Cagliari 11th May 2012
Giovanni Maciocco
University of Sassari UNISS
The Urban Potential of Territories
REFERENCES
Afshar F. (1998), “Balancing global city with global village”, Habitat International, Elsevier, n.22.
Arendt H. (1958), The Human Condition, Chicago University Press, Chicago.
Augé M. (1992), Non-lieux. Introduction à une anthropologie de la surmodernité, Seuil, Paris.
Augé M. (2000), Fictions fin de siècle, Fayard, Paris.
Bauman Z. (2005), Fiducia e paura nella città, Bruno Mondadori, Milano.
Castells M. (1996), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 1: The Rise of the Network Society, Blackwell, Oxford.
Castells M. (1997), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 2: The Power of Identity, Blackwell, Oxford.
Castells M. (1998), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 3: End of Millennium, Blackwell, Oxford.
Foucault M. (2001), Spazi altri, Mimesis, Milano.
Ibelings H. (2006), “Small town Europe”, A10, n. 11, september/october , 2006
Jacobs J. (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Random House, New York.
Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (2011) (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan.
Ostrom E. (1986), “An Agenda for the Study of Institutions”, Public Choice, University Press, Chicago.
Ostrom E. (1990), Governing the Commons: the Evolution for Institutions for Collective Action, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Ostrom E., Gardner R., Walker J. (1994), Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.
Sorkin M. (1992), Variations on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space, Hill and Wang, New York.
Spanedda F. (2011), “Beyond the Bigness”, Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan.
Virilio P. (2004), Ville Panique. Ailleurs commende ici, Editions Galilée, Paris.
It is the city itself that equips itself with the instruments
necessary for its representation (De Azua 2003)
Representation of Paris is a montage of pictures (Nadar 1898)fi
Representation of city
!
FelixNadar,Photographiedelaplacedel’Etoile,1898
Planning methods and techniques cannot insist on their neutral
autonomy
Territory is a multiple act of interpretation (Steiner 1994)fi
Planning methods and techniques: sphere of responsibility
Does it not risk depicting a simulacrum of a city?
The risk is that technology might become the language
of a simulacrum of the city
But if language is the world, it is itself a simulacrum of knowledge
It is the city that can save technology, language from this trend
fi
The city can save technology
What model of a city?
Can we imagine that other models of urban life might exist
different of the dense metropolis?
Re-imagining new forms of urbanity
Externity
Politicians and political institutions have failed, by im-
posing standard models “from above”
Success experiences in the field of sustainability can be
found in local contexts (Ostrom 1986,1990,1994)
Environmental sustainability and local declension
The dense city has become a universal model for
planning and settlement
The metropolis is conceived as a homogeneous spatial
project context, the only feasible and, hence, the
inevitable perspective of urban.
Hegemony of the high-density city
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Vast territories in Europe and in the rest of the world
disprove the interpretation of the dense city as the only
existing urban form (Ibelings 2006, Afshar 1998).
Europe and most parts of the world outside of the
European realm, are characterized by a fragile
settlement, dominated by a landscape morphology.
The space in between these islands of settlement is
neither empty, nor a reserve for the expansion of the
city.
An alternative: the low-density city
Maciocco   input2012
The development of small settlements that exist in these
territories is becoming increasingly detached from the
agricultural economy and more and more attached
to other economies. This increases the structural
interdependency with the city: alternative forms of
residence, cultural economy, tourism, leisure activities,
alternative forms of energy, etc.
These territories make – hence – up an integrating part
of urban life, in the sense that they represent lifestyles
that are alternative and complementary to those of
the metropolis, but their spatial organisation is different
in a qualitative sense (Maciocco, Sanna, Serreli 2011).
