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Antinori Winery

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The new Antinori winery project is located in the extraordinary hilly landscape covered by vineyards of Chianti, halfway between Florence and Siena. The customer wanted a building which enhanced the surrounding landscape and territory and bore witness to the cultural and social valence of the places where wine is made.

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  • Introduction byMassimiliano Fuksas

    Presentation by

    Corrado Clini

    With essays by

    Piero AntinoriMarco CasamontiPaolo GiustinianiFabrizio PucciarelliMassimo Toni

    Photographs by

    Pietro SavorelliwithBenedetta Gori

    Leonardo Finotti

    Valentina Muscedra

    Laura Andreini

  • 2013 Forma Edizioni srl, Poggibonsi, Siena, ItalyAll rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. First edition: February 2013ISBN: 978-88-96780-40-4

    Editorial projectForma Edizioni srl, Poggibonsi, Siena, Italy [email protected]

    Editorial realizationArchea Associati

    Editorial and publishing coordinationLaura Andreini

    Editorial staffSara BenziMaria Giulia CaliriValentina Muscedra

    Graphic designElisa BalducciSara CastelluccioMauro Sampaolesi

    Public relationsVittoria Bacci

    Offset graphicsArt & Pixel, Florence, Italy

    PrintingForma Edizioni srl, Poggibonsi, Siena, Italy

    Photographic credits

    Pietro Savorelli Pp. 10, 18, 21, 32, 40, 42, 48, 50, 54, 64, 82, 83, 88, 90, 109, 110, 112, 114, 115, 118, 121, 122, 124, 125, 126, 128, 130, 132, 133, 134, 140, 143, 144, 146, 148, 150, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 170, 176, 177, 178, 179, 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 192, 198, 200, 202, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 213, 226, 227, 229, 232, 233, 235, 238, 244, 245, 246, 250, 252, 255, 257, 259, 260, 264, 265, 267, 268, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 276, 277, 279, 281, 282, 284, 290, 291, 293, 294, 296, 297, 299, 304, 306, 309, 310, 312, 314, 315, 217, 318, 320, 322, 324, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 334, 335, 340, 346, 348, 350, 351, 352, 354, 356, 358, 361, 362, 363, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 374, 375, 376, 380, 381, 382, 385, 388, 390, 392, 404, 407, 408, 410, 412, 416, 418, 422, 424, 436, 437

    Leonardo FinottiPp. 131, 136, 151, 166, 168, 172, 173, 174, 175, 180, 216, 220, 221, 222, 223, 231, 236, 237, 240, 241, 247, 248, 249, 254, 262, 269, 288, 337, 342, 344, 359, 372, 379, 387, 394, 397, 417, 420, 426

    Valentina MuscedraPp. 113, 194, 196, 292, 302, 398, 400, 402, 403, 406

    Archives of ArcheaPp. 56, 62, 63, 68, 70, 72, 78, 79, 80, 81, 84, 96, 98, 99, 102, 106, 107, 108, 185

    Satellite images provided byMicrosoft Bing MapsPp. 22, 24

    Immagini TerraItaly Blom Compagnia Generale Ripreseaeree spa - Parma - www.terraitaly.itPp. 26, 28, 30

    ASCFI, n. 008446, courtesy of the Archivio Storico of the City of FlorenceP. 34

    Antinori Winery

    CustomerMarchesi Antinori

    Architectural designArchea Associati

    Artistic supervisionMarco Casamonti

    EngineeringHYDEA

    Building site supervisorPaolo Giustiniani

    Structural designAEI Progetti

    Design of plantsM&E Management & Engineering

    General contractorInso

  • IntroductionMassimiliano Fuksas

    PresentationThe example of sustainable developmentCorrado Clini

    Architecture on a landscape scaleLaura AndreiniFrom the city of stone to landscapes of earthPiero AntinoriArtifice and nature. The imaginary as contextMarco Casamonti

    EXCAVATION AS SEARCH OF A LOST IDENTITY

    Wits at the service of architecturePaolo Giustiniani Building a dreamFabrizio PucciarelliFinding a new equilibrium Massimo Toni

    THE RECONSTRUCTION OF A LANDSCAPE

    Moving in the earthLaura AndreiniThe access roads and drivewaysThe entrance hall and the spiralling staircaseThe large areas for loading and unloading of goodsA long itinerary underneath the vineyards

