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Piano Nobile Loft & Round Wall Studio in Brescia, Italy by Alepreda Architecture

Project name:
Piano Nobile Loft & Round Wall Studio
Architecture firm:
Alepreda Architecture, www.alepreda.com
Location:
Brescia, Italy
Photography:
Ottavio Tomasini, www.ottaviotomasini.it
Principal architect:
Alessandro Preda
Design team:
Collaborators:
Built area:
60 m² each apartment, 72 ² each apartment (Gross Floor Area), 58 m² each apartment (Usable Floor Area)
Design year:
2017
Completion year:
2019
Interior design:
Environmental & MEP engineering:
Structural engineer:
Studio Tecnico Zampedrini, www.zampedrini.it
Lighting:
Material:
Oak, white oak,gypsum wall board and metal studs, white laminate, existing stone and brick,
Construction:
Green Cantieri, www.greencantieri.it
Tools used:
Client:
Private
Status:
Completed
Typology:
Residential › Apartment

Alepreda Architecture: This gut renovation modernizes the interiors of two apartments in a dilapidated historic Palazzo in Brescia, Italy, while restoring the original grandeur of the spaces. The units on adjacent floors share the same perimeter footprint; however, the different ceiling heights engender discrete architectural responses. On the first floor, the Piano Nobile Loft develops vertically, while the Round Wall Studio, on the second floor, develops horizontally. The units deploy a common formal language that juxtaposes "inserted elements" to a rich historic fabric comprising wood coffered ceiling, brick and stone walls, arched window openings. The insertions are white abstract, sculptural geometries–at scale between architecture and furniture–devised to imply distinct spaces, define house programs, and conceal utilities.

image © Ottavio Tomasini

This gut renovation opens up and modernizes the interiors of two apartments in a dilapidated historic Palazzo in Brescia, Italy, while restoring the original grandeur of the spaces. Interestingly, the units are positioned on subsequent floors, sharing, as it were, the same perimeter outline.  By virtue of their different ceiling heights, however, they engender discrete architectural responses. On the second floor, the Piano Nobile Loft expands vertically, taking advantage of the 4.4-meter high ceiling. The Round Wall Studio, on the third floor, develops horizontally with a series of partial-height partitions.

Both apartments were in a state of complete disrepair and were subdivided into multiple small rooms, many with no access to daylight.  Several of the most exciting features of the original architecture, such as the decorated primary beams and the coffered wood ceiling, were concealed by plaster dropped ceilings and revealed themselves in the demolition phase.

Structurally, the apartments were unsound–the central wood beams spanning the Piano Nobile Loft's width and the Round Wall Studio's length were both sagging. In addition, several secondary beams had been haphazardly cut to make space for chimney flues and were unsupported. The installation of steel columns, brackets, and reinforced screed at floors addressed these issues.

For light and air, each unit could only rely on two large windows facing the street, and none of the utilities were up to code.
 
image © Ottavio Tomasini

The architecture strategy brought back the sense of the scale of the original rooms while at the same time ensuring a well-defined and efficient allocation of residential programs. Wall "objects" within the space–whose contemporary formal language creates a counterpoint to the existing texture of the historic fabric–ensure such programs' separation. These elements live at a scale between interior architecture and furniture.

To allow light to travel as deep as possible into the room, these "objects" are partial height. A thickened perimeter sheetrock wall aligning with the datum established by the partial-height partitions addresses the unevenness of the existing walls. Additionally, it creates a cavity for services (electric/plumbing) and a shelf for display.

At the Piano Nobile Loft, the intervention left the majority of the ceiling plane uninterrupted, recreating the expansive scale of the original space, which was initially the Palazzo's main living room. Formally, the bathroom and mezzanine volumes are expressed as inserted and interlocking objects within this historic fabric. The mezzanine volume solves two purposes. Firstly, it acts as a storage "superwall" containing various storage niches with closets, shelving, etc. Secondly, it houses an elevated bedroom that is accessed through a stair and overlooks the living space. Here, the sheetrock thickened solid railing doubles as a headboard and night table.
 
image © Ottavio Tomasini

At the Round Wall Studio, partial height partitions–one round, one rectangular–and an L-shaped 
volume housing the bathroom/walk-in closet separate space and imply rooms without fully subdividing. The round partition creates a cozy dining room with a round table on one side and separates the kitchen. The rectangular partition separating the living room and bedroom doubles as a headboard on one side and as a TV/radiator niche on the opposite side. 

The furnishing is sparse yet curated. The Loft's oak and white furniture pairs with the custom oak millwork and kitchen, while ebonized black at the Studio provides contrast. Many of the furniture pieces in the images are designed by alepreda for miduny furniture (the studio's sister company). Miduny's furniture combines timeless form with warm materials and whimsical accents. Made in Verona by master artisans, these pieces express a tension between the softness of hand-craftsmanship and the minimalist form–this tension resonates with the play between old-new at the architectural scale.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

About studio

alepreda is a full-service boutique architectural practice based in New York and Brescia, Italy, combining architecture, interior, product design, and research. Founded by Italian-born architect and furniture designer Alessandro Preda, the studio designs across scales with a focus on digital fabrication, and craft. Believing that the act of making–the translation of ideas into physical form–is a catalyst for discovery, the practice merges a studio space with a fabrication workshop where design questions are tackled through models, prototypes, and material explorations.

By Naser Nader Ibrahim

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