use (even though nearly
twenty years later) in a new church
with all that involves in terms of adaptation to the new space and also in terms
of compatibility with the new way of use.
paving,
re-use, re-composition, reconstruction, conservation.
Lucia
Serafini, Claudio Varagnoli
Tecnica
e arte delle pavimentazioni storiche in Abruzzo.
This
contribution deals with traditional “ abruzzesi” pavings theme, checked in the context of the
various regional culture and considering the way to carry out and get under way in connection with
them. The difference among external pavings, “ semiinternal” or internal ( flooring ) is relative to
their different role public and / or private
and to their preservation state because there is no relavant differences about
technical data and material. If in the first case the research was carried out
considering just a few pieces surviving the systematic renewal process occured
during last century, for road condition requirements, and for shortage
documents discovered , in the others , the persistence of a lot of models,
though not always in optimal conditions, gave us many learning starting points,
to call our attention to this subject which is so worthy of protection because to day it is not
enough understood in consideration of its features as cultural resource.
brick
pavings, stone pavings, cobbled pavings, mosaic floorings, pavè
Michela
Candela, Gabriella Guerrisi, Enrico Gallocchio
Problematiche
della pavimentazione musiva del corritoio della Grande Caccia della villa del
Casale di Piazza Armerina.
Il Corridoio della Grande
Caccia della Villa del Casale di Piazza Armerina è un lungo ambiente di circa
mosaics,
restoration, archaeology, diagnostic project.
Silvana
Carannante, Sergio Omarini, Bruno Sammarco
Misure
spettrofotocolorimetriche su materiali pavimentali lapidei per la valutazione di
un eventuale degrado.
The
target of this research is to identify the colour variation of floor mosaic
tessera of Cecilio Giocondo's and Marco Lucrezio's Pompeian houses and of Villa
di Arianna in Castellamare di Stabia. Two areas, kept off from people walking,
have been considered: one is continuously exposed to sunlight, the other one is
always in shadow. The comparisons have been carried out on tessera of the
reasonably same material and for long in the same situation. Here is also
presented the methodology and the procedure for colour measure on lapideous
mosaics.
Colorimetry,
mosaics, sunlight exposition, Pompeian houses.
Sandra Ricci,
Gian Franco Priori
Aspetti
del degrado biologico di pavimentazioni musive sommerse.
The
authors report the results of a study on the characterization of different kinds
of biodeterioration processes
affecting underwater floors in the archaeological area of Baia (Naples). Three
different archaeological areas have been investigated at different dephts. The
authors present a file card (SAMAS, Scheda Analitica per Manufatti Archeologici
Subacquei – Analytical File for Underwater Archaeolological Artefatcts) for
the characterization of biological populations. On this basis, the authors plan
further conservation actions as well as a systematic monitoring and measurement
of the development of colonizations.
underwater
archaeological sites; Archaeological Underwater Park of Baia, Naples;
Biodeterioration; Mosaics.
Vincenzo
Vaccaro
Il
restauro della pavimentazione della cappella Rucellai a Firenze.
This
article describes the restoration of the marble floor of the Rucellai Family
Chapel in the Church of San Pancrazio (St. Pancras) in Florence, designed and
built by Leon Battista Alberti in 1467.
Preparatory
work for restoration included a complete new survey of the Chapel with a variety
of measuring techniques, employing topography and photogrammetry instruments and
high resolution scanning systems, such as laser scanners and millimeter
resolution radar scanners to record the finer details.
Data
collected from all sources were merged to produce a single 3D texture model of
the complete Chapel structure. Topographical reference points were used to
compose a digital photographic mosaic of the floor.
Restoration
included removing part of the marble slabs, reinforcing them with frames,
cleaning and returning them to their original position. Missing portions in ‘Serpentino’
elements (a green variety of marble from the Prato area) were reconstructed with
another material.
Rucellai Chapel. Marble.
Floor. Restoration. Laser scanner.
Ada
Roccardi, Sandra Ricci
Biocenosi
licheniche e muscinali su pavimentazioni archeologiche.
The
study is part of a research carried out on the characterization of
biodeterioration of stoneworks caused
by mosses and lichens. Observations
of different archaeological pavements and mosaic floor of two sites of Italy,
Ostia (RM) and Paestum (SA), showed that mortars, calcareous stones and bricks
are easily colonized by lichens and mosses associated. These organisms cause
physico-chemical and aesthetic alterations. The aim of this study was to
evaluate the role as biological weathering agents of these organisms and the
dynamism of their growths on various substrata. Some correlations between
microclimatic conditions and biodegradation were carried-out. In this work
preliminary results on the biological development of lichens and mosses in
archaeological areas are discussed.
biodeterioration,
lichens, mosses, mosaic pavements, archaeological floors, Ostia Antica, Paestum.
Fernanda
Cavari, Francesca Droghini, Marco Giamello
Un
pavimento musivo con emblema in opus sectile dall’Acropoli di Populonia: tecnica esecutiva e
caratterizzazione dei materiali
In
2004, during archaeological excavations at Populonia, a mosaic pavement
decorated by perspective cubes emblema in opus sectile, dated at the end of II
century b.c., was discovered. The aim of this work is to examine the working
technique and the petrographical analysis of constituent materials and support
layers. The analysis carried out by polarized light microscopy allowed for the
identification of marly and silicified limestones and white marble, likely to be
of local provenance. The use of marble is significant because, according to
archaeological literature, it would have been absent in these first examples of
sectilia, made completely of poor materials as coloured limestones lime schists,
marls, etc. The use of marble could be explained by its ready availability in
the near Campiglia area where the existence a quarry (Campo alle Buche), already
exploited in Ellenistic period, is documented.
Populonia,
mosaic pavement, opus sectile, marble, limestone.
Marco
Bartolini, Sandra Ricci,
Fiorangela Fazio
Valutazione
sperimentale di erbicidi per il trattamento di colonizzazioni di muschi su
pavimentazioni musive.
Mosaics
in outdoor archaeological sites are
frequently colonized by photoautrophic organisms. Colonization process starts
with a microbial biofilm formation and generally develops with the growth of
bryophytes and higher plants. The flora plays
an important role in the deterioration of the mosaics. Therefore
it is necessary to control the biological growth. The aim of this study is to
evaluate the effectiveness against
mosses of two herbicides commonly used for the treatment of vegetation. The
biocidal activity was evaluated by spectrophotometric chlorophyll a assay and
visual observations in situ. The results are compared with the biocide effect of
a quaternary ammonium compound. The investigation was carried out in the
archaeological site of Ostia Antica (Rome) on three different mosaic pavements
mosaic
pavements, biodeterioration, mosses, biocides, herbicides, Ostia Antica.
Aurora
Cagnana, Serena Franceschi, Adelmo M. Lazzari, Massimiliano Lazzari, Domenico Ruma
Le
pavimentazioni del complesso paleocristiano di San Martino di Ovaro (UD): dallo
scavo alla valorizzazione.
