Achille Sfondrini

Achille Sfondrini (Milan, 1836 – Milan, 1900) was an Italian architect specializing in the design, construction and modernization of theaters.

He completed his university studies in Milan, graduating as an architectural engineer. In 1862, he designed a project for the economic of development of the Tiri a Segno, and was awarded first prize and gold medal by the Provincial Commission of Milan. In 1863, he formed part of the Italian Deputation sent to the Gran Tiro Federale della Chaux de Fonds. In 1864, he wonin a contest for a project concorse per un project del Gran Tiro Nazionale. For this project King Vittorio Emanuele, awarded Sfondrini the Cross of the Order of Santi Maurizio e Lazzaro. In 1869, he designed and built the gran Bagno Nazionale in Milan. In 1870, the theater of Salò. In 1872, he rebuilt the Teatro Carcano of Milan. In 1876, designed and built in four months, the monument to the Battle of Legnano. The statue was designed by the sculptor Pozzi of Milan. In 1878 he reconstructed the Theater of Pavia. His masterwork was the reconstruction of the Theater Costanzi in Rome (inaugurated in 1880). He had financial over-runs in completing the project. The theater has three rows of box seats. The theater was much lauded for its acoustic setting and the modern lines. He was awarded the Order of the Crown of Italy for his work.[1][2][3]

Works

gollark: It's not like you can't learn stuff school doesn't cover, though.
gollark: I'm looking at the AQA one here, as my school seems to have arbitrarily chosen that.
gollark: I'm not sure if you get to pick them individually or if it's as a class somehow.
gollark: As well as the basic stuff the spec we're doing has "Astrophysics", "Medical physics", "Turning points in physics", "Engineering physics (re-branded Applied physics)" and "Electronics" options, it seems.
gollark: Specifically under "Turning points in physics", which is one of the six optional modules (it seems convoluted and weird).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.