Architectural Intervention: Transforming Venice’s Historic Structures to Fit Contemporary Needs

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The history of Venice’s architecture, as seen today, is a semblance of styles centuries old. A destination rich in culture, many of Venice’s existing buildings, from homes alongside the thin interior canals to the grand domed churches of Palladio, have remained stagnant in their overall design and layout since the 16th century. Once a hub of Byzantine and European trade, the city now thrives on a steady stream of tourism and a foundational group of local residents.

The structures that make up the city’s compact matrix, once integral to its function as a commercial empire, have come to take on new functions through architectural intervention; notably, architects such as Carlo Scarpa, OMA, and Tadao Ando have had a large hand in this process.

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Cite: Lindsay Duddy. "Architectural Intervention: Transforming Venice’s Historic Structures to Fit Contemporary Needs" 07 Oct 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/903186/architectural-intervention-transforming-venices-historic-structures-to-fit-contemporary-needs> ISSN 0719-8884

via OMA

建筑师的干预 :适应当代需求,改造威尼斯历史结构

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