SOFIA BOARINO ARCHITECTURE & SOUND ART

•  Projects   Publications    About   Contacts  •

SOFIA BOARINO ARCHITECTURE & SOUND ART

•  Projects   Publications    About   Contacts  •





PUBLICATIONS / AWARDS

2013 


2017

2018


2019

2020

2021


2022

2023
Greenway in Monferrato - group project coordinated by Fabrizio Meni, prized by MIUR as winner of WWF National Competition on Green Economy

Sounds of Etna - published in Material Gesture exhibition and book by Anne Holtrop

House to feel the stoneThe poppy - displayed in Amurs-Microcosmi exhibition by Studio Bearth&Deplazes at the Biennale di Architettura di Venezia

Madworkshop Fellowship: Témenos - project realisation and publication

Hit the Beat - wins SWISS ENGINEERING TICINO Prize

Hit the Beat - displayed in Chiasso-Ponte Chiasso Integrazione exhibition curated by Muck Petzet at Chiasso Cultural Centre

Sound Greenfall - published in Horizonte Weimar Magazine Zuhören015

Interview - at The Grand Challengers Podcast by Peter Marcus Bach


    LECTURES / TEACHING
     
    2018

    2021

    2022

    2022


    2023
    Assistant at Feel the Air workshop, Riccardo Blumer & Madworkshop, Los Angeles

    Assistant at Art Feast in Casciago, Riccardo Blumer & Madworkshop, Varese

    Assistant at Air Architecture in Casciago, Riccardo Blumer & Madworkshop, Varese

    Lecture The Sound of Plants at Acoustic Niche Workshop, Christophe Girot Chair, ETH Zurich

    Lecture at Moving Boundaries course on neuroarchitecture



















    HOUSE TO FEEL THE STONE

    Year        2015
    Place       Kornati Islands, Croatia
    Program  Seaside house, Atelier Bearth 

    The house is situated under a 80m-long wall of rock. The house researches a deep connection with the natural landscape especially through its materiality and conformation: built in the local stone, its walls take the shape of niches in order to nest the main living spaces. It is an archaic house that aims to promote a simple and essential lifestyle, slow, sensual and intense. The definite dimension of the house with its niches, in contrast with the infinite dimension of nature perceived through the courtyard and the rooftop, allow man and nature to meet in a very powerful way.