Directory
Architects Directory 2009
Models
SPG architects
USA
Studiomama
United Kingdom
Platform 5 Architects
United Kingdom
Liddicoat & Goldhill
United Kingdom
Gort Scott
United Kingdom
Jürg Schmid Architekten
Switzerland
Group 8
Switzerland
Marge Arkitektur
Sweden
H Arquitectes
Spain
Moomoo Architects
Poland
MIR Arkitektur
Norway
Andrew Lister Architect
New Zealand
Stad Architects
Japan
Cell Space Architects
Japan
Antonino Cardillo
Italy
Tierney Haynes
Ireland
Anagram Architects
India
Divercity Architects
Greece
H20 Architectes
France
Phorm Architecture + Design
Australia
ALA Architects LTD
Finland
Reigo & Bauer
Canada
Bruno VanBesien architect
Belgium
X Architekten
Austria
Propeller Z
Austria

Antonino Cardillo
Italy
BIOGRAPHY AND PRACTICE
A born and bred Sicilian with a degree from the Palermo University, studying under architecture critic and historian Iolanda Lima, Antonino Cardillo set up his own office in 2004 in Rome. Hugely influenced by his professor – "I learned that in space, relations between things are more important than the things themselves", he says – he also feels that history is one of his bigger inspirations, believing that without memory it is impossible to build for the present. Additionally he sees good architecture as an element which can unite people, rather than divide them.
THE HOUSE
Inspired by large private garden fences spread across Marrakech's dry plains, Cardillo's residential proposal is called Lime and Limpid Green House. Exploring for his design the history of courtyard houses – from the palaces of Akhenaton, to works by Mies van der Rohe - he was challenged to define the notions of "external" and "internal" as well as the relationship between them. The result was a house with a large patio, which reminds the cities of the pre-modern Mediterranean.
THE FUTURE
He is currently designing a private residence in Melbourne for an Australian client. Cardillo feels that often architecture is too intimate a procedure to share and explain, so he cherry picks his clients and the projects he will work on – even though he admits that his architecture may not be right for everyone. "In my houses the interactions with environmental events such as sun, rain, wind and sounds are more important than objects or furniture" he explains.






