|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Answer from VicenzaStand:HOUSING AND LIVING UNITSMario Manuzzato, Enrico Messina, Gianpietro Rigotto *The second year of SoLiLL group research will be marked by two different stages, while the attention paid to the individual ways of learning will be regular.
THE HOUSE AND ITS HISTORYThere is no significant evidence of ancient houses in Italy. They were made
of poor, quickly perishable building material, like cob and timber, for the most
part. From the Middle Ages on, each country shows its own peculiarities since the social and economic background has been changed by the arising middle class and wealthy peasantry. No more courtyards, but kitchen gardens surround the house that grows in height rather than in width. Its outside look changes and is adorned with balconies, however, still without toilet facilities and water supply inside the house. |