Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Which of These Historic Castles Has a Better Modern Staircase?

The general rule, if you expect swordplay, is to have all turns, spirals etc. go to the left as seen from below.
Because ~90% of the population is right-handed you want to keep the usurper's sword hand up against the wall as you retreat into your keep, while allowing yourself a fuller range of movement.

From Curbed:
house-in-greece_160515_05-800x534.jpg
[Left: Castle of Emporeios, Greece; Right: Medieval Italian Fortress]
The Interior Design Gods conspired today to bring us two different projects on design blogs Dezeen and Contemporist that attempt roughly the same thing: adding a modern staircase into a historic stone castle. In the rural Italian village of Villa d'Adda, architect Gianluca Gelmini added his staircase as part of his renovation of a dilapidated 12th-century fortress. And on the Greek Island of Nisyros, Giorgos Tsironis and Greg Haji Joannides added their staircase to a 17th century building perched at the top of a hill. So, we put it to you, the reader. Which do you think is the more successful staircase?
Torre-del-Borgo-Gianluca-Gelmini_dezeen_784_1.jpg
 [Medieval Italian Fortress]
house-in-greece_160515_01-800x534.jpg
[Castle of Emporeios, Nisyros, Greece]

 ...MORE

Also at Curbed:
Starter Castles, Staircase Houses, and Dogs Named Tesla