    Working among the vinesLaura AndreiniA new headquarters to celebrate the return to the earth and to the countryoffices / bookshop and shop / museum / auditorium / stairwellsThe large vaulted spacesbarrique rooms / barrel room / vat room / house reserve / connection towersThe cut dedicated to the production structurerestaurant / vin santo cellar / bottling area

    The essence of Chianti ClassicoLaura AndreiniThe cut in the vineyards and the roof as new land

    APPARATUSES

    CreditsDimensional figuresBiography

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    It is not easy to make a critical interpretation of a project when one has participated in and contributed actively to it. However, while the proximity may limit the objectivity of the judgment, it is important to keep in mind that it has taken a long time to complete the works and that the story, which began in 2002 (Archea was involved in 2004), is sufficiently extended in time to reduce the risks of a narrow and hasty reading. This distance in time, which may be considered sidereal in some parts of the world, appears as almost astonishingly rapid in Italy; eight years between ideation and construction, eight years in which a lot has been written and said about the project a great many articles, publications, participations in exhibitions and conventions. The sense of this analysis should therefore represent an opportunity for reflection, conducted with the objectivity of a knowledge that does not represent a fact of merit but the starting point of an essay written to tell, in hindsight, about a project that sees this condition as the reason and ultimate aim of its design. In fact, if we think carefully, the accessory conditions of this work may perhaps prove more interesting than its main objective, so declared and known as to almost represent a manifesto for an architecture that, rejecting the inappropriate scale of the building in order to relate to that of the landscape, the gentle and fascinating surroundings characterized by the undulating and sinuous profile of the hills studded by cypresses, forests, vineyards, roads and paths along the ridges, a scattering of small churches and farmhouses and once in a while a mansion, that has represented the organizational essence of the old agricultural economic context of the Chianti region. Probably, to take first things first, it would be worthwhile to remember that the present project was inspired by the customers desire to realize a work that would not only meet the production requirements but also bear witness to the familys close bonds to the land and to the vineyards; this transition has been - as Piero Antinori will explain in the book Il profumo del Chianti, a short but significant excerpt of which is included in this volume perceived by the firm and the family as an epochal return to the countryside, a reunion of the financial and commercial part with that of the production sector. However, this relocation of the brain of the company from central Florence, from the heart of Renaissance, far from the stones shaped by Giuliano da Maiano who commenced planning Palazzo Antinori and even further from Baccio dAgnolo who completed the garden faade so admirably, cannot be considered as a mere organizational rearrangement of the firm, because it inevitably becomes laden with those significances, those memories and, on a cultural level, those historical-critical contents that seem to return to the starting point, to the Renaissance, the time when with the familys entry in the Guild of Wine Merchants, dated by documentary proof to 1385 the long and famous saga of the Antinori family and its wines began. It is known that that certain combination between tradition and modernity, attention to the past, a revival of the classical tradition associated with a more contemporary interpretation of it represents, at the same time, the most authentic cipher of Humanism and the truest and most profound credo of the growing and making of wine, which owes its value precisely to the ability with which the old tradition of vintning, protected and transmitted with devotion, is combined with the innovativeness of a group that has more than seven hundred years of history to its name. It is therefore clear that the project could not be understood as the construction of a new headquarters or, as one had erroneously hypothesized in an initial phase in which Archea had not been involved, as the realization of a new Palazzo

    Architecture on a landscape scaleLaura Andreini*

    (*) Architect, researcher at the Faculty of Architecture in Florence in Architecture and Urban Design, co-founder of the Archea Associati firm

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    ANTIQUE WINERY BARDELLA

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    PPPOLI ESTATE

    NEW WINERYMARCHESI ANTINORI NEL CHIANTI CLASSICO

    TIGNANELLO ESTATE BADIA A PASSIGNANO ESTATE

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    Don Stefano Bonsignori, plan of Florence, detail of the neighbourhood where Palazzo Antinori is located, 1584

