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WINNER OF Pollution 2019: A COMMON LINE FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION

Lorenzo Abate -


Project Description:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Country:

In the thesis I developed a project within the Syrian context in a post-war vision (2011) developing a model for a replicable ecological reconstruction in the different agricultural territories. Water, in this context, is not only necessary for the livelihood economy, but vital for the anthropic growth of the morphology of urban/rural agglomerations.

In the Western Gherban village in the Al-Hasaka region, the majority of farmers before the war mainly exploited storm precipitation. Subsequently they were constructed in a precarious way and with obsolete technologies the catchment areas of the water extracted in turn from the subsoil using repeatedly pumping machines to diesel.The first fundamental action of the project: construction of a wall of infrastructure able to support the first water and energy needs. Subsequently, a building program of progressive typological and morphological implementation gives rise to an urban action with a compact shape and no longer reduced and uncontrolled in the surrounding productive landscape.

Inside the water flows in diversified channels for the various types of uses (drinking and not)then is recovered and treated with the process of phyto-purification and finally conveyed in drip irrigation systems to the agricultural fields. The project strategy aims to represent a common line for the whole territory with the provision of a system completed by individual/collective photovoltaic systems and the exploitation of residues of agricultural processing and as fuel for small biogas plants. The outcome of the project would thus represent a community where the modern building-planning tool would be manipulated“by individuals and the community as a whole, thus generating from personal autonomy a collective social efficiency.

Excerpt from the motivations of the Jury:



The “Common Line for the Reconstruction” project demonstrates a comprehensive reflection over the impact brought about by war and destruction in a fragile agricultural territory. An understanding of the environmental challenges that the area is facing drive architectural design, typological studies and urban morphology towards the regenerative process of the area. The wall of infrastructure acts as a water device, as a backbone for progressive urban growth, and as a metaphor of the new life that it will contribute to generate. Although addressing a site specific solution, the project promotes a replicable and scalable solution for other territories affected by water scarcity and lack of water distribution network, demonstrating a rewarding balance of innovation, environmental awareness and architectural quality.
















EX AEQUO MENTIONED PROJECT

Project Title: SHELTER N.1

Emanuele Barili

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EX AEQUO MENTIONED PROJECT

Project Title: POROSCITY

Abhishek Rahate

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EX AEQUO MENTIONED PROJECT

Project Title: RURAL SHELTER

Alejandra Osorio

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FINALIST PROJECTS

Amna Jafri

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Elisa Moro

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FINALIST PROJECTS

Josephine Van Empelen

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FINALIST PROJECTS

Aasr Ahmed

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FINALIST PROJECTS

Niccolò Dal Farra

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2019

A Common Line For The Reconstruction von Lorenzo Abate gewinnt den Next Landmark 2019

Lorenzo Abate hat den Next Landmark 2019 mit einem ökologischen Wiederaufbauprojekt gewonnen, das im syrischen Kontext als Nachkriegswiederaufbau entwickelt wurde, aber Lösungen vorschlä

2018

Die Gewinner von Next Landmark 2018

Die Architekten con Federico Campos, Oscar Chávez (Urbánika) und Roland Baldi (Roand Baldi Architects) wurden im Amphitheater von FICo, dem "größten Agro-Food-Park der Welt",

2018

Die Gewinner von Next Landmark 2018

Die Architekten con Federico Campos, Oscar Chávez (Urbánika) und Roland Baldi (Roand Baldi Architects) wurden im Amphitheater von FICo, dem "größten Agro-Food-Park der Welt",

2017

Die Gewinner von Next Landmark Architectural SKIN

Gregory Lacoua und ellevuelle Architetti sind die Gewinner der sechsten Ausgabe von Next Landmark, dem internationalen Wettbewerb, der von Floornature, dem Portal für Architektur und Gestaltung v

2017

Die Gewinner von Next Landmark Architectural SKIN

Gregory Lacoua und ellevuelle Architetti sind die Gewinner der sechsten Ausgabe von Next Landmark, dem internationalen Wettbewerb, der von Floornature, dem Portal für Architektur und Gestaltung v

2016

Giancarlo Mazzanti: Marinilla Educational Park Kolumbien

Mit dem Marinilla Educational Park hat Giancarlo Mazzanti den Preis Next Landmark 2016 gewonnen. Mazzanti setzt seine Forschung bezogen auf die Aufwertung des öffentlichen als sozialen Orts fort.

2016

Giancarlo Mazzanti: Marinilla Educational Park Kolumbien

Mit dem Marinilla Educational Park hat Giancarlo Mazzanti den Preis Next Landmark 2016 gewonnen. Mazzanti setzt seine Forschung bezogen auf die Aufwertung des öffentlichen als sozialen Orts fort.

2015

Urban Spa: Ein Workshop von PKMN mit Studenten in Chihuahua

Die Gewinner des Wettbewerbs Next Landmark 2015 in der Kategorie Landmark of the Year ist Urban Spa, das Projekt, das aus dem Workshop des Büros PKMN mit den Studenten des ISAD von Chihuahua (Mex

2015

Urban Spa: Ein Workshop von PKMN mit Studenten in Chihuahua

Die Gewinner des Wettbewerbs Next Landmark 2015 in der Kategorie Landmark of the Year ist Urban Spa, das Projekt, das aus dem Workshop des Büros PKMN mit den Studenten des ISAD von Chihuahua (Mex

2014

Casa Esse von Ellevuelle architetti gewinnt den Next Landmark 2014

Sieger der dritten Ausgabe von Next Landmark, internationaler Architekturwettbewerb, der von Floornature organisiert wird, sind die italienischen Architekten Ellevuelle architetti mit ihrem Haus Esse,


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