... you are all so good that we can't keep up with you and we had missed these two: we are proud to retrieve the achievements of two Politecnico Alumni who are tireless creatives.
"It is always an honour to receive an award and, in this case, from an editorial office of international prestige such as Wallpaper", comments Ilaria Marelli, designer and Architecture Alumna, recipient of the Wallpaper Design Awards 2022 in the Best Outdoor Living category for her couch: Calipso, “the floating sofa”, designed for Ethimo.
Owner of the design studio that bears her name, Marelli has won many national and international awards.She is involved in all aspects of design: art direction, product design, strategy consulting, interiors and fittings, design and social innovation. With an eye also on social impact: she told her story on stage at the Politecnico di Milano Alumni Convention, which hosted her in 2015. I've never really left the Poli, it's a great passion of mine", commented the Alumna, (who also taught Design Innovation right here). Watch the video of Ilaria Marelli at the Politecnico di Milano Alumni Convention..
Going back a few months, we also have another piece of good news: among the the top10 architects & landscape architects under 35 is young Alberto Proserpio, architect and civil engineer who won the NIB 2021 Award. Since 2009, the NIB, NewItalianBlood, award has been presented every year to the ten best designers (or studios with at least one Italian partner) working in Italy or abroad and is an important observatory on new Italian talent in the world of architecture. Born in 1990, Proserpio graduated from the Politecnico in 2015 and lives in Warsaw, where he is the Architecture Department Manager of Arup Poland and where he founded his own studio just last year.
“My architecture is inspired by the context in which it is placed and is characterized by clear, simple and rational forms. It's an architecture aware of itself and of the environment" commented Proserpio.
The winners of the Intellectual Property Award (IPA), the competition for Italian technological patents resulting from public research organised by the Ministry of Economic Development in collaboration with Netval (Network for Research Valorisation), were announced at the Italian Pavilion of Expo Dubai.
A total of 217 innovative patents developed by Universities, Research Centres and Scientific Hospitalisation and Treatment Institutions were considered for the competition; and 35 of these were selected for the final stage in Dubai.
At the end of the process, the award-winning projects were those able to propose innovations with the greatest economic and social impact, in 7 technological areas of reference for the global ecological and digital transition: agritech and agrifood, cybersecurity, green tech, life science, future mobility, aerospace, and alternative energy.
The winning patents of the Politecnico di Milano were:
HYBRIS: STRUCTURAL BATTERIES FOR ELECTRIC AIRCRAFT - Winner in the "aerospace" sector
Developed by a research group consisting of professors and students of the Department of Aerospace Science and Technology of the Politecnico di Milano, this is the design of a hybrid-electric aircraft with structural batteries. Structural batteries are innovative multifunctional composite materials that can withstand mechanical loads while simultaneously storing electrical energy. Both the fuselage and the outside of the wings of the HYBRIS are made of structural batteries.
The inventors: Andrea Bernasconi, Fabio Biondani, Luca Capoferri, Alberto Favier, Federico Gualdoni, Carlo Riboldi, Lorenzo Trainelli, Carmen Velarde Lopez de Ayala
SINERGY, METAL-POLYSULFIDE FLOW CELL BATTERY - Winner in the "alternative energy" sector
Developed by the Department of Chemistry, Materials and Chemical Engineering, the invention consists of a metal-polysulfide flow cell battery that uses inexpensive, abundant and non-toxic materials. These characteristics are crucial for application of the technology for storing stationary-type energy that can support the intermittent production of renewable energy. Another advantage is the possibility of making use of sulphur-rich waste, creating a virtuous circle of circular economy (read more about Sinergy here).
Three other projects of the Politecnico di Milano were among the finalists of the competition:
“Composite propellant manufacturing process based on deposition and light-activated polymerization for solid rocket motors” – in collaboration with the Politecnico di Torino. Selected in the "aerospace" section.
It is an innovative process for manufacturing composite solid propellant grains for jet propellers.
“I3D: drug-eluting intraocular device”. Selected in the "life science" section.
This device elutes doses of injectable, bioabsorbable drugs at predetermined times. Developed for the ophthalmic industry, it can also be used in other areas.
“Lift Energy”. Selected in the "alternative energies" section.
The invention introduces a fast and scalable method to create a protective film for lithium batteries that can improve their performance.