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    Finally, I would like to tell a story that is exactly halfway between the Tuscan roots and the wine of tomorrow. It is about a hill and about something my brother Lodovico said some years ago: so what if the French have their chteaux? Wine castles? We will fill our countryside with wineries that are masterpieces of architecture. This is nothing but a new version of what my father Niccol said as he was wringing his brains to find a name for his first new wine, proudly challenging the Bordeaux and the whole world: So what if they have their chteaux? We have our villas! A lot was about to change both then, in the Twenties of last century and today, in the second decade of the present. San Casciano Val di Pesa is the historical heart of the Marchesi Antinori wineries. This is where grandfather Piero decided to build the first structures for making and aging wine: which were large, efficient and well connected to the city; a great, modern idea. It was here, between the village of San Casciano Val di Pesa and an oak and beech forest, just beyond the river Pesa, the natural border of the Chianti Classico district, that Doctor Charlemagnes bottles of badly fermented sparkling wine exploded along with the machine-gun fire of the retreating Germans, on the day that I understood what I wanted to do in my life.It is from here that our bottles have set out on their journey, bound for every corner of the world, for fifty years. After being washed and dried, and then filled and packaged, by generations of local cellar-men and very capable women who glued the labels on one by one, and eventually packaged by the first mechanical systems with transportation belt. The buildings are surrounded by a rusting little forest of wine tanks from various periods, in different materials and dimensions. It is in San Casciano that we have received, in the first half of last century, the best grapes from Chianti Classico, once my grandfather and father had negotiated with brokers, and where we have then turned them into hundreds and hundreds of litres of outstanding wine. They have been tasted, praised and sometimes rejected in the large wine-tasting hall with trussed ceiling, by thousands of wine journalists of every language and school of thought. Finally, we have sent them to spread their aromas and flavours in packages of six and in demijohns, kegs and boxes from Florence to Montevideo, from Moscow to Toronto.This is where we, five centuries after our first barrels, turned our winemaking into a business. Palazzo Antinori, in Piazza Antinori in Florence, is on the contrary the address to which our importers and distributors everywhere in the world send their packages, letters and cables; the Florentine chteau that still ties us to our identity, like a stone anchor, while the world is turning faster and faster. It is a place where I am surrounded by memories of my ancestors, as I write, discuss and talk on the phone. Above my head I have the wooden beams inlaid by the architect Giuliano da Maiano, a follower of Brunelleschi, whom Lorenzo the Magnificent recommended to my forefathers when they needed to complete their new home.I go outside to get a breath of fresh air in the courtyard, and get lost among the grey of the stone and the red of the brick, the white of the plasterwork and the black of the old wood, in the shade of a large magnolia. This is our little fortress on the Arno, lost for some decades and reconquered by my father, with the rooms where my ancestors have lived for centuries, deciding, sometimes at the dining table, the politics of Florence and the trade routes of Europe, where they have invited magistrates and high prelates, generals and crowned heads, pouring them a couple of glasses of Chianti and settling business matters. Together, the palazzo and the wine cellars in Val di Pesa are

    From the city of stone to landscapes of earthPiero Antinori

    From: Piero Antinori, Il profumo del Chianti - Storia di una famiglia di vinattieri, Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Milan, 2011, pp. 195-198, 200-203

