Mónica Bertolino
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Mónica Bertolino (born July 12, 1957), is an Argentine architect, owner of the Estudio Bertolino-Barrado architecture office, dedicated to the production of architectural, urban, and landscape design works of various scales from 1981 to date, developed in the Argentine provinces of Córdoba, Santa Fe, San Juan, Jujuy, and in Spain. The studio obtained the Diploma to the Merit - Architecture 2002-2006 in Visual Arts in the Konex Awards 2012.[1][2]
Biography
Mónica Bertolino was born in Córdoba, Argentina. Her father was an architect. She entered the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism of the National University of Córdoba during the last year of the Taller Total and going through critical moments of the Argentine dictatorship of 1976: assemblies. She graduated in 1981.[3] She recognizes as references Santiago Kunzle, for his integral way of conceiving design, César Naselli for his theoretical contributions to the project and Miguel Ángel Roca for his great trajectory and the literary references he used in his classes.
Miguel Ángel Roca invites her to work in his studio in her last studies year and there Bertolino meets Marina Waisman. She later participates in the Postgraduate course Preservación de ella (about the preservation of Latin American architecture), with the attendance of personalities as Silvia Arango and Ruth Verde Zein.
In Miguel Ángel Roca's studio meets Carlos Barrado, her life and work companion. In partnership with him, she has created single-family and collective dwellings, commercial premises, institutional buildings, proposals for urban intervention, and urban and landscape design. She has participated in numerous competitions (private and public, national, provincial, international). The works by Bertolino and Barrado stand out for their great sensitivity to the landscape and the materials[4] and for the understanding of the constructive possibilities of the environment in which they work.
The recovery of public spaces in the urban periphery of Cordoba during the administration of Mayor Rubén Martí between 1991-1999, whose Director of Green Zones was Carlos Barrado, is relevant. Parks and small squares are resolved with great inventiveness by reusing elements that were in disuse in the municipal sheds.
She is also a professor at the National University of Cordoba and the Catholic University of Cordoba. Since 2009, together with Margarita Trlin, she has coordinated Redsur, an inter-university cooperation project to explore the potentialities offered by certain places in the city, awaiting its urban articulation and putting into meaning.
Awards and recognitions
- 2002: Vitruvio Award of the MNBA
- 2002: Honorable Mention in the Bienal Panamericana de Quito with the Jardín botánico de la municipalidad de Córdoba
- 2008: Mention in the CPAU
- 2010: Prize in the Bienal Iberoamericana de Arquitectura y Urbanismo Panorama de Obras for the Farm at Capilla del Monte (BIAU)[5]
- 2010: Nominated for the Marcus Prize in Milwaukee
- 2011: 3rd prize in the ARQ Clarín Awards for the urban project Pasarela Las Varillas and Honorable Mention for the works Casas Múltiples and Casa en Potrero de Garay
- 2012: Diploma to the Merit - Architecture 2002-2006 in Visual Arts in the Konex Awards.
Bibliography
- Adria, Miquel. New Latin American Landscape Arquitecture, 2009. ISBN 9788425223099. Nasisbooks
- Montaner, Josep Maria. Arquitectura y crítica en Latinoamérica. Nobukosa, 2011
- Gómez Luque, Mariano. Doce arquitectos contemporáneos. Nobukosa, 2011
References
- ^ Factory, Troop Software. "Estudio Bertolino - Barrado | Fundación Konex". www.fundacionkonex.org (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-12-18.
- ^ "Pabellones de Granja / Bertolino Barrado Arquitectos". Plataforma Arquitectura (in Spanish). 2009-04-14. Retrieved 2019-12-18.
- ^ "Bertolino, Mónica — Universidad Nacional de Córdoba". 2010-12-13. Archived from the original on 2010-12-13. Retrieved 2019-12-18.
- ^ "Vivir la granja". www.lanacion.com.ar (in Spanish). 2008-06-25. Retrieved 2019-12-18.
- ^ "Seleccionados VII BIAU 2010, Medellín-Colombia". ArchDaily Perú (in Spanish). 2010-11-04. Retrieved 2019-12-18.