Tall & Urban News

Competition Winner Chosen for Milan’s Human Technopole Foundation Campus

The Human Metropole campus is to be built in Milan's new MIND (Milano Innovation District), located in the former Expo Area.
The Human Metropole campus is to be built in Milan's new MIND (Milano Innovation District), located in the former Expo Area.
16 July 2020 | Milan, Italy

Milanese architecture firm Piuarch has won the right to design Human Technopole's new building and campus. It is an iconic building for the new MIND (Milano Innovation District), located in the former Expo Area - a human-well-being-centered innovative and sustainable architecture.

Piuarch’s design is organized around these three spaces, which form an uninterrupted sequence from the ground floor up to the top of the building.

Featured Buildings

At ground level, the parterre connects the Human Technopole headquarters with the other buildings of the Human Technopole Campus, including Palazzo Italia.

An artificial landscape of inclined planes suggests a distinction between the movement areas, the rest areas and the amphitheaters.

This open space, which in part also continues under the building, provides direct access to the fully glazed atrium, and from there to the covered plaza.

The latter is the true heart of the Human Technopole headquarters, on a functional, relational and symbolic level.

On the one hand, this gigantic, full-height empty space, flooded with natural light, is crossed by a system of ramps and walkways that connect all the building levels.

At the same time, the covered plaza, which is overlooked by all the offices and laboratories, is a crucial space for interaction and the exchanging of ideas: the central stairs and various meeting areas make it an ideal place for dialogue and discussion between researchers.

More generally, this interconnected, panoptic space is the architectural transcription of the values of an institution such as Human Technopole, which promotes scientific research as a highly ethical and “transparent” activity.

The roof garden is the natural complement to the covered plaza: here, the introverted “vertical campus” opens onto its surroundings and the city.

The asymmetrical pitches of the roof alternate with greenery-planted slopes, steps and broad wooden platforms, multiplying the availability of multifunctional spaces, which can be freely appropriated by the users of the building.

The view sweeps southeastward from the terraces toward the center of Milan; at the same time, the characteristic broken profile of its crown makes the Human Technopole Headquarters highly recognizable, a new architectural icon for the future MIND.

Set around the backbone of these three public and collective spaces are the offices and laboratories of the Human Technopole headquarters, arranged in two distinct compact blocks, both parallel to the covered plaza.

Within them, they are distributed according to maximum optimization and flexibility criteria: for example, many partitions are mobile, to allow rapid adaptation to the evolving needs of the research center.

The Human Technopole headquarters, lastly, is conceived as a highly sustainable ecosystem.

The greenery-covered areas at ground level and on the roof allow the correct management of rainwater.

The photovoltaic systems installed on the shelters on the ground floor, on the façade and on the roof contribute significantly to the building’s energy needs.

The angled sunshades along the façades calibrate the amount of sunlight entering in the different seasons of the year.

The outcome of an investment of 94 million euros (US$107.4 million), the Human Technopole Headquarters is a project that is fundamental for the future of Milan and Italy.

With its 35,000 square meters of space, 16,500 square meters of which is devoted exclusively to laboratories, it is a testimony of the renewed centrality that scientific research will need in the country’s near future, and of the fundamental role that architecture plays in conceiving the spaces dedicated to this.

For more on this story, go to World Architecture News.