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    Architectural design is always the result of a calibrated and difficult tension between opposed elements that are at once mutually attracted and repelled, relating to one another rhetorically in an oxymoron that rather than reflecting a contradiction, represents the most authentic symptom of harmony and equilibrium. By this Apollonian and Dionysian path they complete one another formally, as the masses and voids of a volumetric alternation become city and urban system; likewise, light and shade define the sense of a sequence of day and night without which we could not conceive life, the changing of seasons or the flow of time. However, this dialectic and dual relationship is first and foremost based, as far as architecture is concerned, on the ancient and permanent confrontation between artifice and nature. An encounter, but perhaps it would be more appropriate to speak of a clash, between different entities, the one eternally subjected to the other, to the point of the extreme conviction of conceiving the man-made as an unequal attempt to challenge a nature that is considered perfect. The search for the natural archetype and the imitation of the perfection of God-given beauty has been carried to such extremes over the centuries as to imagine the abstract example of the primitive hut hypothesized in the Eighteenth century by Marc-Antoine Laugier as a natural, perfect and imitable model, in order to unravel the inextricable tangle of beauty in architecture. On the other hand, from the classical age to the modern, the equilibrium in question has become completely unbalanced, with the result of a relationship conceived only in terms of mimesis. The project of the Antinori Winery, following the Kantian approach in recognizing the utility value of architecture as an art that serves a purpose, namely to shelter, proposes a vision that attempts neither the ancient and unfeasible path of imitation-subjection of the natural environment nor that of an arrogant indifference allowing anyone to act without paying attention to the context and its motives.The controversy that moderns and academics have never overcome is resolved in the pragmatic comprehension of those who consider land as a non-reproducible resource and who, feeling the burden of its constant consumption, testify to the need for an attentive and calibrated use of the landscape in which works of architecture are inserted on the most appropriate scale. Moreover, the project of the Winery shows the way towards a contemplative relationship with, rather than an emulation of, the natural landscape where the objective is not the value of the copy or the imitation, but rather the possibility to interpret the places without altering hard-won equilibriums, as in the case of the wholly anthropized landscape of Chianti Classico. If there is neither imitation nor indifference, what would a correct relationship between nature and man-made consist of today? Perhaps, romantically, that of a dominating and pervasive nature? This is not what we have sought to achieve with the project for Bargino, because vineyards and constructions do not attempt, or propose, any supremacy or privileged position, instead pursuing the sense of a profound sharing, inspired by a joint cause that sees the land in the centre of an aesthetic, ethical and finally economic-productive model.

    (*) Architect, Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the University of Genoa, co-founder of the Archea Associati firmOpposite page View from the entrance hall to the overhang of the roof terrace

    Artifice and nature.The imaginary as contextMarco Casamonti*

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  • EXCAVATION AS SEARCH OF A LOST IDENTITY

  • The decision to build a new winery in Bargino was made in 2001, as it had become necessary to modernize the old Antinori winery and move it out of the village, even if one wanted to remain within the municipality of Casciano Val di Pesa.The need to define an architectural model in line with the typological metamorphoses that have, in the last few years, changed wineries from production premises housed by rural buildings or wings of stately mansions to complex multifunctional buildings has guided the technological and constructive choices which have led to the realization of the new Antinori home in the Chianti Classico district.Architecture and engineering are closely intertwined in the project, far beyond what appears to the eye, in ways that may seem simple with respect to the true constructive complexity of the work. No element or part of the building has been made with standardized production and construction routines; the materials used are few and poor, but it has taken a lot of research to harmonize them with the natural charm of the surrounding countryside. The building, most of which is below ground, features an area of almost 40,000 square metres, not including the underground driveways that form an essential part of the aggregate. The removal of the soil and the management of the excavated material have proven to be a major challenge: it has been necessary to remove 380,000 cubic metres of soil from the hill, which corresponds to more than 35,000 truckloads, and to find definitive and temporary storage areas for the soil that was to be reutilized once the works were complete. For a long time the building site has looked like a deep cut in the landscape, an impressive, more than 15 metres deep excavation with an almost 500 metres long front supported by large consolidation structures forming a more than 20 metres tall partition, built from 8000 cubic metres of reinforced concrete, with 8 kilometres of sub-horizontal micro-drains and a battery of large, 28 metres deep wells dug in order to deviate and channel the water passing through underground veins that have surfaced during the works. As the construction works have progressed, the wound in the terrain has begun to heal; the enormous volume of the winery has been gradually concealed as the building site has neared completion. Every cast of concrete or erection of metal structures have represented a technological and constructive challenge: 35,000 cubic metres of concrete, 3.5 million kilos of reinforcement iron, more than 2 million kilos steel structure, 35,000 square metres of built floor slabs.The construction of the interiors have proceeded discreetly, almost as if one wanted this phase to remain private; scenic vaults in earthenware have gradually formed a sequence: vat room, barrique room and barrel room. As the works have advanced, the structures have reshaped the landscape; it has been quite an experience to see the project drawings and images become reality, as the winery acquired the desired form, increasingly light and respectful of the environment. The galleries, the parking area, the offices, the museum, the auditorium, the production areas, the laboratory, the canteen, the restaurant, the technological unit and the plants are today almost invisible from without. With time, the area has reacquired its original form; it is as if the concrete and iron has dematerialized and the roof of the winery has been covered with the earth deposited along the edges of the building site (more than 100,000 cubic metres) and vineyards have been planted on top of it. In spite of our long experience with designing complex works with sophisticated technological contents, the realization of a building with a roof supporting vineyards and projecting 21 metres, and the construction of a free-standing helical entrance stair in steel weighing about 105 tons with a more than 30 metres tall spiralling development, has represented a unique experience that is unlikely to repeat itself.

