Libero Cecchini

Libero Cecchini (28 September 1919 – 20 April 2020) was an Italian architect.[1] He specialized in restoration of monuments and the design of residential complexes.

Libero Cecchini
Born28 September 1919
Died20 April 2020(2020-04-20) (aged 100)
NationalityItalian
OccupationArchitect

Biography

Cecchini was born in Pastrengo into a family of stonemasons. He studied at an art school in Verona and received numerous awards for his sculptures in artistic exhibitions. He then studied at the Polytechnic University of Milan, and graduated in November 1944. He was registered as an architect in Verona and began restoring monuments damaged or destroyed during World War II.[2] He worked for the Superintendent of Monuments in Verona until 1966, when he began committing himself to public projects, such as the Verona Chamber of Commerce, office buildings, schools, housing for the elderly, villas, and other commercial buildings.[3]

Castelvecchio Bridge, destroyed during World War II, was rebuilt with Cecchini as architect between 1949–1951.

In 1996, Cecchini and his son founded the company Vittorio Cecchini Libero and Associated Architects, which competed in numerous local and national architectural competitions.

Awards

  • Silver Medal for the Culture and the Arts of the Ministry of Education (1959)
  • Second Prize at the “Premio Vitruve” International Competition in use of stone in architecture (1962)
  • Regional “En-Arch” prize from Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige and Friuli-Venezia Giulia for the INA-Casa San Dona di Trento project village (1964)
  • Honorary Inspector of the General Directorate of Antiquities of Verona (1972)
  • "Europa Nostra" Prize (1993)
  • "Luigi Piccinato" Prize for Urban and Regional Planning (2005)

Publications

  • L'Abazia e il chiostro di S.Zeno Maggiore (1986)
  • San Giorgio in Valpolicella - Scavi archeologici e sistemazioni museali (1988)
  • La chiesa di S.Procolo in Verona - un recupero e una restituzione (1988)
  • Natura e archeologia al fondamento dell'architettura (2009)
gollark: Why listen to your brain? What does it do for you except consume oxygen?
gollark: A thing people apparently do because foolish human brains are foolish is "belief in belief", where you believe you believe something but don't actually believe it.
gollark: This... seems like an odd relationship with your religion, no offence?
gollark: oops.
gollark: Yes, perhaps apiological profiling *can* be misplaced.

References

  1. "Ci ha lasciato l'architetto Libero Cecchini". Verona Network Group (in Italian). 20 April 2020.
  2. Le Pont de pierre à Vérone, Ponte di Castelvecchio à Vérone (in French). Udine: University of Udine. 1982.
  3. "Morto a 100 anni Libero Cecchini, architetto simbolo di Verona - TGR Veneto". TGR. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
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