The year 2022 began with new accolades for the Politecnico di Milano, with the Financial Times Global MBA Ranking, cplacing its Master in Business Administration (MBA) – forming part of the specialist training of the MIP-Politecnico di Milano Graduate School of Business – in 91st place at the global level and in 2nd place at the European level, considering technical universities alone.
Vittorio Chiesa and Federico Frattini, respectively President and Dean of the MIP Politecnico di Milano stated:
"For an increasing number of students worldwide, our Full Time Master in Business Administration serves as a springboard for a truly fulfilling career. The quality of our first-rate training path has been acclaimed by the authoritative Financial Times ranking, further confirming what we have always believed: that the decision to follow an MBA is essential for the professional growth of a corporate leader"
The reasons for our Master’s success are threefold:
1. VALUE FOR MONEY
The Politecnico takes sixth place in terms of value for money, Moreover, in the categories relating to post-MBA career success, the percentage increase in salary three years after graduation has increased from 76% to 94% over 2021 data.
2. INTERNATIONAL MOBILITY
In terms of international mobility - taking into account the students’ citizenship and where they worked pre-MBA, immediately post-MBA and three years later - the MIP reaches 28th place, confirming the excellent quality of its Alumni, recognized both in Italy and internationally.
3. CSR
Finally, the master ranks 30th on a global level for the proportion of the total training dedicated to CSR topics (ethics, green competitiveness, social responsibility).
“In a dynamic market that continuously offers new challenges, companies should be guided by managers having the best possible skills to ensure competitiveness for their business, as well as motivation and growth for their employees. Having a diploma issued by a world-class business school - one of the few that can boast having the three top business school accreditations - is certainly an incentive to invest in one’s future”.
The fundraising campaign 10 students | 10 stories , organized by the School of Management of the Politecnico di Milano, wants to help 10 deserving students in need to realize their dream: to study management engineering at the Politecnico di Milano. Donate now .
Today we would like to tell you about 7 Politecnico women who made history in their professional sectors of engineering, architecture and design. Seven Politecnico women who changed the vision of their chosen professions.
Premise: this is not a competition! This page is intended not as a podium, but as an invitation to reflect together. Since 1913, with the first female graduate Gaetanina Calvi, all the Politecnico Alumnae have become a fundamental part of the cultural transformation that has seen women deservedly (and sometimes with difficulty) take their places at the desks of the Poli and elsewhere. Every Politecnico female student has made and continues to make a difference (we discuss this in the book ALUMNAE - Engineers and Technologies).
Although in 2021 Italy climbed from 76th to 63rd place in the world rankings according to the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap report, when it comes to this gender gap our country still has a great deal of room for improvement (for more details: 2021 data from Il Sole 24 ore).
This is one of the reasons why, starting from the assumption that schools are the first real arena in the fight to narrow the gender gap, the Politecnico has joined the ENHANCE program (read more here) and promoted Gender POP – Pari Opportunità Politecniche (Polytechnic Equal Opportunities), which includes initiatives such as Girls@Polimi scholarships, set up to reduce the gender gap in STEM fields and create a more inclusive environment.
Returning to our female Politecnico students who have made history: names you probably already know, some famous and others less so, but nonetheless important for having challenged the rules of the society in which they lived.
GAETANINA CALVI - CIVIL ENGINEERING ALUMNA
In 1913 she was the first female student to graduate from the Politecnico: the civil engineer Gaetanina Calvi was the only woman in her class. There were 156 graduates that year (149 of whom were engineers). Half a century had passed since the Politecnico di Milano was founded in 1863.
Her professional achievements include the design of the new wing of the Institute for the Blind in Milan, originally intended as a retirement home in 1925, in which she was involved personally, working with the architect Faravelli. In the following years, she taught mathematics and science at this same institute, which only began to give her monetary compensation in 1928 (source).
After the trailblazer Gaetanina Calvi, Maria Artini,the first female Italian electrotechnician, graduated from the Politecnico in 1918, while in 1928, Carla Maria Bassi and Elvira Morassi Bernardis were the first women to graduate in architecture (we discuss this in the book ALUMNAE - Engineers and Technologies).