    Wits at the service of architecture Paolo Giustiniani*

    (*) Engineer, president and CEO of Hydea Opposite page The Antinori Winery and its insertion in the side of the hill, seen from an aerial view above Bargino towards Tavarnelle in the final construction phaseNext page The area of the site during the first excavation and foundation work

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    1. Terrace2. Restaurant3. Keepers house 4. Grape drying 5. Vinsanto cellar 6. Hopper7. Oil bottling 8. Warehouse9. Infirmary 10. Bottle ageing 11. Wine bottling 12. Yard13. Technical room 14. Olive orchard parking lot

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    Chronological sequence of construction phases

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    THE RECONSTRUCTION OF A LANDSCAPE

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    The entrance hall and the spiralling staircase

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    These pages, preceding pages and following pagesThe area for loading and unloading of goods which gives access to the barrique cellars, therefore named barrique square, situated on the north side of the architectural complex

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    The architectural complex faces the surrounding valley through two cuts; the first conceals volumes closed by large glazed fronts, while the second, upper one, is closed by walls and gates in Corten steel; this is where the production areas are to be found.These artificial openings in the original hill surface provide the two buildings comprising the project with a view of the exterior. The first, lower area is a building comprising several floors, with administrative offices, a museum, a shop and an auditorium; it is placed alongside the vaulted areas behind, which house the barrique room, the barrel room and the vat room below. The second consists of a one-floor building which houses the production and storage areas, the dessert wine cellar and the olive oil press; alongside, only united by the projecting roof, the restaurant is to be found. The two wings are connected by means of two enormous towers excavated in the earth, covered by a sequence of stair ramps in Corten steel sheet that cross large empty spaces. The administrative activities and the areas reserved for visitors are distributed on the two upper levels of the multi-story building, which are lit by inner courts whose lateral walls are in glass, and thus transparent. This applies to all partitions between the rooms in the interior, all of which are in glass, screened by terracotta jealousies. Beyond the offices, the glazed fronts form a visual connection with the museum and the shop. Making the space accessible to wine lovers and aficionados, as well as anyone curious to visit it, and telling the story about hundreds of years of history and traditions of the Antinori family has called for the ideation, planning and construction of exhibition premises divided in sections: a permanent one featuring heritages, objects and relicts owned by the family, and another temporary one in which exhibitions and other events may be presented. In addition to distribution corridors, stairwells installed in carefully designed cylindrical light-wells and the bathrooms, the only area which is not immediately visible is the auditorium, a multimedia space where it is possible to hold meetings, seminaries and conferences with 186 persons, in a kind of artificial vineyard surrounded by walls faced with oak lists. The volume formed by these two levels opens to the landscape through the first cut which is visible from the exterior, and which leads to the spacious terrace shaded by the large and imposing projection on the roof. In addition to the transparency of the glass, the spatial continuity between interior and exterior is favoured by the choice of facing material, namely terracotta which is used consistently both in the interior and in the outdoor area, as floor and facing all the way to the ceiling; it continues, earthily, towards the vineyards that seem to continue growing inside the building.The most hidden areas, those furthest away from the exterior, contain the core of the aggregate. In fact, the heart of every winemaking firm is its cellar, the deepest and innermost part of the building, shielded from sunlight and rapid changes in temperature. In addition to these characteristics, which are indispensable and necessary to provide the best microclimate for the wine to age in, the space assumes a mystical, sacred appearance which helps the visitor to appreciate the value of what he or she is observing, and to concentrate. The barrique rooms and vat rooms are distributed along a system of longitudinal vaults of variable section, faced in terracotta; their varying dimension contributes to render the environment dynamic, forming highly innovative spaces for storing wine: the smallest, the barrel room containing the large barrels, the largest one which is the barrique room with the smaller barriques, and the longest room alongside the partition with the large wine fermentation vats in stainless steel. The single-floor building on the upper level is dedicated to production activities; among the most important spaces and functions we find the hopper, where the grapes are pressed; the must passes to the room below by gravity. Also in this case it is a matter of a deep cut in the side of the hill, that makes it possible to conceal the production areas among the vineyards, in order to make the work areas blend into the area where the wine is produced, those vineyards whose rows form the pattern of the anthropized landscape of the Chianti Classico district.L.A.