Between
2000 end
Early
Christian church; cobblestones; mortar; unbreakable glass.
Luciana
Cavallaro, Alessandro Cutelli, Fabrizio Gagliardi
Le
antiche pavimentazioni di San Giovanni e il museo della cattedrale di Asti.
This
communication intends to draw your attention on the works on the area called “complesso
della cattedrale di Asti” that concern the restoration of the Saint Giovanni
church and of the cloister of the “canonici” and on the creation of the
cathedral’s museum. The works have contributed to defined the history of the
churches of this area and to confirm the idea that the San Giovanni’s church
was the first one to be built or, at least, that it was a co-cathedral. The
archaeological site has brought to light a number of stratifications, amongst
them some planking that we can place between the Roman era and the Dark ages.
Such finds create a synergy with the will-be museum. Part of the planking is
going to be preserved and put into view in the will-be museum (“lacerti” of
the Roman mosaic –domus ecclesiae – and parts of the planking in “cocciopesto”
tiles and the bowl of the apse of the South aisle of the XIII century), whereas
other ones have been put into inventory first then removed (planking of a Roman
street made of cobblestones) or preserved but covered to allow a better use of
the areas of the will-be museum ( tiles in “cotto” in the San Giovanni’s
church). This study wants to stress the aspects linked to the different choices
we had to make in relation to the areas of the museum in order to decide if the
finds were becoming part of the visit path or just preserved.
stone
mosaic, archaeology, cathedral’s museum, restoration, Asti.
C.
Bellan, V. Modugno, N. Santopuoli, S.A. Curuni, P.Rispoli
L’integrazione
delle pavimentazioni a mosaico in ambito archeologico. Il
Balneum nei Praedia Iuliae Felicis a Pompei.
The
interest for “Archaeological restoration” brings to a direct contact with
Pompeii and with a research
program, in collaboration with the Faculty of
Architecture of Ferrara and
the Pompeii’s Archaeological Office, directed to Praedia Iuliae felicis (
Regio II, insula iv). This study has dealt with various aspects, from the
historical research to the restoration plan oriented to do conservative
restoration works and to carry out research to increase in value the Praedia
through depth studies about a creation of teaching paths to allow the building
use. Then the restoration project includes
the replacement of mosaic floorings of two thermal rooms (tepidarium and balneum’s
atrium). The planning choices are driven by principles of critical-conservative restoration, in
particular by concept of lacuna:
here we think of the floorings of balneum’s atrium and of tepidarium as an
absence of architectural unit of the baths, so it’s essential the critical
reconstruction of unit’s work.
We
have proceeded with a depth study of historical models of Pompeian flooring’s
typologies and materials, and it has brought to the knowledge of the thiasos mosaic of bath atrium and
fornacator mosaic of tepidarium in a room of National Archaelogical Museum in
Naples. From this discovery, we have decided to repropose a copy of the two
mosaic; in particular, tepidarium’s floor will convert into a didactic
presentation of classic thermal technique. Intervention wants to underline the
importance of Pompeii site and it
wants to underline the fine border line between Architecture and Archaelogy.
Hystorical-critical
restoration, Mosaic, Copy, Didactis
Atanasie
Popescu, Marwan Abu Khalaf
On
site consolidation of a Byzantine mosaic pavement from Ramallah-el-Bireh, the
Palestinian Territories.
The
important Byzantine archaeological site from Kirbat Shuwayka is located close
with the west of Tell en-Nasbeh (The mound of the idol), on the south side of
the Ramallah-el-Bireh, the Administrative Center of the Palestinian Authority.
The
archeological evidences which were discovered on the site indicate that most
probably a monastic complex existed there, aspect confirmed by even its local
name: Qasr al-Malika Helana (The Palace of the Queen Helana). It is thought the
architectural remains discovered were mainly part of a monastery, a church, a
house, a wine press, and a tomb. The majority of the rooms were paved with
mosaics. The 148 mosaic floors of marble tesserae has a white background with a
simple geometric design of intersecting diagonal lines in black, which form squares, with a simple flower
inside of each of them. The archaeological relicts permitted to establish that
this archaeological site is from the Late Byzantine Period (5th - 6th Centuries
A.D.).
Our
contribution will be focused on “in situ” mosaic consolidation of a mosaic
pavement, during December 1994, as a part of the UNESCO Rotating Chair of the
Archaeology Restoration, through the Palestinian-European-American Cooperation
in Education (PEACE) Programme. Due to the difficulties to receive, by E-mail, a
good quality of the photographic illustrations, we will be able to ensure some
representative photos through our poster.
Byzantine
mosaic pavements; “in situ” consolidation; financial problems; international
support.
Valeria
Pracchi, Gianfranco Pertot
I
pavimenti nella sala dell’ Hospitale Spagnolo al
Castello Sforzesco di Milano.
The
assay of the ground floor paving in Sforza’s Castle in Milano, in the hall
that has been the ancient hospital, unearthed the floors which have been
overlapped in time. In the meantime, the removal of superior layer meant to
concern on the conservation of the most ancient layer, especially because of
reuse of the hall. This paper shows the accomplished study, the project choices
and their supporting reasons.
Sforza’s
Castle, Hospital, brickwork, preservation, reuse, stratigraphy
Manuela
Catarsi, Giovanni Signani, Barbara Zilocchi
L'efficacia
dello scavo archeologico nelle scelte metodologiche del restauro di superfici
pavimentali antiche. Due cantieri del parmense: la chiesa di S. Maria Assunta a
Fontanellato e la chiesa di S. Martino a Borgotaro.
For
the restoration of an ancient floor, at ground level, archaeological excavation
is necessary to identify the causes of degradation and to determinate the best
way to proceed with the work of reconstruction. Excavation also provides the
project with valuable historical materials and references. Good examples are
provided by the two sites in the Province of Parma, described below. In the
church of S.Maria Assunta in
Fontanellato, the excavation located the main causes of decay in the brick
floor.These were due to the subsidence of the
floor and the partial obstruction of the drainage system in the brickwork
passages. The floor was restored by creating a hollow space which allows air to
circulate. In the church of S.Martino in Borgo Val di Taro, archaeological
excavation, necessary for the consolidation and restoration of the building,
brought to light antique stone floors. These had been hidden by inappropriate 20
° century restoration, which has now been removed. The old stone floors have
been restored and again visible.
excavation,
Parma, Fontanellato, Borgo Val di Taro, church, brick floors, stone floors.
Alberto
Ambrosiani,
Valeria Mariotti, Giovanni Battista Sannazzaro
Abbiategrasso
(MI), chiesa di Santa Maria Annunziata: un pavimento del XV secolo su arcate.
The
original floor in the XVc church of Santa Maria Annunziata in Abbiategrasso is
one of the most important findings carried out during the recent restoration of
the whole monastery. This was built
between 1469 and 1472, thanks to a vow of
Galeazzo Maria Sforza, Duke of Milan, for the Francescan Observants, according
to a building pattern directly established by the Order itself.
