BICOCCA SUPERLAB

Tipology Offices // Location Milan,Viale Sarca 336, Italy // Timetable 2020-2023 // Surface 10500 mq // State Completed // Project Team Alberto Lessan, Jacopo Bracco, Davide Minervini, Alejandra Mora, Giorgio Salza, Giulia Barbero, Ottavia Mangiafridda, Estefania Mujica, Egle Tavolaro, Sofia Zuccato, Nicolò Acquadro, Alessandro Stante, Alp Arda, Gaia Siddu // Developer Masini011 s.r.l // Constructor Quadrifoglio s.r.l // Eletrical System SIET s.r.l // Mechanical and Special Installations Climagest s.r.l // Project Management e Safety Studio Corradino-Petitti // Structural Design Ing. Alessandro Ferro // Electrical System Project Per. Luca Crudo // Mechanical System and Envelope Design Ing. Alessandro Manzone // Leed Consultant Macro Design Studio, Arch. Amit Anafi // Fire prevention and Fire Design Arch. Massimiliano Colucci, Ing. Angelo Neri // Green Project Studio Verde // Interior Fittings Lab1000 s.r.l // Photo Filip Dujardin //

The project involves the redevelopment (LEED Gold) of a 6,500 square meter office building in Milan, located in the Bicocca District. Instead of demolishing the existing 4-story building above ground, we preferred to propose a comprehensive renovation of both the interior and exterior, but retaining the existing structure. The goal was to preserve the building's industrial memory. The existing structure, with its extraordinary precision, was preserved and became the primary starting point. The project's focus was therefore to add as little as possible and work on internal flows and functions. Each added internal element remains independent of the existing structure. The approximately 100-meterlong building once housed the former offices of the historic Breda Siderurgica, a renowned Milanese metallurgy factory; due to its length, it is now receiving the nickname "horizontal skyscraper." A unique feature is that the facade is made of a prototype of transparent recyclable silicone rubber external uprights developed experimentally for this project. The transparency of the rubber materializes and dematerializes depending on the position of the sun and the time of day. The new facade is positioned further outward than the existing one, managing to surpass the staircases, thus setting them back from view, eliminating visual cuts that previously defined the elevation. The top is modified through a 4-meter elevation increase, visually raising the building by one above-ground floor and allowing the roof to become a usable floor with social areas and vegetation.