Activating the Periphery.
An Aquatic Centre in Milan, Italy
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Masters Second Year, 2017/2018
Design Instructor: Paolo Debiaggi
Team: Christopher Taylor, Alice Huang
Activating the Periphery.
An Aquatic Centre in Milan, Italy
​
Masters Second Year, 2017/2018
Design Instructor: Paolo Debiaggi
Team: Christopher Taylor, Alice Huang
Activating the Periphery.
An Aquatic Centre in Milan, Italy
​
Masters Second Year, 2017/2018
Design Instructor: Paolo Debiaggi
Team: Christopher Taylor, Alice Huang
The site for the new Aquatic Center complex is located on the south-east edge of the Milan Metropolitan City, in Porta di Mare where existing sports facilities have been placed amongst lots of industrial warehouses with agricultural fields and a park found further south. With Rorgoredo train station and the metro station close by, the location seems fitting for a gateway into the city and allows for an opportunity to mark the beginning of the city with a public building, celebrating various sports specifically aquatic sports. The design proposes a building positioned along the street, adjacent to an existing social housing complex.
The most convenient way to arrive to site by public transport is with the metro. As you exit the metro station, there is a wall that blocks the view of what is behind. There is no sense of identity as there is no evidence of this neighborhood’s industrial/sports function. What one would see as they arrive to site became an important aspect for this project. The idea was then to introduce a public square in front of the metro and design a sequence of spaces that lead people to the aquatic center which will be positioned further down the site.
Our proposal includes the demolition of all the industrial buildings on site, thus allowing the park to take over. The aquatic centre sits on the edge, introducing an urban front which faces the city and allows for a threshold into the landscape to the south. This starting point gave the basis for a series of volumes organized along the street all connected by a linear service volume. The volumes have been spaced apart in order to allow for pockets of public open spaces to be formed in between as well as providing sunlight to enter into each volume. These open spaces are then allowed to continue through to the landscape through various breaks in the linear volume. The ground floor walls are mostly glazed and set back providing an overhang and creating an intermediary threshold between the outdoor & indoor public spaces.
The roofs of these volumes played an integral part in creating place within this part of the periphery. The result is a form that referrences Milan’s industrial past as well as creating an almost cathedral-like space within, celebrating the act of swimming and well-being.
Publications:
- Perspective Collage -
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View of public space leading pedestrians from the metro station to the proposed Aquatic Center
- Masterplan -
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Proposed sports facilities placed on the edge forming a threshold between the urban tissue and the park landscape
- Conceptual Sketches -
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Some pages taken from sketch book showing design process
- Ground & First Floor Plans -
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Four main programs placed around a service core in order to save energy and service infrastructure
- Exploded Isometric -
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Showing both levels of main pool area as well as proposed public space and activities surrounding aquatic centre
Main Pool
Changing Rooms & Services
Training Pool
Administration & First Aid
Dry Diving Area & Day Care
- Functional Diagrams -
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Showing function distribution of Aquatic Centre
- North West Elevation -
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View from Piazza San Leonardo, showing the residential building on the left (that houses a restaurant as well as a lecture hall and laboratory on ground floor) and the Library on the right.
- Longitudinal Section -
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Showing the space that can be created with the folded roof as well as the relationship between the entrance space on the left and the main pool space on the right - both housed under the same roof
Portion 3
Portion 1
Portion 2
- Perspective Collage -
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View from upper foyer level into the main pool space. A circular opening is created in order to give an importance to the sensation of entrance allowing viewers to see through to the happenings of the main pool
- Isometric Drawing -
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Showing folded roof structure from inside the main pool space
- Physical Model -
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Built at Scale 1:500 || Understanding the roof structure of the Main Pool and Training Pool Spaces
- South East Elevation -
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Showing facades that face the park landscape
- North East Elevation -
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Showing the elevation that is seen when exiting the metro station - more specifically the aquatic centre on the right where the roof & facade rise up to greet the viewer from its distance
- Cross Section -
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Showing the relationship between the main pool area (one of the four main programs) and the service core to the left of it which houses the changing rooms, storage, toilets and fitness center
- South East & North West Facade Detail Sections -
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- Physical Model -
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Built at Scale 1:20 || View of covered walkway. Attention has been placed on the small details in the column's edges as well as the shadow gap in the concrete ceiling where light can be placed to guide the pedestrian at night
- Perspective Collage -
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View of covered walkway surrounding the main pool area, allowing a visual connection to be created between the outdoor & indoor public spaces
- Exploded Isometric Drawing -
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Detail of how the seating and brick facade fit together as well as how the brick facade is reinforced by an interior steel stud frame
- Physical Model -
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Built at Scale 1:20 || Showing exploration of the perforated brick facade and how the copper rainwater drain is exposed and sits flush in-between the bricks. The concrete step seating is also explored and detailed using steel elements for support
- Axonometric Drawing -
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Showing overview of proposed Aquatic Centre within its context
- Panel Layout -