Urban potential of the territory
Maciocco   input2012
These suggestions may even be considered legitimate
if supported by quantitative data (Spanedda 2011)
UN World Urbanisation predictions: The 2005 Revisions
51% of the world population live in rural areas
25,9% of these 51% live in developed/industrialized
countries
Cities with less that 500 000 inhabitants are, and remain
the residential area for the lion part of the urban
population in the world
25% of the world population lives in small and medium
size villages (with less than 500.000 inhabitants)
9% of the world population lives in so-called mega-cities
The UN forecasts an important population-increase
mainly in contexts with less that 500 000 inhabitants
A quantitative legitimisation: the prospects of urbanisation
Low-density territories develop in the form of systems
of relations, that connect human settlements with the
landscape, in which settled areas, agricultural land
and natural areas create intermediate spaces
The singular urban situations of low-density contexts
contrasts strongly with the continuous and pervasive
fabric of the dense city
The low-density city with its capacity to enter in dialogue
with the landscape to which it belongs contrasts
strongly with the isolated character of urban objects in
the metropolis
The territorial future of the city
Maciocco   input2012
The low-density city with its capacity to enter in dialogue
with the landscape to which it belongs contrasts
strongly with the isolated character of urban objects in
the metropolis
If the close relation to the landscape is a fundamental
characteristic of low-density contexts, interesting
perspectives are opened for the city-project regarding
therelationbetweenthelandscapeandcontemporary
public space
A qualitative legitimisation : a new concept of public space
Driving forces behind a crisis of the myth of public space
in industrial and pre-industrial society
(Jacobs 1961 , Arendt 1958)
De-materialisation of the public sphere driven by the
media (Castells 1996,1997,1998)
Privatisation and theme-parking in cities driven by
consumerism (Sorkin1992, Augé 2000)
Militarisation and segregation characterising the
“panic-city” (Virilio 2004, Bauman 2005)
The crises of the myth of public space
Maciocco   input2012
The end of the era of representation: public space is no
longer a space of representation of civil, military and
religious power (Foucault 2001). The modern idea of
democracy and individualism takes form.
Public space is not an urban fact that necessarily has
to refer to debatable spatial forms (the square, the
street, etc.) but rather a cultural reality in the process
of transformation, connected to history.
Public space as historic place
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
In the European city it is rather the landscape than
the agorà making up the privileged space for public
deliberation.
The landscape is a new, contemporary public space,
because it associates the collective ideal (in that it is
generally being considered as a common good) with
the individual good (since it is a resource for each
individual).
Public space as landscape
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
New perspectives are available for city-projects: the
re-focusing on the new public space – that is, the
landscape-environment – and, hence, on the most
significant elements constituting it
The relationship with this new centre, urban qualities
are enhanced through the capacity of dialogue with
the landscape- environment, which is also related to
the complexity of environmental processes that take
place in the territory
Re-focusing on the city as a landscape-environment
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The city modifies its form by emphasizing the importance
of the anchorage to the land
The city lends its symbolic potential, connected to a
new spatial organisation focusing on the environment,
to a new urban life oriented towards sustainability
A new legend
PROJECTS THAT REVEAL THE ENVIRONMENTAL FOCI OF THE CITY
The park-route in the central-eastern part of Sardinia
A park-route as an means for
exploring and connecting various
environmental objects dominating
the territory
Maciocco   input2012
Santa Caterina di Pittinurri
A degraded touristic
village without relation
with its surrounding
context
A coastal terminal of
Montiferru oriented
towards the sea
The preparation of services
that re-qualifies the
village, poses emphasis
on certain elements of
the environmental system.
This also contributes to
attributing significance to
other places in the same
territory
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The coastal-area of Bosa
Maciocco   input2012
Rocky coast-strip adjacent
to the tourist-village of Bosa
Marina
An extension of the relation
between the sea and the city,
through a system of services on the
rocks
The discovery of an environmental
energy, which is almost oceanic
Not a contemplative gaze, rather a
gaze that seizes the sea as a form of
affection, an attachment.
Maciocco   input2012
The lagoons of Cabras
An extension of the relation
between the sea and the city,
through a system of services on the
rocks
The discovery of an environmental
energy, which is almost oceanic
Not a contemplative gaze, rather a
gaze that seizes the sea as a form of
affection, an attachment
The project consists in creating a
series of wetlands that generate
ecological equilibrium in the area,
altered by the unrestrained infusion
of urban refluents.
At the same time, the project
creates a system of public services
that are introduced close to the
wetlands, favouring new urban
centralities interconnected with the
lagoon-area.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
An area of drained land in Arborea
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
An area of marshes transformed
by drainage in the 1930’s exposed
to intense zootechnical activities,
leading to a severe environmental
crisis in the lagoon and coastal-area.
a.
Planned interventions include a
system of wetlands that suits well
into the geometrical character of
the area. Actions will contribute to
reducing pollution in the coastal-
area, and to re-establish ecological
equilibrium.
