6533b854fe1ef96bd12ae205

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Diagnostics for the knowledge: the case of the tower of Palazzo Termine Pietragliata in Palermo (Italy)

Federica FernandezCaterina GattusoMassimiliano Marafon PecoraroAnna Maria Palermo

subject

Architectural engineeringEngineeringTowerMicro analysisbusiness.industryContext (language use)ConservationMediterraneanFortificationsMedium scaleVisual artsBuilt HeritageModern ageBuilt heritageArchitecturebusinessTowerDiagnostics

description

[EN] Developing a methodological approach is crucial to assess the state of conservation of a monument, starting from the overall analysis, progressively moving from small to medium scale and reaching the grand scale at the end. Considering the territory, causes are investigated in order to understand the propensities, as well as considering a single monument, evidences are carefully read to assess the overall conditions, that will be lately detailed by the analysis on materials and their degradation. The object of this study is the tower of the Palazzo Pietragliata in Palermo, one of the most important examples of the late Gothic civil architecture in Sicily. The Palace, built in 1473 by Prince of Baucina, possesses an imposing crenellated tower, whose two levels are connected by an original internal staircase “cargol” like, an extraordinary example of the influence of Catalan Gothic architecture in Sicily. Some micro samples were taken from the tower structure, made entirely of blocks of biocalcarenite, on which diagnostic investigations were performed in the laboratory. In the context of a more comprehensive interdisciplinary study, this paper illustrates the specific results of the micro analysis conducted in the laboratory and particularly those made through the use of the SEM and biological investigations, also paying attention to the pathologies detected on the battlements of the tower. These forms of decay, for their variety, represent a significant example that allows to properly illustrate the adopted study method.

10.4995/fortmed2015.2015.1760https://dx.doi.org/10.4995/FORTMED2015.2015.1760