This
original floor lies in the secluded presbitery and it is supported by four
underground vaults communicatings with one another, as well as with the outside,
through some small openings, wich were already completely underground at the
building time. These spaces are supposed to be related to the ventilation of the
building foundations, as there are no architectural elements to relate such
structures to a heating system, altrough there are some connections with the
Roman traditional suspensurae system.
The
four vaulted spaces are oriented crossward as to the church and occupy the whole
presbitery area. This one, in turn,
is divided into three different levels, each one marked by a different texture
of the brickwork floor. The stools
for the friars are supposed to have been placed in the perimetric area of the
church, where some spaces are painted in dark colour on a light background.
Monastery,
Franciscan Order, Abbiategrasso, Sforza, Seclusion area, Presbitery, Floor on
underground vault, Ventilation
Stefania
Bossi, Irene Dell’Atti
La
fruizione sostenibile delle pavimentazioni storiche. Modalità per declinarne
responsabilmente l’uso e la conservazione.
Researches
concerning historical floor maintenance practices are usually few and
incomplete. Many studies are interested only in protection of archaeological
paving, floors hardly used in the past but now considered simply as historical
surfaces. However a floor should be "used", not only "looked
at".
This
paper investigates damages to several types of flooring and proposes a different
maintenance planning approach: in fact, assiduous users have to keep clean and
efficient pavings in order to prevent breakdowns.
Through
correct use, constant care and monitoring it should be possible to preserve
historical flooring. The same approach is also suitable when proposing a
compatible reuse, according to the current conservation state.
The
conflict between use and conservation is easy to understand, however users
should be considered not only responsible for the degradation but also warrantor
for the maintenance. Only in a neglected state of the floor use will be
dangerous for the building.
Finally,
each intervention, cleaning included, must be planned with a systemic approach.
This idea needs urgent attention both for now and for the future.
use/abuse,
good practice, recommendations, maintenance planning, care, management of
visitors
Hossein
Fallahdar
Processo
di trasformazione nello stato di conservazione attraverso pavimentazioni in Iran.
Dagli studi sul tema delle
pavimentazioni in rapporto alle scelte dei materiali, degli approcci e delle
tecniche eseguite, all’impatto architettonico, ambientale e agli aspetti
legati alla fruizione, l’articolo va dedicato tali pavimentazioni di valori
storici. Si fa cenno ai
lavori svolti dai francesi, italiani e iraniani in quattro siti dell’Iran a
poter valutare aspetti conoscitivi e quelli applicativi. Dove sono mancati dei
riferimenti più enerenti riguardante all’indirizzo di intervento nel campo di
restauro, di conservazione e d’amnistrazione delle opere. Si cercherà
riferire alle situazioni di tali opere e in relazione al loro stato d’esistenza
e alla loro destinazione d’uso,
specialmente le pavimentazioni che una volta svolgevano la loro funzione,
ora pur continuano svolgimento ma in un ruolo diversa.
Dunque, la loro esistenza
in un stato di
critica, pavimenti che pur essendo di valore singolare, si rendono utilizzati in
maniera moderna, come se fosse riproducible e di poco valore. Oggi, con i mezzi
e le facilità c’è una crescità del flusso di viaggiatori curiosi con il incremento di fruizione legato all’industria del
turismo. Allora, dalle ricerche approfondite di carattere valutativo sul
significato delle pavimentazioni tradizionali e sulle scelte
conservazione, restauro, tipo re-integrativo, ri-uso, carico di visitatori turistici etc, si va alla straficazione delle cose in
un complesso situazione legata al contesto, di dei materiali originari,
trasformazioni e dei requisiti relativi al fine di stesura esemplari da
protocollo di intesa per i lavori connessi, come linea di guida alla scala
decisiva.
L’articolo potrebbe
offrire un contributo alla conoscenza dello sviluppo storico del restauro,
tecniche esecutive, dei materiali,
del processo e comportamento, dell’uso e della durata nel tempo
tipologie dei pavimentazioni storiche nellle loro diversità tipologica.
Riferimenti si faranno agli spazi architettonici interni ed esterni, come delle esperienze
svolte nei tempi, prima delle guerre. In cui, il contributo vorrebbe costituire
un carattere originale di approfondimento al tema con la scansione per mettere a
punto quelli aspetti di ruolo
delle pavimentazioni nei centri Susa, Apadana, Acropoli, Sultaniè e Gulistan in
Iran venendo materiali e lavorazioni, valutazione e controllo di interventi
effettuati dai francesi come Andrè Godard, italiani (come Sampaolesi) e gli
iraniani (come Kasai) valutando lo
stato di degrado, compatibilità con le forme d’uso moderne con i criteri di
decisione per la conservazione interventi di sovrammissione, re-integrazione,
sostituzione, imitazione, la conoscenza degli sperimenti di materiali, e
tecnologie incompattibili per la conservazione e durabilità e manutenzione
prevista e correlata al bene. Nell’articolo si verifica rilettura di assi a
rappresentare l’influenza critica fatta per la conservazione e dei valori di
pavimentazioni sulle questioni in Iran.
Susa, Sultanieh, Pavement,
Floor, Kaf Sazi, Iranian Architecture, Sasanide, Ilkhanide &
Architectural Conservation
Massimiliano
David
Tecniche
di pavimentazione stradale in eta' romana e tardo-romana.
Adhering
to the indications in the literature (especially the Digest), art critics
generally speak of three basic types of Roman roads (dirt, gravel, and paving
stone). However, archaeological documentation allows us to expand the range of
road types. The existence of cobblestone roads has been demonstrated, for
example, and wooden plank or tile roads have also been uncovered. The use of the
different techniques depended not only on the natural resources and funds
available, but also on the type of natural environment where the road would pass
and on the volume and type (foot, animal, carriage) of traffic. The high traffic
around cities required very durable roadways such as those made with large
paving stones, and even within this single type there was a broad variety of
possible construction techniques.
ROADS – CONSTRUCTION –
TIPOLOGY – LAYERS – STRATIGRAPHY
Paola
Novara
Sectilia
pavimenta a Ravenna nei secoli V e VI.
During
the V-VI centuries, Ravenna was a very important city. From 402 Ravenna was the
last imperial capital of the Western Roman Empire, then, in 493, the capital of
the kingdom of Theoderic, and then, with the reintegration of Italy into the
Eastern Empire, the capital of what remained of the Byzantine areas of Italy,
later known as the Exarchate. Archaeological and documentary evidence indicates
that the buildings constructed in Ravenna during the two centuries had often
marble floors. The marble floors are one of the least known aspect of the
ancient Ravenna’s monuments. This study collects a short catalogue of the
Ravenna’s marble floors we know from documentary and archeological sources and
specially the one of the Orthodox
and Arian Baptisteries, of the churches of S. Giovanni Evangelista, S. Francesco
(Apostoleion), S. Croce, S. Apollinare Nuovo, S. Vitale, of the
Classe’s cathedral (Basilica Petriana), and of the tomb of the king Theoderich.