Born in 1937, in 1962 she was the first woman in Italy to graduate - with full marks - in Aeronautical Engineering. In this regard, she says:
"I was one of the first girls in Italy to attend scientific high school, which was then a predominantly male environment. In my class, there were only five girls out of a total of 52 students. Then, when it came time to enrol at university, my parents wanted me to become a mathematician, but I preferred aeronautical engineering. What really interested me was understanding how things work in reality".
After her studies, Ercoli-Finzi stayed on at the Politecnico as a lecturer (she taught rational mechanics and aerospace mechanics to many Alumni who will read this page) and ricercatrice. Her discoveries and experiments made her a name for herself in the international aeronautical sector. She collaborates with NASA and with the Italian (ASI) and European (ESA) space agencies.
Her most famous initiatives include coordinating and participating in several space missions, most notably the Rosetta space mission, which began in 2004 and ended in 2016 and had the aim of closely studying the 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet. Read more (Read more).
Having always been active in promoting and supporting women in what are considered “male” environments, in a recent interview with Sky she defends the importance of encouraging more women to pursue scientific research:
"I really realised," she said, "that for many women I was a source of inspiration, the girls who are studying now thought that the satisfaction I transmitted for my work was a valid reason to copy and do what I do. It is a great responsibility, even our words and attitudes convey the passion for the values we have upheld. [...] In my day women like me were stars, isolated stars, Sirius rather than Aldebaran, now there are constellations. They represent constellations because they manage to form a mass; there is still much to do but we will get there.”
CINI BOERI - ARCHITECTURE ALUMNA
Cini Boeri graduated from the Politecnico in 1951, with a two-month-old baby in a pram and a job offer from Gio Ponti in her pocket. After several collaborations, in 1963 she opened a studio and her career took off with projects, teaching and research, her focus on houses, private flats and the design of everyday objects that were not "owned but used".
Credits: Maria Mulas
"When I design a house for a married couple, for example, I always suggest adding an extra room. They always ask me: "for guests?". But no! Not for guests. Because if one evening one of you has a cold they can go and sleep in another room, for example. One should be able to choose, to know that one can go to sleep with one's partner, but that one can also decide not to do so, without affecting life as a couple. I think it would be very educational to teach young people that when they get together as a couple it is not obligatory to share a bed, it is a choice. It’s much nicer.”
She is known for her democratic approach to architecture and design:
"This is a habit we picked up at the Politecnico. Our teaching there was very open minded; I don't know if it's still like that today!"
Gae Aulenti graduated in 1953 and began her career as a designer at a time of profound evolution in the Italian architectural culture. After leaving the Politecnico, she approached two of the period’s main leaders in theoretical elaboration of architecture: the magazine Casabella Continuità, directed by Ernesto Nathan Rogers, with whom she worked between 1955 and 1965, and the IUAV – Istituto Universitario di Architettura of Venezia, where she worked from 1960 as assistant to Giuseppe Samonà.
For Gae Aulenti architecture is always a collective, never individual gesture,, something to be shared with a community. This is why many of her most famous works are public spaces: among many others, the Museum of Modern Art and the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, the Institute of Italian Culture in Tokyo, the renovation of Palazzo Grassi in Venice, the former papal stables at the Quirinale and Piazza Cadorna in Milan.
Ghettoisation in general makes me furious. And I get particularly angry when I ear people say: I needed an architect and I chose a female one.”
For Aulenti, architecture looks ahead, beyond the gender conditions from which it must free itself and towards a new destiny to be designed and built with knowledge. She rejects the idea of the "woman architect", which she finds ghettoising. She sees talking about architecture and design in terms of gender as reinforcement of the idea that these two specialities for women are something that limits them to surfaces and decoration, while the heart and skeleton of the project are reserved for male designers.
Anna Castelli Ferrieri began studying architecture at the Politecnico in 1938 and was immediately attracted by the avantgarde and Bauhaus. Over the years she studied under Franco Albini, from whom she learned the rationalist approach. She then worked in his studio where she came into contact with architects Piero Bottoni and Ernesto Nathan Rogers, who were involved in the reconstruction of Milan.
In 1942, she graduated in architecture and left Milan because of the German occupation, only to return in 1946, when she became editor-in-chief of the architecture magazine Casabella and founded her own studio.
