The use of dark metamorphic stones in architecture is common through the centuries. Such materials were traditionally employed mainly for decorative purposes, both indoor and outdoor, and for architectural cladding. Unfortunately, after prolonged outdoor exposure their characteristic surface colour tends to fade. In the framework of the pilot conservation site of the Renaissance façade of the Cathedral of Monza (Italy), a thorough study of the features and state of conservation of an example of this lithotype, Oira stone,was conducted. This stonewas employed during the 19th century restoration of the façade, and the on-site evaluation of the stone blocks after more than a century of exposure showed a distinctive chromatic alteration. The ...
The plasters of the XVI cent. Cavallerizza Courtyard in the Ducal Palace in Mantua (Italy), designed...
In the fall of 2007, the Modena City Council started a preliminary diagnostic campaign to create a s...
Textural, physical–mechanical, and mineralogical–chemical properties influence the degradation of bu...
The use of dark metamorphic stones in architecture is common through the centuries. Such materials w...
For some study cases (the Cathedral of Modena, Italy, XII-XIV century; the Ducal Palace in Mantua, I...
Among the natural stones used in historic buildings in Tuscany, sandstone and marble are the most wi...
Preliminary studies are an imperative when determining the impact of conservation treatments on hist...
The conservation study of the Roman Heritage in Aosta (Italy) is aimed at understanding the causes o...
The Angera stone is a sedimentary Triassic dolostone mainly composed of dolomite, which was widely e...
The dark grey Breccia di Billiemi and the Ammonitico Rosso of Piana degli Albanesi, two coloured sto...
The conservation of contemporary buildings is particularly challenging as only few information about...
The deterioration process of historical building is progressive and irreversible, and the timing and...
The degradation of the cultural heritage begins immediately after its implementation and the speed o...
The plasters of the XVI cent. Cavallerizza Courtyard in the Ducal Palace in Mantua (Italy), designed...
In the fall of 2007, the Modena City Council started a preliminary diagnostic campaign to create a s...
Textural, physical–mechanical, and mineralogical–chemical properties influence the degradation of bu...
The use of dark metamorphic stones in architecture is common through the centuries. Such materials w...
For some study cases (the Cathedral of Modena, Italy, XII-XIV century; the Ducal Palace in Mantua, I...
Among the natural stones used in historic buildings in Tuscany, sandstone and marble are the most wi...
Preliminary studies are an imperative when determining the impact of conservation treatments on hist...
The conservation study of the Roman Heritage in Aosta (Italy) is aimed at understanding the causes o...
The Angera stone is a sedimentary Triassic dolostone mainly composed of dolomite, which was widely e...
The dark grey Breccia di Billiemi and the Ammonitico Rosso of Piana degli Albanesi, two coloured sto...
The conservation of contemporary buildings is particularly challenging as only few information about...
The deterioration process of historical building is progressive and irreversible, and the timing and...
The degradation of the cultural heritage begins immediately after its implementation and the speed o...
The plasters of the XVI cent. Cavallerizza Courtyard in the Ducal Palace in Mantua (Italy), designed...
In the fall of 2007, the Modena City Council started a preliminary diagnostic campaign to create a s...
Textural, physical–mechanical, and mineralogical–chemical properties influence the degradation of bu...