LUCE 322 | Page 31

Cino Zucchi: architecture is a sundial W would be no need for architecture. The walls of a building are diaphragms, they are complex organisms that regulate and filter a very large number of elements: climatic, weather, visual etc. The wall membrane has multiple functions, once this was a solid wall, but it is no longer so. If the farm is a loden coat, the building for Salewa is a technical jacket. Contemporary walls are made with different layers of specialized materials, every level has a different function. Some layers, inside, are essentially technical, others, outside, are visible and consist of iridescent or semi-transparent elements that relate with the outdoors. The theme of filters and privacy from the outside inwards and vice-versa asymmetrically, is very important. In the building for Lavazza in Turin there are white pixel serigraphed glass panels which implement this function, from the inside it is possible to look out in the distance, and they partly shield the view of the interiors. Modern technologies, films for glass panels and laser cuts for metals, have greatly increased the range of material textures, giving a textural value to the surfaces and providing the architect with a palette of instruments that is even too vast, and that entails the problem of a choice. A great part of the sincere beauty of architecture of the past is due to the limited number of materials and traditional craftsmanship. On the contrary, today there is an almost infinite number of materials and technologies; like the colours of a screen, which one do I choose? The real dilemma of a modern architect is that with such a range of materials, finishing and technical e met Cino Zucchi, architect and collector of strange objects. We spoke of projects, architecture and light. The story of his vision of architecture, mediated between Boullée and Ponti, passing through the Loden, is sinuous but efficient. For Cino Zucchi light is … Architecture is heavy, it is a purely visual art, and light makes it resound. There is a constant duel between light and substance, one amplifies the other. For example, classical art mouldings act as light amplifiers. I see architecture like a large sundial, I think of Monet’s cycle of The Portal of Rouen Cathedral paintings, which reveal something great: architecture remains still, what illuminates and colours it is the sun. In my opinion we do not need Times Square and its large illuminated facades. Etienne-Louis Boullée stated that the architect applies all the models that nature offers him (in his book, Architecture. Essay on art) and like him, I have always tried to give form to this duality. To show light you need architecture, light is an invisible material, it can be seen only when it engraves a surface. Lavazza HQ and Salewa HQ: two projects in which thin sheets of material and perforated surfaces are regulating elements, that control natural light. Would you tell us more about them? Light is one of the great materials in architecture. I like the idea of an architecture that cuts, modulates and filters light and heat, if the environment is a pastoral and good one, as described in books on Mother Nature, there possibilities, a great discipline is required in order to understand what one really wants to do, a discipline of the effects. In your buildings, colour has a strong narrative value, related to the landscape and its light. As in the Salewa HQ or the Pedrali warehouse, for example. Is that so? For Salewa, we discussed the colour of the building’s outer skin with Heiner Oberrauch, and perforated aluminium panels painted with the cataphoresis process were chosen; this option created an analogy between the building and the product (snap-hooks and hooks, Ed.). With regard to the duration of the painting bath, the panels turned three different shades of grey/light blue, slightly clouded and iridescent. Ideal for our vision of the brand architecture. Salewa is located between the highway, fields and the mountains, and thanks to this mimetic finish it almost disappears. What I find interesting is that the building is of the same colours as the background, the light blue mountains behind the light evening mist. Like in The Virgin of the Rocks by Leonardo da Vinci, with its light blue mist, where everything is dematerialized in the surrounding landscape. I am extremely proud of the very careful study of the colours that we carried out: the building is the colour of the mountains seen through the evening mist that is typical in and around Milan. Also the automated warehouse designed for Pedrali is an interesting case of mitigation of a very vast volume in a landscape, this was one of the main requests of the Administration. With a great INTERVIEWS / LUCE 322 29