9:30-12:00 VESPARCH#2 - Milano Ovest: modi di abitare sociale
A cura di Francesca Cognetti e Anna Delera Itinerario: esempi di abitare sociale fra San Siro e QT8 su iscrizione powered by Piaggio Partenza da Ingresso triennale di Milano, Viale Alemagna, 6
10:00-13:00 Workshop Archive of resistance
A cura di IRA-C, Fosbury Architecture In collaborazione con Domus
10:00-13:00 Workshop The empowerment of nature
A cura di Matteo Poli e Sara Gangemi Con AOUMM, Gabriele Tononi powered by MIAMI S.c.a.r.l
10:00-17:00 Workshop IAH Special edition
A cur di Archistart
10:00-11:00 Talk Lost nature /Let's talk forest
Lost Nature / Let's talk forest. The role of nature within cities: an essential redefinition Con Simone Borelli / FAO, Rola Khoury / Cloudburst Foundation, Lina Liakou / 100 Resilient Cities, Marco Marchetti / SISEF - UNIMOL, Piero Pelizzaro / Milano Resiliente, Maria Chiara Pastore / Politecnico di Milano
10:30-12:00 Talk Mega events & the city
A cura di Giovanna Carnevali / Strelka KB Con Luigi Borrè / EuroMilano, Attilio Di Cunto / EuroMilano, Emanuela Recchi / Recchi Engineering, Umberto Zanetti / ZDA, Giovanna Longhi / Studio Longhi, Denis Leontiev / Strelka e Adriaan Geuze / Tverskoy District Modera Alessandro De Magistris
10:30-11:30 Book presentation Palazzo Citterio verso la Grande Brera
Con Stefano Boeri, Paolo Sciortino, Lorenzo Degli Esposti, Antonella Ranaldi / Soprintendente ABAP Milano
11:00-12:00 Conversation Genealogia
Con Gianluca Peluffo e Orizzontale
11:00-12:00 Talk Lost nature
LOST NATURE / Coping with the environmental crisis through new ecological policies Con Erion Veliaj / Mayor of Tirana, Justine Laurent / Circulab - Wiithaa, Charlie Peel / Urban Good - London National Park, Olivier Reppert / car2go
12:00-13:00 Talk Archistart
Con Andrea Tabocchini, Francesca Vittorini e THE DECORATORS
12:15-13:15 Lecture Stefano Boeri: Lost nature / città, tecnosfera e natura vivente
14:00-15:00 Talk Domus 90. Il grande fiume by Domus
Con Michele De Lucchi e Alessandro Mendini modera Walter Mariotti / Direttore Editoriale di Domus
14:00-20:00 Interview Practice by Nikolaus Hirsch & Nick Axel
Con Stefano Boeri, Juan Herreros, Bjarke Ingels, David Adjaye, Wang Shu
Workshop - Let's talk forest
Let's talk forest / Forestare Milano. Incontro aperto a idee progetti proposte A cura di Maria Chiara Pastore e Livia Shamir
15:00-16:00 Conversation BASE / FARM
Con Giancarlo Floridi, Angelo Lunati / Onsitestudio e Salvator-John A. Liotta, Fabienne Louyot / LAPS Architecture. modera Federico Tranfa
15:00-16:00 Thesis Marathon Architecture & Landscape
A cura di Giulia Setti Discussants: Peter Beard, Antonio Carvalho, Matteo Poli, Alessandro Rocca
15:00-18:00 Architour Landwalk - Un grande parco storico milanese
Una passeggiata al Parco Sempione con Francesca Neonato A cura di Francesca Neonato, Matteo Poli, Sara Gangemi Itinerario: Parco Sempione
15:00-15:30 Lecture Alessandro Balducci: Moving from the edge
Moving from the edge / I progetti di trasformazione di Milano: oltre la dicotomia centro-periferia
15:30-16:30 Roundtable Ri-centrare la marginalità delle periferie
Con Lacittàintorno, Sergio Urbani / Fondazione Cariplo, Super - Il Festival delle periferie
16:00-17:00 Talk Smart cities e mobilità innovativa
Con Stefano Boeri, Giorgio Meszley / H3 - GaiaGo, Federico Cassani / MIC-Mobility in Chain Powered by H3, GaiaGo
16:00-17:00 Roundtable The empowerment of nature
A cura di Sara Gangemi e Matteo Poli Con AOUMM, Gabriele Tonini
16:30-17:30 Talk Riempire i vuoti attraverso gli scali ferroviari
17:00-18:00 Conversation Gio Ponti e l'architettura milanese
Con Francesco Librizzi e Cino Zucchi Powered by FontanaArte
17:00-18:00 Lecture Martinez Barat Lafore