Ravenna,
floor, marble, opus sectile, sectilia, church, baptistery, tomb.
Sandro
Colagrande, Raimondo Quaresima, Danilo Ranalli, Marco Tallini
Pavimentazioni
stradali in pietra: il contributo del Georadar nella diagnosi del degrado.
Cobblestone
road pavement is valuable both aesthetically and historically to such an extent
that it is often protected by the law. It is still to be found in many Italian
historical towns, which, thanks to its ancient origin, is to be considered
artistic heritage and therefore it should be preserved. On the other hand,
structural degradation of road pavements, included the cobblestone one, is a
threat to traffic safety. Defects or damages in the road surface make driving
uncomfortable and increase the likelihood of accidents.
The
present paper had the purpose to validate the use of the Ground Penetrating
Radar (GPR), as non destructive testing, in finding correlations between the
type of stone surface, the traffic load, the road surface degradation.
For
this purpose a GPR investigation (1600 and 600 MHz radar antennas) has been
conducted on 15 cobblestone road pavements located in the medieval centre of L’Aquila
(Abruzzi Region). Both qualitative (anomalies on radar scans) and quantitative
analyses (curves of radar signal attenuation with depth) were carried out. The
analysis of 1600 MHz radar scans showed a good correlations between the
above-mentioned variables and the surface pavement degradation. Moreover the 600
MHz radar scans evidenced that the highest decayed surface pavement areas and
the underground technological networks are located in the same position, so
demonstrating that the trench digging is the main cause of the decay. Through
GPR investigation it seems possible to optimise the execution of building and
preservation of cobblestone road pavements.
Cobblestone,
road pavement, decayed road pavement, road maintenance, GPR investigation.
L.
Galli, G. Rebay, M.P. Riccardi, S. Zatti
Le
pavimentazioni stradali della tradizione storica nella citta’ di Pavia:
materiali, tecniche esecutive e conservazione.
The
restauration and the maintenance of ancient streets pavements in Pavia presents
tough interpretative and operative problems. The matter/texture features are the
starting point in the historical records and they can be traced back with
highest fidelity and confidence. This preliminary study starts from an overall
historical remind and goes through the technical details supportive to potential
sound technical interventions.
historical pavements, cobblestones
surfaces, paving stones typology, surface deterioration
Fernanda
Cantone, Daniela Anello
Un
osservatorio sul degrado delle pavimentazioni storiche. Il caso delle corti di
Ortigia.
The
evaluation of the conditions of some technical elements or of the entire
building is a fundamental step to decide the necessary interventions. Data
concerning the materials, the shapes, the area surrounding the object of the
study and its use, are also important to the recovery project.
The
recovery of the historical floors, realised with different techniques that
depended on their importance, their use and the economic possibilities of the
payer, need a special care, in particular when we examine those of the inner
courts of some important historical buildings in Ortigia.
These
floors, realised with natural local materials and stones, should be mentioned
for their beauty and their value and it is therefore necessary to examine
carefully their structure, their construction techniques and their conservation
in order to plan a recovery intervention.
recovery,
degradation, historical floor, interventions, re-qualification, conservation, decay evolution, natural stone.
Begoña
Carrascosa Moliner, Montserrat Lastras Pérez
L'importanza
del cromatismo nei pavimenti, come nesso di unione fra ieri e oggi.
From
the different treatments that are carried out in one restoration, we focus this
article in the results achieved by the materialization of the realized
investigations inside the section of colour retouching in archaeological works.
One
of our maximum concerns about the restorative processes, is the colour retouching of the pieces,
because it supposes the definitive step before the work is exposed. In relation with this result depends not
only the historical valuation that is made of the work itself, but also the
interpretation and meaning of its use. The final objective of any restoration is
generally the exhibition in a museum. Therefore, the fundamental thing in any
intervention is that the visualization that the spectator carries out on the
ceramic be objective, so that it considers as important the form and the
historical valuation of the piece, and that through a second reading, can be differentiated easily between the
original piece and the realized restoration. In order to this, the techniques
and products that we use allow us to consider every type of works without
depending on which be his location, both, external and internal, and on its
expositive system, guaranteeing this way, at every moment the stability of both,
the realized intervention and the work.
colour
retouching, tile, pavement, fill, exhibition.
Francesca
Castagneto, Vittorio Fiore, Daniele Intelisano
la
Strada Nova: la scala Santa Maria del Monte in Caltagirone tra riqualificazione
urbana e restauro.
The
paper deals with the most important monument of Caltagirone: Santa Maria del
Monte Staircase, a way between Townhall Square and the ancient Chiesa della
Matrice. It becaame the symbol of the image of a city considered one of the
marvels in Val di Noto, that is part of the UNESCO World Heritage.
The
strada nova underlines the continuity between the ancient part of the city and
the new one; it was built in 1606, restored after the 1693 earthquake and
restyled more than once in XIX and XX centuries.
The
study aims to show the role and the sense of the
technical and strategic
appropriate choices in restoration projects.
The
last project was a real innovation, that improved the visual message through the
use of the traditional ceramics elements: this work settles urban identity
preservation questions, maintenability
and durability issues, technological performances control.
Caltagirone,
urban rehabilitation, materials, recovery technologies, performance control.
Stefania
Bertano, Micaela Goldoni, Alessandra Lenti, Barbara Pani
La
fruizione e la conservazione delle pavimentazioni nei porticati urbani: una
dialettica aperta a nuovi apporti.
Nowaday
is clear a lack of interest towards outside flooring, whose historical value is
subordinated to their efficency and to their aesthetic quality. These two
features, considered indispensable by public administrations and by the
operators of the field, would seem to be the last purpose of the interventions
done on the floorings; interventions that often foresee complete dismantling and
reconstruction from the beginning, instead of restoration for saving. By means
of this article, whose interest is limited to the floorings of urban porticos,
we want to analize not only the reason of this attitude but also to verify which
ways of intervention have usually been taken, which materials and technologies
have been employed. A research aimed to the knowledge of the manufactures, not
only under the historical side but also and most of all by the
technical-material point of view, has been developed; the results have been
described inside dossiers whose examples most meaningfull are here exposed.
porticos,
flooring, restyling, maintenance, laying technologies, materials.
Michela
Benente, Manuela Mattone
Materiali
e tecnologie esecutive delle pavimentazioni urbane realizzate nel Ventenio
fascista a Torino.
The
technological experimentalism that characterised the architectural works built
in Italy between the 1920s and the 1940s also affected the field of
infrastructures. New materials were proposed and used in the construction of
city road surfaces. The advent of new vehicles (motor cars, streetcars, etc.)
mated to an appreciable increase in traffic, the growth of buildings and the
innovative drive typical of the fascist era all contributed to the development
and subsequent utilisation of new road floor materials, designed to meet
evolving performance requirement.