    Working among the vines

    Aerial view from east to west of the new Marchesi Antinori Winery in the Chianti Classico region

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    Offices

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    Bookshop and shop

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    The large vaulted spacesbarrique rooms / barrel room / vat room / house reserve / connection towers

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    Cross section of system of vaults that enclose the spaces of the bottle and vat cellarsPreceding pagesGlazed tasting room suspended over barrique cellar

    Covered road Vat cellar Restaurant Tower of connections between floors

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    Barrique cellar Inspection walkway

    Glazed tasting room Offices Elevated visitors route

    Sorting corridor Museum

    Passage for open tasting rooms

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    2011.04Assembly of vaults steel structures. The structure has a first row that runs across the building, braced against the wind by tubes on which the second row of UPNs is clamped. The beams curved sections are calendered to follow the curved progression of the terracotta cladding.

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    The cut in the vineyards and the roof as new land

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    The spiral staircase is the pivotal point of both the composition and functions of the entire route crossing the building

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    APPARATUSES

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    GeologyMarco BastogiPaolo Canuti

    Geotechnical designer Marco Sacchetti

    Geotechnical consultantsStudio ColleselliFrancesco ColleselliStefano Trevisan

    Structural designAEI ProgettiDesign managerMassimo Toni

    Niccol De RobertisStefano ContriLuca FrancalanciMarco PratellesiStefano Valentini

    Massimo CapigattiAndrea CariaggiStefano Cariaggi Francesco Del GaudioSilvia MinutilloDomenico NarcisiStefano Niccoli Chiara RemoriniLorenzo RossettiDaniele SaniRiccardo Simeone

    Inspector of structures Gianni Bartoli

    Design of plantsM&E Management & EngineeringPaolo BonacorsiStefano MignaniAlessandro PanichiFrancesco Pesucci

    LocationBargino, San Casciano Val di Pesa, FlorenceProgrammeWinery, offices, museum, auditorium, restaurant, viability, manoeuvring and green areas, depurationCost 85,052,831 (excluding oenological plants and landscaping)Chronology Beginning of design 2004Opening of building site 2007Completion date 25 October 2012

    CustomerMarchesi AntinoriPresidentPiero AntinoriManaging DirectorRenzo CotarellaProject manager for the CustomerAlbiera AntinoriCoordinationGiovanni Donato

    Architectural designArchea AssociatiLaura AndreiniMarco CasamontiSilvia FabiGiovanni PolazziCollaborators in the architectural designMaria AbbracciaventoEnrico AncilliAndrea AndreuccettiAndrea Antonucci Niccol Balestri Domenico Giovanni CacciapagliaLuana CarastroElena CatalanoAntonella DiniMarco Gamberi Francesco Giordani

    Li GuojinPaolo Invidia Lorenzo Malavasi Valentina Malta Alice MarzoratiElena Masci Mattia Mugnaini Marco OrtoMichelangelo PerrellaAlessandro RiccomiGabriele SestiniPatrizia ValandroFeng Xiancheng

    Artistic supervisionMarco CasamontiAssistant artistic supervisorFrancesco Giordani

    Engineering, general coordination and urbanistic and administrative proceduresHYDEA

    Paolo Giustiniani

    Alberto BaccaniMarco Befani Andrea DeserventiEnzo Floridi Giuliano Griffi Luciano LucianiStefano MonniMaurizio PapiniZeno Romano

    Building site supervisorPaolo GiustinianiAssistant building site supervisorZeno RomanoSafety coordinator Lapo Lombardini (project)Laura MezzaGiorgio Salimbene (execution)

    Oenological plantsEmex EngineeringStefano VenturiMarchesi AntinoriLuca TagliaferriPaolo Mariotti

    Interior architecture and furnitureArchea AssociatiLaura AndreiniMarco CasamontiSilvia FabiGiovanni PolazziCoordination of furniture worksFrancesco Giordani