A cura di Parasite 2.0 Con Benjamin Lafore e Sébastien Martinez Barat
17:00-18:00 Book talk I nuovi luoghi della cultura
A cura di BookCity Con Sandra Aloia, Paolo Della Sega, Mimma Gallina, Stefania Minciullo Modera Oliviero Ponte di Pino
17:00/17:45/18:30/19:15 Performance VEDUTA / MK
In collaborazione con Triennale Teatro dell’Arte / inserito nel programma del festival FOG
17:30-18:45 Talk Ridefinire i confini con l'Area Expo2015
17:30-18.30 Talk Jam sessions
Jam sessions: Landscape choreographies. Rethink relations in a world of climate changes and possible future overpopulation. A cura di Sara Gangemi e Matteo Poli Con Adriaan Geuze / WEST 8, Alison B. Hirsch
18:00 Lecture di Wang Shu
Introduce Matteo Ruta Wang Shu, (born November 4, 1963, Ürümqi, Xinjiang, China), Chinese architect whose reuse of materials salvaged from demolition sites and thoughtful approach to setting and Chinese tradition revealed his opposition to modern China’s relentless urbanization. He was awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2012 for “producing an architecture that is timeless, deeply rooted in its context, and yet universal”. Wang grew up in Ürümqi, the capital city of Xinjiang, China’s northwesternmost province. He studied architecture at Nanjing Institute of Technology (B.S., 1985; M.A., 1988). He then researched building restoration for the Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts (now the China Academy of Art) in Hangzhou and, while there, completed his own first architectural project in 1990—a youth centre for nearby Haining. Subsequently he embarked on an intensive study of construction practice and of the craftsmanship involved in building. In 1995 he began advanced studies at Tongji University (Ph.D., 2000). Two years later he and his wife, Lu Wenyu, together established a practice, Amateur Architecture Studio, in Hangzhou. From 2000 Wang Shu taught at the China Academy of Art and served as head of the architecture department, and in 2007 he became dean of the architecture school. In addition to designing the Library of Wenzheng College, Suzhou University (completed 2000), several houses (Sanhe House, Nanjing, 2003; Ceramic House, Jinhua Architecture Park, 2003–06; Five Scattered Houses, 2003–06), an apartment building (Vertical Courtyard Apartments, 2002–07), and more than 20 campus buildings for Xiangshan University (2002–07) in Hangzhou, Wang Shu designed several exhibition halls and pavilions as well as the Ningbo Contemporary Art Museum (completed 2005). Perhaps his signature work is the Ningbo History Museum (completed 2008), which epitomizes his architectural philosophy. Like his other work, it incorporates local recycled materials—tiles, bricks, and stones—and combines modern technologies with traditional crafts and attention to the building’s site. It provided a striking contrast to the ultramodern structures of urban China, which he has described as “soulless.” During this period, Wang Shu also made the installation Tiled Garden (2006) for the Venice Biennale. The garden consisted of a sea of tens of thousands of tiles that had been salvaged from Chinese demolition sites, laid in meditative rows, and made accessible to the viewer by means of a bamboo bridge. Wang Shu’s Pritzker Prize citation noted “the exceptional nature and quality of his executed work” and also “his ongoing commitment to pursuing an uncompromising, responsible architecture arising from a sense of specific culture and place”. Despite his growing popularity and fame as an architect, Wang Shu, who practiced calligraphy, considered himself a scholar, a craftsman, and an architect, in that order. He saw the abilities to adapt and to improvise as critical characteristics of the craftsman.
