FABRIZIO DI MARCO

Researcher

email: fabrizio.dimarco@uniroma1.it
phone:



Fabrizio DI MARCO, graduated in Architecture in 1991, obtained the PhD in History of Architecture at Sapienza - University of Rome (2000) and was the holder of three research grants, two at the same University (2012 and 2015) , one at the University “G. D'Annunzio" of Chieti-Pescara (2009). Since 2020 he is RTDa Researcher in History of Architecture at the Department of History, Design and Restoration of Architecture of Sapienza - University of Rome and since 2021 he is part of the PhD board in "History, Design and Restoration of Architecture", section A - History of Architecture, at the same department. He unanimously obtained the ASN in the II band for the SC 08/E2 - Restoration and History of Architecture.
From 2004 to 2022 he was a contract professor of 27 single-subject courses, SSD Icar/18, semester-long and annual, in the Faculty of Engineering and Architecture of Sapienza University of Rome. The courses dealt with various chronological areas, both extensive (Fundamentals of the history of architecture) and specific (History of modern and contemporary architecture).
Speaker at national and international conferences and congresses, member of the Study Center for the History of Architecture, has participated in various university and institutional research groups and organized in 2016 the study conference Ostia 1916-2016 Architecture and the city in a hundred years of the sea of ​​Rome.
His scientific production mainly concerns themes of Italian architecture between the 18th and 20th centuries, examined through extensive documentary excavation campaigns. In this context, he studied themes between the end of the eighteenth century and the Napoleonic period, in particular figures of Roman architects such as Pietro Camporese, Giuseppe Camporese, Raffaele Stern, analyzing for the same period the complex dynamics that governed the institutions and offices assigned to the management of the city and of the territory, in relation to the different settings desired by the French administration. In the chronological context of the transition between the 19th and 20th centuries, he dealt with issues of urban history, from Giulio Podesti's Policlinico Umberto I to the first project of the University City at Castro Pretorio and studied unedited aspects of the teaching and design activity of Gustavo Giovannoni and Marcello Piacentini, also devoting himself to studying the works of some of their pupils (Vittorio Morpurgo, Giuseppe Capponi, Arturo Hoerner, Ignazio Guidi, Cesare Pascoletti). In all of his scientific production he is the author of 319 publications which include 5 monographs, 43 essays in miscellaneous volumes, 22 articles in class A journals, 7 articles in scientific journals, 19 essays in dictionaries and 223 catalogue-review cards.

Research products

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