    Graphic designArchea AssociatiLaura Andreini

    Elisa BalducciSara CastelluccioKatia CarlucciCaroline FuchsVitoria MuziMauro SampaolesiLara Tonnicchi

    Ideation of the museology partAlessia AntinoriCurator of temporary installations and exhibitions Chiara Parisi Invited artistsRosa BarbaJean-Baptiste DecavleYona FriedmanOrigin of works included in exhibitionAntinori Family CollectionTornabuoni ArteCultural project managerIlaria Barbieri MarchiChiara Rusconi

    Credits

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    BRIXIA - Welding of monumental staircaseBUCHER VASLIN - Supply and installation of hopper and grape pressesCAF - Assembly of prefabricated structuresCAPITAL FERRO - Supply of ironCARMONT - Assembly of metal structuresCARPENTERIA PIEMME - Installation of metal structuresCASTELLI - Supply of chairs for employeesCATENA SERVICES - Execution of insulation behind vaultsCENTRO ARREDOTESSILE - Systems for curtains and textiles for floorsCEIPO - Supply of furniture elements in terracottaCESAF - Installation of geotechnical monitoring systemCHIEFARI - Handling of earthCHIMERA SERVICE - Assistance in assembly of works in ironCHIMI - Installation of gates in REI CortenC. M. CESTELLI & NUTI - Installation of machinery for incoming grapesCIELO - Ceramic washbasins and toilets CITYFER - Installation of metal structuresCOIFER - Insulation of pipesCOLIMAR - Installation of metal structuresCOLLICELLI - Execution of plants and sub-servicesCONSORZIO ETRURIA - Coordination of building siteCONSULENTE ENOLOGIA - Assembly and testing of unitary filling elementCOOPSERVICE - Assembly of partitions for officesCOPAMEC - Installation of REI doors of NINZ typeCOPARI - Waterproofing of roofCORTE APERTA - Assembly of terracotta ceiling and installation of glass panesCPM - Metal structure worksCRAWFORD HAFA - Assembly of rapidly-folding doorsCREMONESE IMPIANTI - Air conditioning systemCRISTMONT - Assembly of heavy metal structuresCSP - Structures in prefabricated elements in pre-compressed reinforced concrete

    Companies and suppliers which have contributed to the realization of the building site

    3M SERRANDE - Installation of sheet metal, shutters, grids4 EMME - Execution of load tests4 M - Installation of glazed partitions and furnitureABA ARREDAMENTI - Supply and installation of furnitureABDELALIM - Execution of insulation behind vaultsADECCO ITALIA - Installation of fixed glass panesADVERTISING & BUILDING - PlasterworkAERTHECNO - Conduits for mechanical systemsA. G. - Blacksmith work AHMED EDILIZIA - PlasterworkALFA SYSTEM - Installation of truss beamsALMA POSA - Assembly of shelves in terracottaALPAGIVA - Execution of general construction worksALPI - Supply of formwork for works in reinforced concreteANTINORI AGRICOLA - Working of land for vineyardsASFALTI RUGE - Execution of waterproofing of walls in contact with earthASTEC - Assembly of kitchens AUROMONT - Assembly of casingsAUROPORT - Construction of casingsA.R. COSTRUZIONI - Handling of earthAVIT - Porterage, handling of materials and cleaning of building siteBAIOCCO - Canteen kitchenBETON RAPID - Supplier of heavy metal structuresBESANA - Supplier of carpetsBFF - Assembly of canteen kitchenBINIMPIANTI - Systems with pipes in PeadBODNARESCU - Installation of wallsBONGIO - Faucets bathroomsBORSANI GIANFRANCO - Assembly of laboratory furnitureBREBE - Installation of safety harnesses

    General contractorInsoManaging DirectorFabrizio PucciarelliProject managerGraziano VoltoliniBuilding site managerAntonio PortinoAssistant building site managerPasquale OlmoSystems managerAntonio SalviettiSystems consultantSilvano RisalitiTechnical staffFilippo SchipaRaffaele Di MarcoFrancesco Di MarcoAntonella La CameraGiacomo Bertinelli Antonio RossiGaetano NotaroGiuseppe PiemonteseGianni Pepe

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