At the same time, the project
includes the re-orientation towards
complementary activities and
alternative (tourism-activities, leisure,
alternative agriculture, etc.) the
settlement adjacent to the mirrors
of water that have been created
artificially. The fishing village of
Marceddi will become the service-
centre of the new area
The system of dunes of Pistis
A system of coastal dunes of
particular environmental importance
situated close to degraded tourist-
settlement
Maciocco   input2012
The project emphasises the dunes
through interventions defining the
border between the settled area
and the system of dunes.
At the same time, a system of
services will be developed through
the project, that will facilitate
the use of the coastal-zone and
a re-qualification of the urban
qualities of settlement in the
area by emphasizing the general
environmental system.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The valley of the Solanas river
One of the valleys below the
massive rocky area of the “Sette
Fratelli” shaping the coastal system
of the southern part of Sardinia
Maciocco   input2012
The valley close to the sea
is characterised by touristic
settlement – an urban sprawl,
such as the village of Solanas.
The project, defines the border of
the settlement, blocks the sprawl
and reconnects the valley to the
beach through the introduction
of a series of public services (bars,
small restaurants, facilities for sports
and leisure, etc.)
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The new cemetery of Sassari
An area of particular
environmental relevance outside
of the city, degraded by an
abandoned tipping site
The project re-qualifies
the tipping site, which will
become a part of the
cemetery, situated in one
of the most important
valleys of the city from an
environmental point of
view.
The project focuses,
hence, on orienting the
city towards discovering
and inserting itself into its
environmental matrix
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Il The urban and
environmental
system of Alghero,
Fertilia and the Calich lagoon
Alghero, a medium-sized city, a
small city founded in the 1930’s,
Fertilia separated by the natural
area consisting of a long beach
and its system of dunes and the
lagoon of Calich.
Maciocco   input2012
Interventions include making
Calich the environmental centre
of an urban settlement that
stretches from Alghero to Fertilia,
re-organizing – through a system
of public spaces – the two urban
settlements situated in the lagoon.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The seafront of Palau
A small touristic city with a
harbour – a context from which
the city appears to be detached.
Historical research reveals that
the coastline was different
before, and that the present line
is the border of an artificial bank.
Thus, we can conclude that the
geomorphology is variable to
some extent.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The project develops around
the idea of variability. A system
of urban services, consisting of
equipped boats is developed:
this spatial organisation connects
the city to the sea. These solutions
permit for the coastal zone to vary
so as to enable the realisation
of two possible scenarios: in one
scenario the boats remain on
the shore, in the other – in case
the coastal-line would move
backwards like in the past.
Maciocco   input2012
The botanical garden of Sassari
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
An area on the border of the
“compact city”
The nature takes on the form of
city, and the city takes on the
form of nature through a system
of “islands of land” with plants,
the city of stone becomes a
city of soil. Through a process of
bewildering, the city displays the
natural environment, and – in a
certain sense – its entire context.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The botanical garden of Caprera
One of the islands
of an archipelago
of considerable
importance from an
environmental point
of view. An Italian/
French natural park
that encompasses
the “Bocche di
Bonifacio”, which
is the strait that
separates Sardinia
from Corsica.
Maciocco   input2012
The botanical park will be realised
to host the typical vegetation
of the archipelago. One of the
interventions in the project will be
the placement of two ombrari
(sun-shields) crossing each other
orthogonally in the garden,
forming the axes of a roman
castrum: an urban trace found in
the nature, creating the sensation
of bewildering and reveals to the
visitors’ eyes the peculiarities of the
vegetation that otherwise would
blend in with and disappear in the
surrounding context.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The Paleobotanical Park of Anglona
A territory in the central/northern
part of Sardinia involving four
municipalities and covering a
petrified forest, consisting of
fossilised wood and trees is one of
the region’s most significant paleo-
environmental resources.
An agrarian landscape studded
with historical-cultural heritage,
immersed in a territory defined by
hills and rivers that constitute
the significant elements of the
environmental system.
Interventions include four long
ombrari (sun shields) which mainly
serve for exposing and facilitating
access to fossil finds, but first and
foremost, they indicate some of
the fundamental characters in
the landscape by opening up in
certain directions.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
The project encourages, hence,
inhabitants of the four municipalities
as well as other visitors to discover
some of the naturalistic and
territorial qualities that make up the
central resources for representing
the territory in which individuals
recognise themselves. This gives
rise to an enhanced urban life and
strengthened relations between the
four municipalities through touristic
and cultural activities.
