The problem of the conservation or transformation of industrial complexes is not a question simply of decay, but also of the significance and values that an architectural work acquires (or loses) over time. In the collective imagination, there is nothing that suggests featureless and blighted suburbs so much as the concept of "prefabricated architecture". Drabness, seriality, reinforced concrete produced cheaply, architectural structures that are the fruit of chance or speculation, create a series of preconceptions which disturb, and sometimes distort, our reading and understanding of works that draw their strength from experimentation, variation in repetition, construction techniques and modular coordination. In Italy, certain industrial d...