The old station was small and crowded, and the new one should be a relief. But the dominant impression is hardly one of comfort. The new station is huge. Almost comically so. Like an aircraft carrier, or the hovering hunk of high-tech metal from outer space in the final scenes of Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Then, as one can see in the photo (right, center of photo), in July a fire consumed a portion of the new structure. The authorities are still investigating (don't hold your breath).
We'll have to wait to experience fully the new Tiburtina station. But one part of the new building appealed to us: a colorful, angular box at the front of the station, positioned in playful contrast to the glowering mass behind it. Almost as if the architect had had second thoughts and decided to include a day-care center.
Back in our apartment, we were shocked to pick up one of our architecture books, Rationalism and Architecture in Italy during Fascism (a translation from the Italian) and see, on the cover, a design for a building--not identified elsewhere in the book---not unlike the fanciful cube at Tiburtina. Had we not seen this drawing and seen it marked as an example of rationalism, we would have labeled it postmodern, if only for its complex window treatments, the use of the pink and blue (the colors of infancy), and the presentation of an unusual angularity that undermines a message of stark modernity. While cut from the same cloth, the Tiburtina box goes a step further--and lifts our spirits.
Bill
[A reminder from Dianne - when itineraries need to change (e.g., because the station with its plaques is torn down), Updates are provided in an online document, and thru the ebook versions of Rome the Second Time. Updates can be accessed with a click on the link on the blog at right, or right here.]
Title: The Station(s) at Tiburtina
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author 1:05 AM
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author 1:05 AM