Skip To Main Content
Issue 64 - The 'Future' Issue

Issue 64

The 'Future' Issue

Habitus #64 Welcome to the HABITUS ‘Future’ and ‘Habitus House of the Year’ Issue. We are thrilled to have interior designer of excellence, Brahman Perera, as Guest Editor and to celebrate his Sri Lankan heritage through an interview with Palinda Kannangara and his extraordinary Ek Onkar project – divine! Thinking about the future, we look at the technology shaping our approach to sustainability and the ways traditional materials are enjoying a new-found place in the spotlight. Profiles on Yvonne Todd, Amy Lawrance, and Kallie Blauhorn are rounded out with projects from Studio ZAWA, SJB, Spirit Level, STUDIOLIVE, Park + Associates and a Lake House made in just 40 days by the wonderful Wutopia Lab, plus the short list for the Habitus House of the Year!

Order Issue

A Product of

A slice of Sicilian architecture reaching back to prehistoric times
OtherHabitusliving Editor

A slice of Sicilian architecture reaching back to prehistoric times

Italy

Architecture

Leopold Banchini Architects

Build

DiSé

Photography

Simone Bossi

Asympta by Leopold Banchini is a work of speculative micro architecture in dialogue with the mostly unknown architectural landscape of a prehistoric civilisation in what is today Italy.


Description provided by designer, Leopold Banchini Architects.

Little is known about the people who lived and buried their dead along the Anapo river. Pantalica – a complex of over 4,000 thumbs carved in the rocks, one millennium BC – doesn’t tell us much about the way the living found shelter. Since very few traces of commoners’ architecture has been found, we can only imagine that the valley’s inhabitants used light construction technics and local organic materials to build their homes.

Part of the Syracusa-Pantalica UNESCO world heritage site listing, Asympta is a speculative micro architecture reflecting on the mostly unknown architectural landscape of the prehistoric civilisation rather than on its known necropolis. It explores how architectures and cosmologies might emerge from a specific landscape, attuned to its topography and resources.

The temporary installation, echoing the provisional qualities of early domestic architecture, generates diverse and fictional narratives based on vernacular as much as on contemporary construction methods, purposefully distancing itself from archaeological and scientific research or from strict timelines.

Using lava stone from the nearby Etna volcano, local wood sealed by fire, Pietra Pece limestone, bronze and sheep wool felt, the structure offers a shaded space for reunion and reflection. The double asymptotic shape echoes both the cone of the volcano dominating the landscape of eastern Sicily and the excavation shape of the nearby latomie where stone was extracted since ancient times.

Purposefully questioning the romanticised myth of Laugier’s Primitive Hut, the open structure speaks of proximity, adaptability and reciprocity towards this rich landscape.


About the Author

Habitusliving Editor

Tags

Anapo RiverArchitectureAsymptacoastCOSMO FestivalDiSeeuropeinstallationitalyLeopold Banchini


Related Projects
Issue 64 - The 'Future' Issue

Issue 64

The 'Future' Issue

Habitus #64 Welcome to the HABITUS ‘Future’ and ‘Habitus House of the Year’ Issue. We are thrilled to have interior designer of excellence, Brahman Perera, as Guest Editor and to celebrate his Sri Lankan heritage through an interview with Palinda Kannangara and his extraordinary Ek Onkar project – divine! Thinking about the future, we look at the technology shaping our approach to sustainability and the ways traditional materials are enjoying a new-found place in the spotlight. Profiles on Yvonne Todd, Amy Lawrance, and Kallie Blauhorn are rounded out with projects from Studio ZAWA, SJB, Spirit Level, STUDIOLIVE, Park + Associates and a Lake House made in just 40 days by the wonderful Wutopia Lab, plus the short list for the Habitus House of the Year!

Order Issue