The Circular Destiny of Ruins — The Case of the Convent of San Michele in Borgo, Pisa
by
Andrea Crudeli
Keywords
Massimo Carmassi
restoration
adaptive reuse
building adaptation
heritage conservation
During World War II, the medieval convent of San Michele in Borgo, located in Pisa, Italy, was destroyed by bombings. It has been considered for decades the primary post-war wound in the city center. From 1974 to 2001, architect Massimo Carmassi worked on the recovery of the ruins, first with a survey, then with a sequence of project proposals over more than twenty years. In 2001, close to the completion of the construction site, the complex was abandoned. Even though Carmassi later received the “Golden Medal for Italian Architecture” in 2015, also thanks to this project, the restored complex has turned paradoxically into a ruin again.
After a recent investigation of the author’s archive in the Municipality of Pisa, unpublished projects emerged from the research, ranging from the initial proposals of the 1970s to the construction drawings of the 1990s. Thanks to a cross-reading of the various projects, and following a conversation with the author about the construction phase, a relationship between the ruin and the architect becomes apparent. This relationship consists of an innovative methodology that is deeply rooted in the theoretical restoration debate of that historical period in Italy.
The paper explains how Massimo Carmassi’s main innovation has been to conceive the ruin as an active subject, an alive entity still capable of suggesting design topics and spatial solutions, both to be celebrated in the recovery project. The design principles adopted, the reinterpretation of the traditional technologies, and the intellectual linguistic dialogue, all converged into the image of a new integrated ruin, fulfilling Auguste Perret’s statement that “Architecture is what makes beautiful ruins.”
Published in
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Chicago citation style
DOI:
10.54508/sITA.11.11