This
study investigates these themes by focusing on the interventions performed
during the two decades of fascist rule in Turin, with the aim of contributing to
the knowledge of the historical development of the construction technologies and
the materials characterising the city floors laid during that period and the
preservation and replacement works carried out at later times.
floor
materials, evolving performance, fascist era, preservation, replacement.
Giuseppe
Vincenzo Pulvirenti
La pratica costruttiva della
pavimentazione in pietra lavica nei centri storici dell’area Etnea.
The
paving in stone has carried out between the various materials employs a role to
you characterizing of one determined culture, today then is assisting after
years of progressive waterproof of the city territory to one various
historical-environmental attention. The
presence in the historical centers of the Sicily Orients them of the Paving in
basalt stone reminds the cultural requirement to us of a sustainable development recovery.
In fact the paving in stone represents a consolidated example of
bio-compatibility, connotation due to the durability and in the case of puts
down in work on sand bed of one relative permeability of the foundation. The productive phase then from a point
of view of impact acclimatizes them also in consideration of the refuse res-use
to you represents materials echo- sustainable whose extraction guarantees one
compatible development with the nature and the ecosystem.
Paving
in basalt stone, historical centers of the Etnea area.
Vincenzo
Borasi
Il
restauro delle pavimentazioni storiche deve essere sempre progettato come un
intervento colto per un riuso conservativo di un
insieme di strati architettonici preziosi da coordinare entro un sistema
edilizio con sensibilita’ critica sia architettonica sia territoriale.
It
is possible to understand “ex post” whether the restoration of a historical
flooring is of quality either good, acceptable or terrible on the basis of the
success the project engineer achieves in combining in a functional system all of
the elements he identified “a priori” in his initial analysis. As a matter
of fact in a project for the restoration of historical floorings the most
important errors, i.e. the ones that are impossible to amend without enormous
expenses and/or the loss of authentic artifacts, most frequently derive from the
initial theoretical analysis, rather than from defects in materials and/or
techniques. In order to limit this kind of errors we propose a list of
guidelines for project engineers which should hopefully lead them to escape at
least the most dangerous errors. More precisely we propose to examine any
ancient flooring first of all as a layer which is part of a landscape system
having its own causes and aims, and then to classify it on the basis of specific
criteria as: “real” (A. and B.1) vs. “virtual” (2); according to “disciplines
(3); “scale” of the environmental project (4); “compatibility” with over
layers (5); “who” will issue an evaluation (6) and in which direction, if
more “sentimental” (7) or “technical” (1 and 8) or “historical” (2
and 9) or etc.(10).
1)
Methods of project; 2) Project choices; 3) Reading architecture; 4) Theory of
architecture; 5) Theory of restoration; 6) Virtual architecture; 7) Virtual
landscapes; 8) Historical floorings
Enrico
Pedemonte, Silvia Vicini, Elisabetta Princi, Saverio Russo, Alberto Mariani, Simone Bidali
La
produzione di piastrelle a base di aggregati di ardesia mediante tecnologie
innovative.
In
this work we reported our results on the preparation of composites with slate
powder and polymeric binders (acrylic and epoxy resins). The new technique
applied to make the products, in particular tiles, is the frontal polymerization,
in which the heat released by the exothermal reaction of monomer or oligomer
into polymer is exploited to promote the formation of a hot travelling front
able to propagate and self-sustain. The characterization of the products is here
discussed, looking at the good performances reached especially with the epoxy
resins as binders. In particular, the tiles show values of the water absorption
repellence and the chemical, thermal and mechanical resistance equivalent or
better than those of the raw slate.
slate,
tiles, frontal polymerization, acrylic polymers, epoxy resins.
Moreno
Binci, Paolo Sardella
Piazza
Filippo Corridoni a Corridonia. Disegno, significato e storia di uno spazio urbano.
Corridonia
(MC) is one of the many examples of urbanistic restructuring carried out during
the Fascist era (1936). The intervention comprises the City Hall and a square,
with a monument to F. Corridoni in the middle. The paving of the square leads to
the ideal centre of the spatial composition, the monument to Corridoni. The City
Hall provides a backdrop and sets the scene. References from Italian Squares by De Chirico can be found. The new
urban leftover area aims at totally re-designing the borders with the existing
structures by means of a carefully planned addition of new elements of urban
design. The present paving marks out the area of the monument with a subtle
design whose main characteristic is the changing of texture and tones of the
base material, sandstone blocks and porphyry dots. The meaning and the history
of the square read through the use of materials, the design and the paving.
square,
urban design, rationalist architecture, urbanistic requalification.
Mariacristina
Giambruno, Raffaella Simonelli
Spazi
urbani e pavimentazioni storiche. Conservazione della materia vs ripristino
dell'immagine urbana.
Squares,
roads and stairways are constitutive elements of historical centers like
buildings. They compose real “urban rooms” in which an important role is not
only played by the morphology, but also, and above all, from materials. The
replacement of historical floorings becomes, therefore, a matter of primary
importance in the preservation of the ancient centers, in the guardianship of
the urban identity.
We
have to assign to the floorings a value of historical testimony that contributes
to characterize our cities in their
entirety, with their buildings. This means to plan a management strategy of
interventions that, departing from a knowledge of materials and of the state of
decay, comes to find the lines for preservation.
So
the paper means to consider the role of the historical floorings of the open
spaces inside the program of preservation of historical centers.
urban
floorings, guardianship norms, preservation guides lines, historical centers.
Giovanna
Cacudi, Giovanni Giangreco
Pavimentazioni
Salentine: Genius Loci.
Salento's
paving models are specific of old
Terra d'Otranto area.
They
are made of calcareous and calcarenitic local stone and are used for inside and
outside paving, as well as for
covering of vaulted buildings.The execution and recover techniques are still the
same as the ones used in the past, since the area has kept its old conservative
vocation, based on the idea of tradition as reference of social values and
cultural behaviours.
Astricu
- small set – calcarenitic - chianca - mosaic
paving - local stone – Salento.
Il
ruolo della pavimentazione nei centri storici minori: San Giovanni in Marignano,
granaio dei Malatesti. Il difficile rapporto tra contesto storico,
riqualificazione e funzionalità.
San Giovanni in Marignano
“terre murate” a small urban area of the Rimini district whose foundation
goes back to the end of 13th century. Located
in the southern area of Romagna, the Conca river valley, San Giovanni in
Marignano has the historical features of an urban design that put to evidence
some similarities with the “Florentine terre murate”. Among these, the role
of the “Signoria Malatestiana” and a documented presence of sir Filippo
Brunelleschi in the year 1438, let us imagine him, the wellknown architect of
the Renaissance, as the main author of San Giovanni renewal. This place,
traditionally presumed as the Malatesti barn and center of heavy commercial
trading activities, as well as privileged warehouse of the entire valley, is
pointed out in such a role by a specific map from 1871: this document witnessing
the exintence of 128 barn holes tidily distributed through the streets.
