Joseph Di Pasquale | |
Nationality: | Italian |
Birth Date: | 24 April 1968 |
Birth Place: | Como, Italy |
Alma Mater: | Politecnico di Milano |
Joseph Di Pasquale is an Italian architect.
Graduated with honors in architecture at Politecnico di Milano in 1991. Honorary degree in Social and Political Science, ISFOA University, Zurich 2024. In 2019 he got a "cum laude" PhD at Politecnico di Milano with the thesis: "Hybrid Modular Architecture: a strategic framework of building innovation for emerging housing behaviors in urban contexts". Since 2009 contract professor at the Faculty of Architecture at Politecnico di Milano. In 2001 he studied Film Directing in New York Film Academy. He started his professional practice JDP Architects[1] since 1992 and operates in Europe and China.
Di Pasquale claims a lack of identity in contemporary globalized architecture, considers himself an architectural storyteller and a seeker of new interpretations for the contemporary city. In the book "Dense City" he identifies a structural relationship between urban density and cultural identity in urban fabric and architecture.[2] He states "the contemporary city is no longer able to generate significant urban space because the modern architecture has abandoned the idea of "facade", which means the idea to orient the buildings, therefore the city no longer looks toward its space, but it's made by architectures that are meant to be looked upon as single sculptures or objects". Since 2008, he has produced several works on cultural dissemination with lectures and conferences in Italy, China, Russia and the United States. He has been an observer of the historical meeting between Chinese tradition and the western contemporary society in the early 21st century. In 2013, he declared to the Il Sole 24 Ore that contemporary Chinese society and architecture are "seeking the contemporary transposition of its millenary tradition[3] ". Di Pasquale is the author of many articles in "L'Arca International" magazine.[4] In his academic research he defines and investigates hybrid modular systems and concepts in terms of process innovation linked with the ongoing deep changes of lifestyles and housing habits in contemporaneity. In the further development of experimental research on the innovation of residential typologies in urban contexts, Joseph di Pasquale defines the concept of adaptive housing which inverts the relationship between user needs and the size of the accommodation: instead of the users adapting to the dimensions of the home, it is the home that expands and shrinks according to the evolving needs of individuals and families over time.[5] [6] [7] [8] In 2023 he designed the first adaptive housing building and founded a development company for its construction in Milan, financing the operation through crowdfunding.[9] [10]
He won several national and international competitions of architecture, among which the Tianjin Eco Town and the Guangzhou Circle, opened in 2013, that CNN listed in the 10 most interesting buildings that will appear in 2014 worldwide.[11] Other relevant projects are Gewiss production plant, Intercos, Polini, Valsir, Aerea headquarter, amusement park of Minitalia Leolandia in Turate (Italy), and the masterplan Choruslife Bergamo in 2016.