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Calatroni Silvia

  • Site : www.sdarch.it
  • Adresse : 15, via Cosimo del Fante Milan Italy 20122 milan
She is graduated in Architecture at Politecnico di Milano in 1993, from 1994 to 1997 she continued her carrier in France where with arch. landscaper Alain Marguerit, she found herself closer to landscape architecture. After the French experience she obtained her Master’s degree in Landscape Architecture at the Art School of Castello Sforzesco in Milan. From 2004 she joined to SdARCH Trivelli&Associati where she participated numerous national & international projects.

Constitution Garden

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Constitution of Kuwait, Al Amiri Al Diwan, the government agency, decided to build a park in Kuwait City to host “The Constitution”, a sculpture celebrating the path to democracy of the State of Kuwait.
The landscape design of this project tells a story, a story of a Country with all the people that live in. It is a place where to stay and to find out a world a sense, the culture in a contemporary interpretation of a urban public garden in a strong arid climate. A place full of history but designed for the people.
The garden is divided into two areas,“Old Age” and “New Age”. The sculpture marks the transition from the old era that represents the pre-Constitution period and the new era, the period after the establishment of the State of Kuwait.
“Old Age” is represented by a messy landscape, arid and furious, where instability and insecurity reign. “New Age” is represented by an organized landscape, prosperous and orderly, dominated by security and calm.
The garden is designed, according to Islamic tradition as a reflection of paradise, a place where one can linger and where time passes; a shaded space where water and vegetation abound, all interpreted in a new contemporary vision.
The paths in “Old Age” are not ordered; the landscape is rough, tough; trees and shrubs coexist with small rocky formations and struggle with a desert land, in an arid climate without water.
The sculpture is a stepping stone to the future and is consist in two large portals. On the side of “Old Age” they are made of brass and titanium while on the side of “New Age”, 183 blocks en relief highlight the articles of the
Constitution.
The façade of titanium and brass on the side of “Old Age” is without lyrics or guidance: the difficulties of the past are resolved and overcome by the Constitution.
The Fountain, at the center of the park has the image of protection of the precious treasure.
A water sprinkler system gives greater thermal comfort allowing visitors to rest in the shade of the park during the warmest periods.
In “New Age” the garden is made up of 183 olive trees and palm trees representing the individual articles of the
Constitution.
Dozens of species of shrubs represent different ethnic groups making up the people of Kuwait.
There are symbolic trees, palms and olive trees, the first resistant to the climate the latter for their evocative
power and the great resistance and adaptability to the context. Usually, we choose the local plants according to the hardiness zones, but in this case, with a radiation and a temperature so strong it would not be enough.
There is a great shady area, where people could sit, walk and stop, usually in these climatic area you do not do it because of the heat and the direct sun radiation.
To improve the comfort feeling, with conditions of existing low humidity and high temperature, we used the sea water, filtered with a reverse osmosis system, a high technology water treatment which produces clear
water for a series of jets of vaporized water spread among the shrubs and feeds a large mirror fountain, as reflection and connection with the sky. Water is precious.
The great diversity of species of shrubs used in the project symbolically evokes the many ethnic groups that, today, inhabit the Kuwait. People spends their time here, in a public garden of meanings, finding the roots of the their citizen, enjoying with the tree shadow and the water amenities.
The sculpture stands toweringly and eagerly towards the sky in a detached, but expressively symbolic, way that unequivocally shows impressiveness, strength and firmness.

Nominee to the Aga Khan Award 2016
Selected for publication Dedalo Minosse Award 2017

Illustration

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