Recently,
with a rational project regarding the planning of urban paving, some of these
old hypogean cavities have been rendered visible, according to the historical
and cultural milieu.
San
Giovanni in Marignano (RN), “terra murata”, XIII century, XV century,
Signoria Malatestiana, underground barn holes, urban project.
Fabiana
Pieri
Il
masegno. I "lastricati " storici a Trieste: realizzazione, manutenzione, conservazione e…manomissione.
The
ancient and modern roads of Trieste are constructed in sandstone, a loam-sandy
rock extracted from the layers of flysch that characterise the subsoil of the
territory.
The
careful constructive and maintenance technique carried out up until the
beginning of the last century, hasn’t had an analogous tradition in the
current day.
Through
an analysis of the constructive, maintenance and restoration techniques of the
stone pavements from the 1700s to today, carried out by studying sources from
the archive records, this contribution aims to relate these activities to the
recent interventions undertaken on the urban roads.
In
particular, a conservative intervention will be illustrated in the historical
centre of Trieste, that has foreseen the conservation and restoration of the
ancient masegni, comparing these with other interventions which have totally
removed the latter by substituting them with new stones that have been brought
from distant quarries, motivated by the need to guarantee security and
accessibility (Piazza Unita’ and others).
Through
the re-proposition of the ancient techniques, guidelines are suggested for the
maintenance of the historical stone roads in order to guarantee the protection
of the historical city’s “landscape".
masegno,
construction, maintenance, conservation, historical city’s landscape.
Valter
Proietti
Le
pavimentazioni esterne di villa Torlonia a Roma: un sistema di fruibilita’ e
di mantenimento dei soprassuoli.
The
setting of the walks of this historical evergreen parkland could be matched to
that of the paved streets of an historical centre for reaching right up to an
ancient building on several sides.
The
setting of the alleys of this famous Villa Torlonia can be matched whit the
holding functional works of the natural grounds together with those for
conveying and recovering rain waters.
The
whole of the aforesaid carrying structures studied in the old planimetries and
recovered “in situ”, as well as, restored by the writer in the years between
1988 end 1992, shows the refined and precisus mastery workman ship carried out
in Villa Torlonia.
At
present, these skilled repair works of art can be seriously damaged for lack of
maintenance of both parkland and
functional supporting works which result to be i n very poor conditions.
Actually, the necessary steps are taken, after a so long time, to restore this
neglected garden.
But,
it is not sure that the hard evidence of the recent past time of carelessness could be useful to save
just in time, for the sake of Roman
Art, this historical wonderful garden.
Villa
Torlonia, evergreen parkland, neglected garden, historical centre, mastery.
Monica
Fantone
Gli
Gneiss delle alpi occidentali nelle pavimentazioni degli spazi pubblici a
Torino.
Much
part of the roads of Turin are covered by porticos and show a flooring in plates
of stony material, primarily the gneiss stones of the Occidental Alps, so as
mixed to plates and pebbles is the surface of the inner courtyards of the
palaces in the areas of expansion of the city up to the last enlargement plans
of the first half of the XIX century..
The
essay aims to reconstruct, through the archive documentation, the origin and the
technique of traditional laying of the stones, verifying the actual consistence
and the operation of maintenance, consolidation, reorganization but even
tampering (in correspondence of the cart footsteps, where the tiles with to
favor the access of the carriages to the porches are often reassemble without
holding in consideration the ancient uses) and substitution (the usage of new
plates, no more the result of breaks but cut with saws and with flamed surfaces),
making a comparison between the today situation and that of about ten years ago.
Turin,
pavement, stone, maintenance, porticos, roads
Giovanni
Fatta, Tiziana Campisi, Mario Li Castri, Stefano Lo
Piccolo
Le
pavimentazioni esterne nella Sicilia occidentale.
Aspetti materiali, tecnici e formali della tradizione costruttiva.
Squares,
roads, alleys and courtyards, ramps and staircases of many urban centres in
Western Sicily are characterized by ancient paving, in some cases still well
preserved in small hinterland towns and in historical cities areas, but often
hidden by “modern” bituminous coats, if not entirely or partly removed
because uncomfortable for pedestrian traffic and noisy to vehicles way. The
transformations in progress or already happened, they generally conform to
models deduced by repertoires distant from areas of application about material,
forms, executive techniques; it contributes to show a progressive and quick
forgetfulness of building art-rules and also an oversight of how much knowledge
of local building characters it’s necessary, also in urban re-qualification,
for a correct intervention.
This
study investigates different cases, determined by availability of natural and
artificial stones, by site orography, by rain and generally by climate, by
pedestrian or vehicle prevailing use, by quality of site; by prevalence in some
areas of compact stone in blocks or plates with a various geometry, or pebbles
and tile. We analyze how the materials were disposed, if panels and guides, or
schemes with oblique joints to favour water outflow; we examine simple
longitudinal alternation of cobbled paving, complexes bi-chromatic schemes on
vast plain surfaces, the transversal placing predominantly for strong
inclination; we also investigate the techniques of arrangement and position of
paving elements. Through direct investigation and unpublished archives documents,
the study would probe into technical, material, executive and formal aspects for
the exploitation of ancient paving to be a guide for a respectful and congruous
intervention.
outdoor
paving, Western Sicily, building materials and techniques, tradition,
re-qualification, restoration, congruous interventions.
Simonetta
Valtieri, Francesco Paolo Cecati, Antonio Gambino,
Il
problema dei piani pavimentali monumentali e urbani in Calabria: Il caso del palazzo Carafa e del suo intorno nel nucleo antico di
Roccella Jonica (RC).
The
researches deal with both the reinsertion of the missing part of an original
brick flooring and the realization of an external road paving, inside and
outside Palazzo Carafa respectively, by a laboratory supported work plan. The
first subject concerns the choice of a new paving mortar able to be applied by a
casting method and composed mainly of cocciopesto, siliceous sand, hydraulic
lime, and water. Some compositions varying mainly the aggregate/binder fraction
and the strength of the binder, has been proved. On the basis of some important
physical-chemical and mechanical properties, it has been found that a volumetric
mix composed of 2 part of aggregate
(fragments and powder of cocciopesto and powder of yellow ochre), 1 part of NHL
5 binder type and 0.8-0.9 part of water, may represent a suitable composition.
The second proposal aims to the development of a semi-transparent asphalt able
to exalt the aesthetic quality of local aggregate pebbles linked together by
means of an innovative layer of synthetic binder commercially sold as “transparent
bitumen”. Preliminary results points out that by employing a suitable mix
design of components (binder and aggregates physical properties) and by applying
a corrects physical and mechanical treatments (pre-heating, mixing and curing
modalities), it can be successfully obtained a high performing and perhaps
durable product.
Roccella
Jonica (RC), Palazzo Carafa, internal and external paving, hydraulic lime,
transparent binder, conservation and renovation.
