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Rada Markovic Lighting Design Studio

Rada Markovic Lighting Design Studio

Berlin, DE

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Lighting design project of Passive House - House on the Park

By radamarkoviclighting
Jan 15, '18 11:39 AM EST

HOUSE ON THE PARK, Fidenza (PR)

Promoter of the initiative / client / executive company: Montanari Costuzioni s.r.l.

Fidenza Architectural Project: Studio DELBOCA + Partners, Milano-Parma – Studio Architetti Simona e Giovanni Rossi, Fidenza

Landscape Architect: Arch. Anja Werner, Agazzano (PC)

Lighting Design: Rada Markovic Lighting Design Studio, Parma (IT) – Berlin (DE)

Passive House certification: Passive House Institute Italia – Eng. Marco Boscolo

Active House certification: Active House Italia – Arch. Samuel Buraschi

Multi-Comfort Building: Saint-Gobain Multi-Comfort Program Energetic class A4 - nearly zero-energy building

House on the Park is a multi-family residence designed and built to state-of-the-art construction standards with the goal of meeting the highest levels of design and technical quality attainable today.

Located in the urban center of Fidenza (Emilia Romagna region of Italy) in an upscale, lushly-green neighborhood, the House on the Park offers an original and expressive architectural design, functional and versatile living areas and common spaces, with attention to total comfort and well-being, reduced energy consumption and use of renewable sources, the most advanced technologies, earthquake- and burglary-resistant safety measures, integrated living and green spaces, use of healthy materials and certified working methods. In short, an approach whose aim is to establish new sector standards.
The result is a building that is truly one-of-a-kind, which brings together the most advanced building techniques while maintaining at the core of its goals the quality of materials and finishings, all of the highest aesthetic standard.

House on the Park is one of the very first Italian buildings to be certified by Active House Italia and the Passive House Institute Italia whose guidelines analyze not only energy-related aspects, but also the quality of the edifice in terms of its environmental impact, sustainability of the materials utilized, healthfulness of the living spaces and living comfort (natural light; air quality; acoustics; heat comfort; primary, renewable and final energy consumption; water consumption and eco-compatibility of materials).