Skip to main content

Pilosio underlines its ambitions with international award

Italian formwork manufacturer Pilosio underlined its global ambitions with the presentation of its third ‘Building Peace’ international building awards to architect Cameron Sinclair, co-founder of Architects for Humanity, which helps re-build sustainable communities post-disaster.
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Pilosio MD Dario Roustayan presents the firm’s ‘Building Peace’ award to architect Cameron Sinclair.
Italian formwork manufacturer 7163 Pilosio underlined its global ambitions with the presentation of its third ‘Building Peace’ international building awards to architect Cameron Sinclair, co-founder of Architects for Humanity, which helps re-build sustainable communities post-disaster.

“Up until three years ago, we were extremely focussed on the Italian market,” said Pilosio managing director Dario Roustayan. “Today 80% of our product is exported, so we are becoming more and more international.

“We have changed our business model by changing our focus, which previously was distribution and production and is now engineering and consultancy.”

Klaus Dittrich, CEO of Munich Trade Fair, also spoke at the event. Italian companies have a huge presence at bauma, he said, with 460 exhibitors making Italy the second largest exhibiting country. “The philosophy of the award says that it gives a new perspective to the construction industry,” said Dittrich. “What setting would be better for such an event?”

Interviewed by TV presenter Alessio Vinci, Sinclair told invited guests at the award ceremony about the work of his organisation, including the re-building of communities in Haiti after the 2010 earthquakes. “In Haiti more than 2million people were displaced and hundreds of thousands of people died. That wasn’t because it was a terrible earthquake but because there was terrible buildings.”

Architects for Humanity arranges the design and construction of sustainable housing and public buildings, while training local designers and contractors so that they can continue to build to higher standards.

Stand: F10/N1020/1

www.pilosio.com

 

View more stories

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Fraccaroli & Balzan targets large quarries with its new filter press
    April 19, 2013
    Fraccaroli & Balzan, which designs, manufactures and installs waste water treatment systems, is showcasing its biggest filter press yet at bauma 2013. Previously the Italian firm only made lateral beam-type filter presses, which can only go up to a certain size and capacity. Now Fraccaroli & Balzan has developed high beam filter presses, which can be much larger and designed for quarries that need to process high volumes of material. “This filter press is for big quarries with big production that prefer to
  • Engineering elegance in bridge design
    July 9, 2012
    Multi-award-winning bridge designer Michel Virlogeux was the keynote speaker at the recent Austroads Bridge conference, held in Auckland, New Zealand, last month. He had a simple message: Bridge design is the realm of the engineer and should not be given to architects. "Bridge architecture, bridge aesthetics, bridge elegance is the problem of engineers. We must not leave this major part of our job to architects," he said. "I always work with an architect, but the architect is not selecting the structure. To
  • IMAG and Nigerian Afrocet Montgomery launch ConMin trade fair in 2017
    April 12, 2016
    Internationaler Messe-und Ausstellungsdienst (IMAG) and Nigerian Afrocet Montgomery are launching the first trade fair for construction machinery and mining in Nigeria. ConMin West Africa will take place from 25-27 April 2017 at the International Convention Centre in Abuja. The fair is planned to be annual and is supported by Nigeria's Federal Ministry of Solid Minerals Development. A number of major construction projects are underway in the country, including expansion of railway lines, ports and airport t
  • All change: get ready to rethink everything
    November 10, 2022
    How can we make our infrastructure ready for new sustainability challenges? What kind of investments are needed? And who will finance them? Tolling association Asecap has some thoughts. Geoff Hadwick reports from Lisbon