Daniela
Bosia, Giovanna Franco, Stefano F. Musso
Il
contributo delle pavimentazioni all’identità locale dei nuclei rurali.
In
the rural villages on the hills and on the mountains of Liguria and lower
Piedmont the paths, the open spaces, the courtyards, often derived from a
patient human work to use a hard territory, represent – even from the
perceptive point of view – the inseparable legacy between the human settlement
and the landscape. Besides the apparent homogeneity of constructive techniques of the pavements,
every kind of stones – depending also on the unique context – is linked to
different kind of work, has various “behaviour” in relation to external
agents and, overall, is positioned on specific soil, following the local
tradition. The paper aims to offer a view of the different external pavements of
the rural villages, with particular attention to: geometry and morphology,
materials and ways to treat the stones and their surfaces, disposal to gutter
the rainwater; current conditions of decay and structural disease and analysis
of their causes, guidelines for the maintenance, repair, integration and new
interventions, especially in cases of new demands for use.
stone
pavement, rural villages, constructive techniques, maintenance, repair.
Danilo
Biondelli, Roberto
Bugini
Pavimentazioni
stradali nel XIX secolo a Milano: materiali lapidei, tecniche di realizzazione e
aspetti di degrado.
Pavings
of urban street in Milan were investigated in order to outline the development
during 19th century: pebbles and granite row, stone slabs or stone cubes. The
material employed were pebbles from glacial and fluvial deposits, granites from
lake Maggiore (Baveno and Montorfano), granite from lake Como (san Fedelino),
granophyre from lake Lugano, sandstone from Liguria and porphyry from
Trentino-Alto Adige (since 1925). The change of the street profile according to
the development of urban needs (sewers, cables, rails) was reported. The
different features and decay phenomena of each stone were also investigated.
Paving,
stone, pebble, history of materials, Milan
Annalisa
Conforti, Annalisa Marra, Consuelo Celeste Spinella, Lorenzo Jurina
Il
caso delle pavimentazioni nel borgo abbandonato di Laino Castello: dove il tempo
e le nuove tecnologie non hanno alterato la continuità della tradizione
costruttiva.
The
study introduced in this article faces the topic of the external and inner
paving of the village of Laino. The urban texture, abandoned over 25 years ago,
introduces concerns related to the complete lack of maintenance, because of
which the vegetation has come to an uncontrolled growth.
This
dilapidation damaged the external paving resulting in impassableness of streets
as well as their undetectability and most of all in their bad readability.
In
the case of the inner paving, the maintenance shortage brought to the
deterioration of all the wooden structures, and consequently of the paving,
because of the water seepage. Analysis have been conducted aimed to find out and
to characterize the constructive techniques in order to allow future restoration.
The results obtained through three types of analysis (photographic, metric and
stratigraphic description) have been organized in synthesis cards by means of
which it is possible to easily detect typologies, employed materials,
constructive techniques and the state of conservation.
paving,
survey, cataloguing, materials, constructive techniques, conservation
Luisa
Gabbaria Mistrangelo
Le
pavimentazioni negli spazi pubblici dei nuclei storici di Borgio Verezzi.
In
the territory of Borgio Verezzi there are five historical centers: the biggest
one is on the coast, and the others are on the hills of the natural amphitheatre
which looks to the sea.
The
construction technology of “ciottolato” (cobbled paving) is usual in their
old streets and squares: it is called in the region “rissêu” (from “riccio”
= “curl” or from French “ruisseau” = “river” where there is a lot of
stones). Some areas in the 70s were asphalted because the original paving was
ruined and the stones were disconnected and disjointed.
The
article describes functions and characters of paths paving in Verezzi landscape
and their rehabilitation, following the projects included in town plans for the
restoration of the entire old villages.
All
the paths are pedestrian. For a better accessibility, a central fillet was added
in main streets and squares (which are used as open theatres in summer time)
using: bricks (as in many Ligurian examples) or “Lessinia stone” (from
Verona mountains) which is very similar to the original stone called “stone of
Verezzi”. Its beautiful particular pink color is the topic of the architecture
in Borgio Verezzi. In fact Verezzi stone quarries were closed many years ago.
cobblestones,
cobbled paving, original stones - new materials, compatibility
Maria
Rita Pinto, Maria Palumbo, Stefania De Medici, Cristiana Viscardi
Verifica
degli esiti della riqualificazione dei parchi urbani: la pavimentazione della
villa Comunale di Napoli.
The
Nineteenth-century urban parks witness of the relationship in constant becoming
between nature and town. The need of progressive adjustment to the use demands
has led, in the years, to modify the natural components, the built ones and the
activities. Such interventions have, in a few cases, changed the characters of
the parks, using materials, construction techniques and plants incompatible with
the system. This often compromises the system balance and speeds up the decay
process.
The
recent recovery of the Municipal Park of Naples, realized in 1778 and modified
and increased in the early Nineteenth-century, is a significant case study, in
order to evaluate the results of interventions performed. In fact, this
intervention produced alterations due to the poor control of the compatibility
between new and pre-existent technological elements, even thought it was aimed
at the recovery of the harmonic relationship between nature and building.
Starting
from the analysis of the flooring replacement intervention, realized in tufo,
the proposed study is aimed to outline criteria for the control of the project
choices concerning the requalification and maintenance of the urban parks,
according to strategies oriented to the balance preservation of the plant /
building /activity system.
decay,
flooring replacement, maintenance, park, recovery, tufo
Simona
Lanzu
Le
pavimentazioni del moderno: caratteristiche tecnico-costruttive, forme di
degrado, problemi di
recupero e di manutenzione. Il
caso del complesso di piazza Rossetti (GE).
The
paper concerns the case of the external pavements of an important residential
complex in Piazza Rossetti, Genoa (1936-1958), by architect Luigi Carlo Daneri,
located in the wide area facing the sea, close to the outfall of the torrent
Bisagno. The original design, the care in details, the ability to choose and to
use different materials and colours are the main features of this work. More
than sixty years after its construction, a large part of the pavement under the
portico has been substituted with different materials, shape and colours. The
fact is that, during the recent maintenance, this complex has been intended as a
contemporary building, lacking of architectural and historical values. In the
actual debate, on the contrary, this work represents the result of particular
urban and architectural choices and its significance is well known also outside
from the city. For this reason it is really necessary to design and to realise
correct intervention to preserve and to maintain the original pieces, basing on
the knowledge of the constructive techniques and on the analysis of the state of
decay and of its causes.
constructive
techniques, maintenance, repair, preservation
Raffaella
Laviscio
le
pavimentazioni storiche all'aperto: forma e materia nella costruzione del
paesaggio. Il
caso della “rizzada” Lombarda.
The
contribution intends to examine the role of the historical paving in the
open-air in the construction of the landscape in the specific type of the
cobbled paving roads in the Lombardic area. It is recognized he great importance
that not only the formal aspect but also the material aspect, constituted from
the paving of the great roads of communication, of squares and minor paths, has
in the definition of the identity of a place. Near the value of the material
history it takes place the consequent value to the possibility to be available
to see the surrounding landscape and to the symbolic character of such seeing.