Maciocco   input2012
The archaeological museum of Olbia
Maciocco   input2012
The city of Olbia is situated inside
of the gulf, characterised by a big
harbour of national importance,
but with a weak relation to the sea.
This relation cannot be understood
merely by analysing geographical
location of Olbia. The city of Olbia
is situated at the inner peak of the
external gulf, while the external
coastline is studded with touristic
facilities.
The museum-project includes the
establishment of a building at the
bottom of the internal gulf, which
facilitates the contact between the
city and the sea. This relation is not
established by the establishment of
the building in the adjacent urban
context. The substantial scale of the
building itself suggests, as a matter of
fact, an extended system of relations
that emphasizes the urban potential
of the entire territory.
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
Maciocco   input2012
REFERENCES
Afshar F. (1998), “Balancing global city with global village”, Habitat International, Elsevier, n.22.
Arendt H. (1958), The Human Condition, Chicago University Press, Chicago.
Augé M. (1992), Non-lieux. Introduction à une anthropologie de la surmodernité, Seuil, Paris.
Augé M. (2000), Fictions fin de siècle, Fayard, Paris.
Bauman Z. (2005), Fiducia e paura nella città, Bruno Mondadori, Milano.
Castells M. (1996), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 1: The Rise of the Network Society, Blackwell, Oxford.
Castells M. (1997), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 2: The Power of Identity, Blackwell, Oxford.
Castells M. (1998), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 3: End of Millennium, Blackwell, Oxford.
Foucault M. (2001), Spazi altri, Mimesis, Milano.
Ibelings H. (2006), “Small town Europe”, A10, n. 11, september/october , 2006
Jacobs J. (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Random House, New York.
Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (2011) (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan.
Ostrom E. (1986), “An Agenda for the Study of Institutions”, Public Choice, University Press, Chicago.
Ostrom E. (1990), Governing the Commons: the Evolution for Institutions for Collective Action, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Ostrom E., Gardner R., Walker J. (1994), Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.
Sorkin M. (1992), Variations on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space, Hill and Wang, New York.
Spanedda F. (2011), “Beyond the Bigness”, Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan.
Virilio P. (2004), Ville Panique. Ailleurs commende ici, Editions Galilée, Paris.

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GROUP4NURSINGINFORMATICSREPORT-2 PRESENTATION

Maciocco input2012

  • 1. Cagliari 11th May 2012 Giovanni Maciocco University of Sassari UNISS The Urban Potential of Territories
  • 2. REFERENCES Afshar F. (1998), “Balancing global city with global village”, Habitat International, Elsevier, n.22. Arendt H. (1958), The Human Condition, Chicago University Press, Chicago. Augé M. (1992), Non-lieux. Introduction à une anthropologie de la surmodernité, Seuil, Paris. Augé M. (2000), Fictions fin de siècle, Fayard, Paris. Bauman Z. (2005), Fiducia e paura nella città, Bruno Mondadori, Milano. Castells M. (1996), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 1: The Rise of the Network Society, Blackwell, Oxford. Castells M. (1997), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 2: The Power of Identity, Blackwell, Oxford. Castells M. (1998), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 3: End of Millennium, Blackwell, Oxford. Foucault M. (2001), Spazi altri, Mimesis, Milano. Ibelings H. (2006), “Small town Europe”, A10, n. 11, september/october , 2006 Jacobs J. (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Random House, New York. Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (2011) (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan. Ostrom E. (1986), “An Agenda for the Study of Institutions”, Public Choice, University Press, Chicago. Ostrom E. (1990), Governing the Commons: the Evolution for Institutions for Collective Action, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Ostrom E., Gardner R., Walker J. (1994), Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor. Sorkin M. (1992), Variations on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space, Hill and Wang, New York. Spanedda F. (2011), “Beyond the Bigness”, Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan. Virilio P. (2004), Ville Panique. Ailleurs commende ici, Editions Galilée, Paris.
