Walter Lollino Architecture

RESEARCH

Stoai of Kos

Figurability of the ruin

Reconstruction and
re-signification of
Ancient Architecture

Taking a step forward from international Charters, it is time to identify different approaches to the idea of reconstruction. In Burkhardt’s and Focillon’s postulations on the constant evolution of form, interconnected through analogical relationships, we can see how the reconstruction of form can become an opportunity to engage with what Aby Warburg called nachleben or engramma: elaborating stratified and anachronistic traces of historical complexities.

Reconstruction can be considered not only as a transformative intervention but as an opportunity to sculpt an accurate image of space. Thanks to the focus on traces and documentation, some projects seem to have succeeded in presenting an evocative image without being cryptic or freezing history and memory under protective shelters or screens. Memory is a function of the brain, but also a collective tool, enabling us to encode, store, and retrieve images and information from the past, thereby becoming a means to develop concrete actions on the territory.

The process I have attempted to summarize assigns memory a central role in projects situated in places heavily laden with history, aiming to connect the new, the projected, to the identity of the place sustained by our view of the past. To have memory means being aware of the processes that have shaped us as individuals and constructed the environment in which we move. The built landscape is one of the elements that defines our individual and collective identity, creating a network that assigns shared meanings to what we perceive. It is in the urban space that our collective memories are preserved. The depth of the built landscape, shaped over time, stands as a testimony to countless material and spiritual events.

© 2025 Walter Lollino Architecture

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