The open spaces are often connectors to the elements that constitute the
landscape; therefore the opportunity of their conservation and valorization and
also the importance of the conservation of that historical matter that
constitutes one meaningful permanence for the comprehension of the characters of
a place. To such reflections follows a research of the constructive techniques,
today and in the past, of the roads in cobbled paving exemplified in the sacred
way of the Sacred Mount over Varese.
rizzada, cobbled paving, roads,
constructive techniques, landscape, Sacred Mount over Varese
Paola
Branduini
Le
pavimentazioni dei borghi rurali:lettura e
conservazione.
The
flooring is part in the system of landscape relating to rural architecture, in
which any element finds priority but everything it is expression of a necessity
of use and it directly comes down from the local availability of the materials.
It is testimony of a knowledge heritage that have known how to gather the
potentialities of a site strongly engraving a proper connotation. They have
often been object of great transformations and stratifications, due to the
change of use happened in the centuries, regulating itself to the new
necessities of speed and resistance, but those original have sometimes remained,
especially in the small mountain villages where the modern demands have been
less pressing. They remain as the rural buildings what authentic expression of a
local identity that must be safeguards and transmitted to the future generations.
In order to deliver indications for the correct landscape insertion of the new
interventions in a rural village, the national and international literature has
been analysed.
rural
landscape, preservation, landscape system, mountain villages
Alberta
Cazzani, Camillo
Sangiorgio
Le
pavimentazioni della viabilità storica extraurbana: caratteri
tecnico-costruttivi e problemi di tutela e conservazione di un sistema
architettonico-paesistico complesso.
The
historic trails form a very interesting architectonic, technical and cultural
linear system: not only the traces, but also the road works (pavings, walls,
bridges, tunnels, drain wells, etc.), the connected buildings (churches, chapels,
fortifications, custom-houses, mills, forges, furnaces, mines, etc.) rose out of
ancient religious, military, commercial or industrial functions with a
relationship between villages, towns, landscapes.
Leaving
out the more ancient trails (roman and medieval roads) with a lot of
archaeological value, there are in Italy many XVIII-XIX century trails now
transformed or abandoned and decayed. However they often conserve historic
features and particularly pavings, built with traditional construction technics
and materials (drystone, gravel, dirt). In the past many documents and treatises
analysed paving materials, defining building construction components and
management criteria. The paper examines the methodological approach to study -
from historic research to survey - the material substance to define conservation
treatments and management guidelines. The paper also illustrates some recent
studies about Lombardy historic trails preservation.
pavings
of historic trails; historical research; construction technics and materials;
conservation standards and treatments; management guidelines.
Carla Di
Francesco, Paolo
Maria Farina, Laura Guidolin
I
pavimenti delle fabbriche reali milanesi. Manutenzioni tra la fine del XVIII e
la metà del XX secolo.
The
Villa Reale in Milan offers several extraordinary different types of floors:
seminati alla veneziana, wood and brick floors, built up and restored during the
last two centuries.
The
present contribution means to propose the features and the execution techniques,
maintenance and restoration of this floors.
Villa
Reale, Milano; floors, maintenance, restoration.
Gianfranco
Carcangiu, Alessio Farci, Deborah Floris, Luigi Massidda, Paola Meloni
Uhina
colonia Julia (Tunisia): il singolare degrado di un basolato romano dal momento
del suo disepellimento.
Within
the framework of a restoration plan of emerging
structures in the archaeological site of Uthina, an ancient roman city, founded
in the Augustian age (first century B.C.) and located about
Eocenic
Mudstone was used for the ashler and for severall architectural elements exposed
to static and dinamic strength. Pit sampling and laboratory tests carried out on
limestone put in evidence a good macroscopic omhogenity (lack of marked bedding planes within a single
bank) and good fisical and mechanical performances. At the excavation time the
ashler appeared in a relatively good conservation state. Nevertheless the
periodic control (annual) allowed to evidentiate the rising of increasing decay
phenomena. It has induced us to make a careful study of the relation microstructure-durability
through a more careful analys of material
and its presumed omhogenity.
The
interpretation of the structural feactures of the stone and the methology used
for simulating various weathering forms let us to reproduce in the laboratory
the multiple contour scaling phenomenon observed
in situ and consequently evaluate the different factors that affected the stone
decay.
mudstone,
porosity, thermal stress, multiple contour scaling, decay
Nadir Bisan
Progetto
preliminare di restauro e conservazione dei pavimenti della stazione centrale di
Milano.
N.D.
Daniela
Biancolini
Opere
d’arte da calpestare: le pavimentazioni dei cantieri sabaudi, struttura forma conservazione.
Works
of art born to be trampled on: the paradox of parquets.
From
the beginning of 17th century, in the building works of the Savoy State, this
technique reaches the status of a proper decorative art, in which taste and
functionality meet to create a sort of “fashion”, being the court fully
aware that carpets were – despite their beauty – deposits of dust.
17th
century parquets are made with various wood essences, initially simple
geometrical designs based on square shapes. But soon, aesthetic research
develops in parallel with floor-makers’ skills.
In
18th century “marqueterie” becomes an art of its own, pushes simple “square”
parquets out into secondary ambiences, while in the great parade halls complex
geometries are adopted, exalted by the chromatic interplay of many different
types of woods: Filippo Juvarra himself plays with suggestive creations full of
chiaroscuro effects.
In
19th century works, wooden floors are inlay-made, and neoclassical decoration is
very similar to that adopted for furnishings by the same artists in charge of
cabinet making, such as Gabriele Capello, cabinet-maker for King Carlo Alberto.
The
Savoy archives have, as well as the instructions for floor-making, documents
full of information about floor-maintenance with techniques and materials
similar to those used in nowadays care-taking and big and small restoration
campaigns. This preservation has to be carried out with materials and techniques
compatible with these precious artefacts, but most of all through an activity of
“intelligence”, in a view to rather prevent degradation than to repair it.
wood
– parquet – floor-maker – cabinet-maker – prevention – limitation of
use
Guido
Biscontin, Guido Driussi, Renzo Mazzari , Renzo
Nicoletti, Mauro Tonon
Pavimentazioni
in cotto del Palazzo
Reale di Torino: applicazioni sperimentali per la conservazione.
An
experimentation to verify the possibilit to confer a good solidità to the brik
pavimentation of Palazzo reale in Torino was developed.
Some
original briks, were tested with different
water micromelsions dispersion based
on acrylic systems, silane and siloxane, and silica nanodispersion, in order to
give new satbility to the system. Original bricks are rich in cloride because of
a wrong cleaning metodology carried out in the past. The results obtained both from the abrasion resistance and
waterprofness tests were encouraging
Riaggregation,
brick floor, Palazzo Reale (TO), silan