  • 3. It is the city itself that equips itself with the instruments necessary for its representation (De Azua 2003) Representation of Paris is a montage of pictures (Nadar 1898)fi Representation of city
  • 5. Planning methods and techniques cannot insist on their neutral autonomy Territory is a multiple act of interpretation (Steiner 1994)fi Planning methods and techniques: sphere of responsibility
  • 6. Does it not risk depicting a simulacrum of a city? The risk is that technology might become the language of a simulacrum of the city But if language is the world, it is itself a simulacrum of knowledge It is the city that can save technology, language from this trend fi The city can save technology
  • 7. What model of a city? Can we imagine that other models of urban life might exist different of the dense metropolis? Re-imagining new forms of urbanity Externity
  • 8. Politicians and political institutions have failed, by im- posing standard models “from above” Success experiences in the field of sustainability can be found in local contexts (Ostrom 1986,1990,1994) Environmental sustainability and local declension
  • 9. The dense city has become a universal model for planning and settlement The metropolis is conceived as a homogeneous spatial project context, the only feasible and, hence, the inevitable perspective of urban. Hegemony of the high-density city
  • 12. Vast territories in Europe and in the rest of the world disprove the interpretation of the dense city as the only existing urban form (Ibelings 2006, Afshar 1998). Europe and most parts of the world outside of the European realm, are characterized by a fragile settlement, dominated by a landscape morphology. The space in between these islands of settlement is neither empty, nor a reserve for the expansion of the city. An alternative: the low-density city
  • 14. The development of small settlements that exist in these territories is becoming increasingly detached from the agricultural economy and more and more attached to other economies. This increases the structural interdependency with the city: alternative forms of residence, cultural economy, tourism, leisure activities, alternative forms of energy, etc. These territories make – hence – up an integrating part of urban life, in the sense that they represent lifestyles that are alternative and complementary to those of the metropolis, but their spatial organisation is different in a qualitative sense (Maciocco, Sanna, Serreli 2011). Urban potential of the territory
  • 16. These suggestions may even be considered legitimate if supported by quantitative data (Spanedda 2011) UN World Urbanisation predictions: The 2005 Revisions 51% of the world population live in rural areas 25,9% of these 51% live in developed/industrialized countries Cities with less that 500 000 inhabitants are, and remain the residential area for the lion part of the urban population in the world 25% of the world population lives in small and medium size villages (with less than 500.000 inhabitants) 9% of the world population lives in so-called mega-cities The UN forecasts an important population-increase mainly in contexts with less that 500 000 inhabitants A quantitative legitimisation: the prospects of urbanisation
  • 17. Low-density territories develop in the form of systems of relations, that connect human settlements with the landscape, in which settled areas, agricultural land and natural areas create intermediate spaces The singular urban situations of low-density contexts contrasts strongly with the continuous and pervasive fabric of the dense city The low-density city with its capacity to enter in dialogue with the landscape to which it belongs contrasts strongly with the isolated character of urban objects in the metropolis The territorial future of the city
  • 19. The low-density city with its capacity to enter in dialogue with the landscape to which it belongs contrasts strongly with the isolated character of urban objects in the metropolis
  • 20. If the close relation to the landscape is a fundamental characteristic of low-density contexts, interesting perspectives are opened for the city-project regarding therelationbetweenthelandscapeandcontemporary public space A qualitative legitimisation : a new concept of public space
  • 21. Driving forces behind a crisis of the myth of public space in industrial and pre-industrial society (Jacobs 1961 , Arendt 1958) De-materialisation of the public sphere driven by the media (Castells 1996,1997,1998) Privatisation and theme-parking in cities driven by consumerism (Sorkin1992, Augé 2000) Militarisation and segregation characterising the “panic-city” (Virilio 2004, Bauman 2005) The crises of the myth of public space
  • 23. The end of the era of representation: public space is no longer a space of representation of civil, military and religious power (Foucault 2001). The modern idea of democracy and individualism takes form. Public space is not an urban fact that necessarily has to refer to debatable spatial forms (the square, the street, etc.) but rather a cultural reality in the process of transformation, connected to history. Public space as historic place
  • 26. In the European city it is rather the landscape than the agorà making up the privileged space for public deliberation. The landscape is a new, contemporary public space, because it associates the collective ideal (in that it is generally being considered as a common good) with the individual good (since it is a resource for each individual). Public space as landscape
  • 29. New perspectives are available for city-projects: the re-focusing on the new public space – that is, the landscape-environment – and, hence, on the most significant elements constituting it The relationship with this new centre, urban qualities are enhanced through the capacity of dialogue with the landscape- environment, which is also related to the complexity of environmental processes that take place in the territory Re-focusing on the city as a landscape-environment
  • 34. The city modifies its form by emphasizing the importance of the anchorage to the land The city lends its symbolic potential, connected to a new spatial organisation focusing on the environment, to a new urban life oriented towards sustainability A new legend
  • 35. PROJECTS THAT REVEAL THE ENVIRONMENTAL FOCI OF THE CITY
  • 36. The park-route in the central-eastern part of Sardinia
  • 37. A park-route as an means for exploring and connecting various environmental objects dominating the territory
  • 39. Santa Caterina di Pittinurri
  • 40. A degraded touristic village without relation with its surrounding context A coastal terminal of Montiferru oriented towards the sea The preparation of services that re-qualifies the village, poses emphasis on certain elements of the environmental system. This also contributes to attributing significance to other places in the same territory
  • 46. Rocky coast-strip adjacent to the tourist-village of Bosa Marina
  • 47. An extension of the relation between the sea and the city, through a system of services on the rocks The discovery of an environmental energy, which is almost oceanic Not a contemplative gaze, rather a gaze that seizes the sea as a form of affection, an attachment.
