Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Arturbain International Student Competition

The theme of the 2011 edition of the Arturbain International Student Competition was “Putting forgotten urban voids to good use”.


Following a recent tradition, the Pantheon Institute Architectural Design Studio Course asked its students to participate in the competition as the initial large scale urban analysis and design exercise of the course program. The students were asked to investigate a series of urban voids extending from the areas surrounding the Colosseum to the architectural design project site in the Celio neighbourhood.

We are proud to announce that two of our project teams from the Spring 2011 semester were shortlisted by an international jury of experts in the group of the thirty finalists who will compete for the Arturbain Award. The winners will be announced in Paris this coming May.

We would like to congratulate the entire Fall 2010 and Spring 2011 student group for their excellent work at both the urban and architectural scales.

Our special congratulations go to GROUP 3 - Angela DeGeorge (U. Mass.), Michelle Greene(Penn State), George Konel (Penn State) and Benton Mahan (Penn State) for their proposal "Reinterpreting Boundaries: Merging Social and Historical Layers"; and to GROUP 7 - Matt Graham (Penn State), Kristen Massenburg (Penn State), Susan Mollasalehi (Woodbury) and Blaze Rzewnicki (Woodbury) for their proposal "Communal Thread".


Professor David Sabatello

Giochiamo a bowling!

The Pantheon Institute organized a bowling night for the students on Wednesday, March 23rd.


Once the students were done with the Wednesday architectural studio session, they came to the Pantheon office to meet me and we headed together to Piazza San Silvestro to take the bus; we walked along streets full of tourists and Romans going around for shopping. We took bus n.80 and we reached our destination in just 10 minutes: as a matter of fact, we didn’t go to the Brunswick bowling as we did last year with the Spring 2010 students, but we decided to go to a place that is definitely smaller and not as fancy as the Brunswick but that’s absolutely easier to reach…and everyone liked it! This bowling is in Viale Regina Margherita, very close to the university “La Sapienza”.

Once we got there, we met Alessia, the student from Roma Tre who is working as an intern at the Pantheon Institute , and her friend Silvia. So we went inside and, after the students got the bowling shoes, they started playing. Despite being a little discouraged at first, the girls totally rocked the competition so much so that they scored more points than most of the boys! Between a game and another, Americans and Italians had a good chat…using both languages!

This activity was once again a very nice opportunity for our students to have a little conversation, relax for a couple of hours I good company and get to know new areas of Rome!

Monday, March 28, 2011

Le Sagre


If you really want to see how the Italians in rural Italy live, your best bet is to head to the nearest sagra.

A sagra (from the Latin “sacrum”, meaning sacred) is a festival held in the open air: most of them are held in small towns, usually in the main piazza, and they usually celebrate a food that is typically harvested at the time of the festival.

Many Italian Sagre (plural of sagra) are in conjunction with a Saint's feast day or based on historic events and often include processions with people dressed in period costume, contests between neighborhoods of the town, flag throwers, food and fireworks, musical bands.

Festivals can be quite specific. They can celebrate local specialties, i.e. truffles or wild boar, or a specific dish or preparation. You generally sit at long comunal tables and the food is usually brought to you. The food at a Sagra costs much less than it does in a restaurant.

There are enough festivals throughout the year in Italy that it’s a food idea to check whether something is going on when you are here: with all the saint days and local food festivals, something is being celebrated somewhere in Italy on every day of the year.

Among the most famous in Rome and surroundings: Sagra dell’Uva at Marino (Festival of Grapes – October); Sagra della Porchetta at Ariccia (Festival of roasted flavoured pig); Sagra della Castagna at Soriano del Cimino (Festival of Chestnut).

Do you want to know more? Go to http://www.festivalsinitaly.com/main-events-in-italy.html! Or simply do not miss our weekly messages and notes we post in studios and offices: you will have all the necessary details on the current sagra and information on how to get there!

Monday, March 21, 2011

New Soles

Unlike most places in America that are paved smooth with asphalt, all of Rome's streets are cobblestones. Not only does it take some time getting used to walking on the uneven surface, but it takes a toll on one's shoes! Before coming to Rome, I received a new pair of boots for Christmas. I wear them almost every day and as you can imagine, the heals of my boots have worn down to reveal the material underneath the rubber sole. Today, I decided that I would ask the Pantheon office assistant if there is a place nearby that I would be able to go to to resole my shoes. The woman said yes and circled on a map where one was located. She also wrote me down a phrase that I needed to say to the cobbler. I decided that I would then go to the cobbler to get an estimate of the price it was cost to repair my shoes. I walked into the small store down a side street and said to the man what I had been told to say: Devo resvolare la scarpa. The cobbler looks at me as if I need to continue saying something and I just stand there smiling. I'm then confused and I say, "Parlo italiano un po." That's when I realize he speaks no English. He's now talking to me in Italian. I'm confused and try showing him the heals of my boots. In Italian I ask how much: Quanto costa? He replies by saying, "Dieci euros." In my head I am saying, "Crap...I know how to count! How much is that? Oh right, that means ten." He continues to say "Domani" which means tomorrow. I'm sure he thought I was going to try to leave my boots with him today without having another pair of shoes to walk out of the store in! I replied with "si" and tried to think of how to say I will return tomorrow, yet all I could think was how to say it in Spanish. Frazzled, I said in English that I will be back tomorrow. I thanked him ("Grazie mille") and left the store. Tomorrow, I hope to drop off my shoes...in the meantime, I am going to be practicing my Italian.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Picture of the Month - February 2011


Here is the winning picture of the February 2011 photo competition!
Congratulations to Theresa Garrety! If you want to see all of the pictures that were submitted by the Pantheon Institute students for the competition, check out our activities photopage: http://www.pantheon-institute.com/photopage.php.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Shall we dance?

Last night we went to Fonclea, a beautiful music pub in the city centre. Born in 1977, this music house still mantains its soft atmosphere and nice staff, and organizes music events promoting young bands and reproposing ever-lasting successes and covers.

Mondays are dedicated to Greg, a comic actor and singer who, in collaboration with jazz singer Antonella Aprea, filled the night with the rhythm of swing. The orchestra played songs by Sinatra, Gershwin, and the best of ’30s, ’40s and ‘50s.

A wonderful occasion to chill out, sing along, and have fun with the comical sketches Greg played with Antonella! Definitely a great evening, and definitely yesterday night two great voices made the old swing live again.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011


We were happy to receive the news of the recent Tulane School of Architecture student work exhibit from the 2010 Rome Program at the Pantheon Institute. The installation looks great and the work by the students even better. I cannot but confirm the feeling of accomplishment which characterized our common experience on both the academic and human levels, and am looking forward to confirming such high standards in the forthcoming future.
Prof. Arch. David Sabatello
You can take a look at some of the pictures taken by the TSA students during their stay in Rome on our activities photopage: http://216.14.127.190/photopage.php.