Authors’ Comment
The ground floor was thought as a diversion of this house, the studios being oriented towards the semi-public garden and separated by a column held wall from the expositional spaces which face the public square between the fortification wall and the proposed building. The first floor recedes its walls from the columns in order to create classrooms and hallways. The second floor finds the columns freed of any additional structure, thought as a place of gathering within a generous atelier. The final level finds the jury hall, free of columns and under a vaulted roof, a piano-nobile which crowns the school.