  • 49. The lagoons of Cabras
  • 50. An extension of the relation between the sea and the city, through a system of services on the rocks The discovery of an environmental energy, which is almost oceanic Not a contemplative gaze, rather a gaze that seizes the sea as a form of affection, an attachment The project consists in creating a series of wetlands that generate ecological equilibrium in the area, altered by the unrestrained infusion of urban refluents. At the same time, the project creates a system of public services that are introduced close to the wetlands, favouring new urban centralities interconnected with the lagoon-area.
  • 57. An area of drained land in Arborea
  • 61. An area of marshes transformed by drainage in the 1930’s exposed to intense zootechnical activities, leading to a severe environmental crisis in the lagoon and coastal-area.
  • 62. a. Planned interventions include a system of wetlands that suits well into the geometrical character of the area. Actions will contribute to reducing pollution in the coastal- area, and to re-establish ecological equilibrium. At the same time, the project includes the re-orientation towards complementary activities and alternative (tourism-activities, leisure, alternative agriculture, etc.) the settlement adjacent to the mirrors of water that have been created artificially. The fishing village of Marceddi will become the service- centre of the new area
  • 63. The system of dunes of Pistis
  • 64. A system of coastal dunes of particular environmental importance situated close to degraded tourist- settlement
  • 66. The project emphasises the dunes through interventions defining the border between the settled area and the system of dunes. At the same time, a system of services will be developed through the project, that will facilitate the use of the coastal-zone and a re-qualification of the urban qualities of settlement in the area by emphasizing the general environmental system.
  • 71. The valley of the Solanas river
  • 72. One of the valleys below the massive rocky area of the “Sette Fratelli” shaping the coastal system of the southern part of Sardinia
  • 74. The valley close to the sea is characterised by touristic settlement – an urban sprawl, such as the village of Solanas. The project, defines the border of the settlement, blocks the sprawl and reconnects the valley to the beach through the introduction of a series of public services (bars, small restaurants, facilities for sports and leisure, etc.)
  • 77. The new cemetery of Sassari
  • 78. An area of particular environmental relevance outside of the city, degraded by an abandoned tipping site
  • 79. The project re-qualifies the tipping site, which will become a part of the cemetery, situated in one of the most important valleys of the city from an environmental point of view. The project focuses, hence, on orienting the city towards discovering and inserting itself into its environmental matrix
  • 82. Il The urban and environmental system of Alghero, Fertilia and the Calich lagoon
  • 83. Alghero, a medium-sized city, a small city founded in the 1930’s, Fertilia separated by the natural area consisting of a long beach and its system of dunes and the lagoon of Calich.
  • 85. Interventions include making Calich the environmental centre of an urban settlement that stretches from Alghero to Fertilia, re-organizing – through a system of public spaces – the two urban settlements situated in the lagoon.
  • 91. A small touristic city with a harbour – a context from which the city appears to be detached. Historical research reveals that the coastline was different before, and that the present line is the border of an artificial bank. Thus, we can conclude that the geomorphology is variable to some extent.
