The restoration works on this building involved a complete renovation (pursuant to Regional Law 19/2009 – Art. 4, letter c), focused on the reorganisation of the building’s structure and internal layout, the partial change of use at ground-floor level, and the redefinition of the unit distribution, while ensuring full compliance with seismic, health and safety, and accessibility regulations.
The building’s footprint, covered surface area, and overall volume remained unchanged, except for the increased thickness of the external walls and roof elements. Given the historical context of the property, the intervention preserved the existing external masonry in order to maintain the building’s original character.
The redesign of the internal layout allowed for the creation of eight guest rooms with private bathrooms on the upper floors and a restaurant area on the ground floor.
Particular attention was given to acoustic performance. Internal partitions were therefore built using plasterboard and fibre-reinforced gypsum boards combined with high-density insulation materials.
Due to the building’s location in an area subject to harsh winter temperatures, an external insulation system based on low-thickness nanotechnology materials composed of nanomolecules was installed.
The focus on insulation performance and the use of state-of-the-art building systems ensure high thermal efficiency, reduced energy consumption, and an overall lower environmental impact.