18:00-19:00 Talk Let's talk forest
Let’s talk forest / forestare Milano. Incontro aperto a idee progetti proposte Restituzione tavoli di lavoro con Stefano Boeri
18:30-19:30 Talk Verso una legge per l'architettura italiana
A cura di Simone Capra / stARTT, Simone Gobbo / Demogo, Alberto Iacovoni / ma0
18:30-21:00 Architour Bikearch: Swifts & The City
A cura di Andrea Pirovano e Guido Pinoli / Progetto Natura Onlus - SOS Rondoni Itinerario: Castello Sforzesco, Piazza Affari, Chiesa di S. Maria presso San Satiro, Basilica S. Eustorgio Partenza da Triennale di Milano Presentarsi muniti di bicicletta
19:00-20:00 Lecture di The Decorators
The Decorators is a multidisciplinary design collective founded by Suzanne O’Connell, Xavi Llarch Font, Carolina Caicedo and Mariana Pestana. Combining the disciplines of landscape architecture, interior architecture and psychology, The Decorators work on spatial design projects that aim to reconnect the physical elements of a place with its social dimension. As a socially engaged practice they put conversation at the heart of their design process. Driven by the principle that people make places, they create spatial opportunities for social interaction. Through collaborative frameworks that involve many actors, The Decorators imagine alternative futures for everyday spaces. Their clients include local authorities, housing developers, museums, curators and brands, and their work ranges from context specific community engagement strategies, public realm landscapes, exhibition design to interactive interiors. Their work in public space is known for its creative approach to community engagement, driven by a concern for finding inclusive ways to create animated places in disconnected parts of a town or city. As a result they have developed a methodology that is about building on the social history and culture of a site to create new experiences that can prompt interaction or shape communal memory. Amongst their public space projects, Ridley’s turned a derelict square in Ridley Road Market in London into an open kitchen that celebrated the produce of the market and its traders, Chrisp Street on Air developed a programme of events that brought the hidden culture of Chrisp Street out into the public and civic space of the market, Hackney Circle recruited nine local businesses and organisations in and around a public square in East London interested in working to make their businesses more welcoming to older residents.
19:00-20:00 Talk Cultural institutions as urban infrastructure
Con Stefano Boeri, Stein Olav Henrichsen, Juan Herreros Modera Ugo Bacchella / Fondazione Fitzcarraldo
Lecture Cino Zucchi
Modello Milano. I processi di trasformazione e il ruolo dell’architettura
19:30-20:30 Video Talk Open Looping
A cura di The Architecture Player Con Davide Rapp e Marco Brizzi
20:00-21:00 Lecture di Bjark Ingels
Introduce Stefano Boeri Bjarke Ingels started BIG Bjarke Ingels Group in 2005 after co-founding PLOT Architects in 2001 and working at the Office of Metropolitan Architecture in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Through a series of award-winning design projects and buildings, Bjarke has developed a reputation for designing buildings that are as programmatically and technically innovative as they are cost and resource conscious. Bjarke has received numerous awards and honors, including the Danish Crown Prince’s Culture Prize in 2011, the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale in 2004, and the Urban Land Institute (ULI) Award for Excellence in 2009. In 2011, the Wall Street Journal awarded Bjarke the Architectural Innovator of the Year Award. Architizer awarded BIG as Firm of the year. In 2016, Time Magazine named Bjarke one of the 100 most influential people in the world today. Alongside his architectural practice, Bjarke has taught at Harvard University, Yale University, Columbia University, and Rice University and is an honorary professor at the Royal Academy of Arts, School of Architecture in Copenhagen. He is a frequent public speaker and has spoken in venues such as TED, WIRED, AMCHAM, 10 Downing Street, and the World Economic Forum. Studio BIG
20:00-01:00 Screening marathon Com'è bella la città
Com’è bella la città: grandi classici intramontabili A cura di Federico Rossin Jacques Tati – Mon Oncle / 1958 Woody Allen – Manhattan / 1979 Pedro Almodòvar – Che ho fatto io per meritare questo? / 1984
21:00-22:00 Conversazione fra David Adjaye e Stefano Boeri
Sir David Adjaye OBE is recognized as a leading architect of his generation. Born in Tanzania to Ghanaian parents, his broadly ranging influences, ingenious use of materials and sculptural ability have established him as an architect with an artist’s sensibility and vision. In 2000, he founded Adjaye Associates, which now has offices in London, New York and Accra with projects in the US, UK, Europe, Africa, Asia and the Middle East. His largest project to date, the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture, opened on the National Mall in Washington DC in September 2016. The museum was named Cultural Event of the Year by the New York Times and the Beazley Design of the Year by the Design Museum. Other prominent completed projects include the Idea Stores in London, which were credited with pioneering a new approach to library services (2005); the Moscow School of Management SKOLKOVO (2010), and the Sugar Hill mixed-use social housing scheme in Harlem, New York (2015). Ongoing projects include a new home for the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, the recently announced National Cathedral of Ghana in Accra, and the National Holocaust Memorial and Learning Centre in London. Adjaye has amassed numerous accolades for his visionary work, including Design Miami/ Artist of the Year title in 2011, the Wall Street Journal Innovator Award in 2013 and the 2016 Panerai London Design Medal from the London Design Festival. In 2017, Adjaye received a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II for services to architecture and was recognized as one of the 100 most influential people of the year by TIME magazine.
22:00-02:00 Special event Le cannibale
con dj SPILLER / Nano Rec, TAMATI / Le Cannibale IT URBAN LOOP — Visual Performance di Davide Rapp e Giorgio Zangrandi