  • 94. The project develops around the idea of variability. A system of urban services, consisting of equipped boats is developed: this spatial organisation connects the city to the sea. These solutions permit for the coastal zone to vary so as to enable the realisation of two possible scenarios: in one scenario the boats remain on the shore, in the other – in case the coastal-line would move backwards like in the past.
  • 96. The botanical garden of Sassari
  • 100. An area on the border of the “compact city”
  • 101. The nature takes on the form of city, and the city takes on the form of nature through a system of “islands of land” with plants, the city of stone becomes a city of soil. Through a process of bewildering, the city displays the natural environment, and – in a certain sense – its entire context.
  • 107. The botanical garden of Caprera
  • 108. One of the islands of an archipelago of considerable importance from an environmental point of view. An Italian/ French natural park that encompasses the “Bocche di Bonifacio”, which is the strait that separates Sardinia from Corsica.
  • 110. The botanical park will be realised to host the typical vegetation of the archipelago. One of the interventions in the project will be the placement of two ombrari (sun-shields) crossing each other orthogonally in the garden, forming the axes of a roman castrum: an urban trace found in the nature, creating the sensation of bewildering and reveals to the visitors’ eyes the peculiarities of the vegetation that otherwise would blend in with and disappear in the surrounding context.
  • 113. The Paleobotanical Park of Anglona
  • 114. A territory in the central/northern part of Sardinia involving four municipalities and covering a petrified forest, consisting of fossilised wood and trees is one of the region’s most significant paleo- environmental resources. An agrarian landscape studded with historical-cultural heritage, immersed in a territory defined by hills and rivers that constitute the significant elements of the environmental system. Interventions include four long ombrari (sun shields) which mainly serve for exposing and facilitating access to fossil finds, but first and foremost, they indicate some of the fundamental characters in the landscape by opening up in certain directions.
  • 121. The project encourages, hence, inhabitants of the four municipalities as well as other visitors to discover some of the naturalistic and territorial qualities that make up the central resources for representing the territory in which individuals recognise themselves. This gives rise to an enhanced urban life and strengthened relations between the four municipalities through touristic and cultural activities.
  • 125. The city of Olbia is situated inside of the gulf, characterised by a big harbour of national importance, but with a weak relation to the sea. This relation cannot be understood merely by analysing geographical location of Olbia. The city of Olbia is situated at the inner peak of the external gulf, while the external coastline is studded with touristic facilities.
  • 126. The museum-project includes the establishment of a building at the bottom of the internal gulf, which facilitates the contact between the city and the sea. This relation is not established by the establishment of the building in the adjacent urban context. The substantial scale of the building itself suggests, as a matter of fact, an extended system of relations that emphasizes the urban potential of the entire territory.
  • 133. REFERENCES Afshar F. (1998), “Balancing global city with global village”, Habitat International, Elsevier, n.22. Arendt H. (1958), The Human Condition, Chicago University Press, Chicago. Augé M. (1992), Non-lieux. Introduction à une anthropologie de la surmodernité, Seuil, Paris. Augé M. (2000), Fictions fin de siècle, Fayard, Paris. Bauman Z. (2005), Fiducia e paura nella città, Bruno Mondadori, Milano. Castells M. (1996), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 1: The Rise of the Network Society, Blackwell, Oxford. Castells M. (1997), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 2: The Power of Identity, Blackwell, Oxford. Castells M. (1998), The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, vol 3: End of Millennium, Blackwell, Oxford. Foucault M. (2001), Spazi altri, Mimesis, Milano. Ibelings H. (2006), “Small town Europe”, A10, n. 11, september/october , 2006 Jacobs J. (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Random House, New York. Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (2011) (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan. Ostrom E. (1986), “An Agenda for the Study of Institutions”, Public Choice, University Press, Chicago. Ostrom E. (1990), Governing the Commons: the Evolution for Institutions for Collective Action, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Ostrom E., Gardner R., Walker J. (1994), Rules, Games and Common-Pool Resources, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor. Sorkin M. (1992), Variations on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space, Hill and Wang, New York. Spanedda F. (2011), “Beyond the Bigness”, Maciocco G., Sanna G., Serreli S. (Eds), The Urban Potential of External Territories, FrancoAngeli, Milan. Virilio P. (2004), Ville Panique. Ailleurs commende ici, Editions Galilée, Paris.