In 1966, together with her husband Giulio Castelli and his company Kartell, she became the first woman to devote herself to to industrial design and the production of everyday objects and furniture made of plastic: some of the most famous are the 4870 stackable chair (winner of the Compasso d'Oro) and the 4970/84 furniture, modular storage solutions for the home, designed according to her principle that everyday objects should have functional person-centric design.
"If a product is unsuccessful, it is because the architect made a mistake, not because the public doesn't understand. The architect must only—but always—answer two questions: "What is needed?" and "What is missing?".
LILIANA GRASSI
''Architecture gives me a sense of being, it is a synonym of freedom, a freedom that must be constantly monitored and protected through the study of history, through an accurate research, through the loneliness of imagination, through disinterested reflection... "
Alumna in architecture in 1947, Liliana Grassi graduated together with Ambrogio Annoni and assisted the latter for several years, both at university and on the building site. Years later she started teaching Restoration of monuments. Eminent figure in the Lombard and Italian cultural landscape, Liliana Grassi held various prestigious institutional positions, gaining recognition above all for her great practical and theoretical contribution in the field of restoration. Her most important achievement is the restoration in the name of philological rigour, love and respect for the artistic object of the ancient Ospedale Maggiore di Milanodestroyed by bombings in 1943 and then adapted to house one of the seats of the Università degli Studi.
Credits: Sara Calabrò (a cura di) “Dal Politecnico di Milano protagonisti e grandi progetti”
Source: “Dal Politecnico di Milano protagonisti e grandi progetti”
FRANCA HELG
"Details are essential for the definition of the whole, a detail can determine a project and for sure characterize it. The overall result of the work is connected to details, in terms of design and quality. Details affect the spatial and volumetric values of what is built"
After graduation in 1945 she associated with , Franca Helg , with whom she collaborated until his death. In her designing work, Franca Helg has always shown meticulous attention to details, fusing modernity and classicism, rationality and creativity, giving life to works characterized by elegance and simplicity, unlinked to the cultural trends of the moment. And we must not forget industrial design: Helg created vases, handles, chairs, suspension lamps, desk lamps, floor lamps and the Primavera armchair in cane and wicker.
Credits: Sara Calabrò (a cura di) “Dal Politecnico di Milano protagonisti e grandi progetti”
The teaching of Architectural Composition represented an important part of her life: earlier at the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia (IUAV), then at the Politecnico di Milano, where she became full professor in 1984.
By supporting the GIRLS @ POLIMI project you can contribute together with other donors to create scholarships to support girls enrolling in engineering degree courses with low female attendance. Donate now .
In recent days, one of the indisputable stars of Italian manufacturing, the Vespa Piaggio. made the national press. Like a Renaissance beauty, it has been reproduced using Lego bricks, in the round and in full scale, by a modern sculptor: Riccardo Zangelmi, LEGO Certified Professional. It was the talk of many newspapers, including Il Sole 24 Ore, La Stampa, ANSA and Wired.
Lego and Piaggio have defined it as an “engineering masterpiece”: it is made up of 110,000 pieces in 11 different colours, weighs 93.3 kg and was assembled in 320 hours of work.
The occasion was the market launch of the new Lego Vespa 125 #10298 set, which represents the Vespa 125 from 1965. A partnership between Lego and Piaggio that celebrates the Vespa’s cutting-edge engineering and style. Launched in 1946 and produced in Italy at the Piaggio factory in Pontedera, 19 million Vespas have been made to date for worldwide distribution (a number that continues to rise today with the focus on electric).
The set, made up 1,106 bricks, is of “apparent medium difficulty”, as Il Sole writes, but is not as easy as it seems (it is, in fact, recommended for adult enthusiasts). Once assembled, the miniature Vespa measures 22 centimetres in height, 35 cm in length and 12 cm in width.
Marco Lambri, Alumnus of Politecnico di Milano (Architecture) and Head of Piaggio Group Design Center explains:
“Working in collaboration with Lego has been an extraordinary experience as it has brought together two dreams, Lego and Vespa, sharing the infinite expressive possibilities they can offer their fansTwo extraordinary brands capable of spanning different eras and always succeeding in reinventing themselves because the ability to combine and construct is in their very DNA. As a designer, the challenge was to reconcile the rounded forms of the Vespa with those of Lego bricks, and I think that challenge has definitely been won”.
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