The Capanna Minolina is a prefabricated structure designed by architect Giulio Minoletti. Conceived in 1960 and unveiled in 1962 at Milan’s Palazzo dell’Arte, this innovative shelter was meant to revolutionise accommodation for tourists with its minimal footprint and ease of assembly. Marketed by the company ‘Holiday’, it promised affordable, year-round vacations in diverse landscapes. However, its legacy has been overlooked. While some of these cabins still stand in coastal settings, the alpine prototype met a different fate. Demolished in 2024, it fell victim to preservation regulations that failed to recognise its architectural significance. Minoletti, a pioneer of lightweight prefabrication, was instrumental in modern design, shaping interiors for ships, aircraft, and high-speed trains. Yet his contributions were disregarded, and the Capanna Minolina’s demolition epitomises the neglect and erasure of a unique architectural heritage. This photograph remains as testament to what was lost – a fragment of Italy’s postwar architectural innovation, sacrificed to bureaucracy and indifference.
La Capanna Minolina è una struttura prefabbricata progettata dall’architetto Giulio Minoletti. Concepite nel 1960 e presentata nel 1962 al Palazzo dell’Arte di Milano, questa innovativa unità abitativa era pensata per rivoluzionare l’alloggio turistico grazie al suo ingombro minimo e alla facilità di montaggio. Commercializzata dalla società “Holiday”, prometteva vacanze accessibili tutto l’anno in contesti paesaggistici differenti. Tuttavia, la sua eredità è stata trascurata. Mentre alcuni esemplari sopravvivono ancora in contesti costieri, il prototipo alpino ha avuto un destino diverso. Demolito nel 2024, è stato vittima di normative di tutela che non ne hanno riconosciuto il valore architettonico. Minoletti, pioniere della prefabbricazione leggera, ha avuto un ruolo fondamentale nel design moderno, progettando interni per navi, aeroplani e treni ad alta velocità. Eppure, il suo contributo è stato ignorato, e la demolizione della Capanna Minolina rappresenta emblematicamente la trascuratezza e la cancellazione di un patrimonio architettonico unico. Questa fotografia resta come testimonianza di ciò che è stato perduto: un frammento dell’innovazione architettonica italiana del dopoguerra, sacrificato alla burocrazia e all’indifferenza.
Capanna Minolina
A. Gritti
2025-01-01
Abstract
The Capanna Minolina is a prefabricated structure designed by architect Giulio Minoletti. Conceived in 1960 and unveiled in 1962 at Milan’s Palazzo dell’Arte, this innovative shelter was meant to revolutionise accommodation for tourists with its minimal footprint and ease of assembly. Marketed by the company ‘Holiday’, it promised affordable, year-round vacations in diverse landscapes. However, its legacy has been overlooked. While some of these cabins still stand in coastal settings, the alpine prototype met a different fate. Demolished in 2024, it fell victim to preservation regulations that failed to recognise its architectural significance. Minoletti, a pioneer of lightweight prefabrication, was instrumental in modern design, shaping interiors for ships, aircraft, and high-speed trains. Yet his contributions were disregarded, and the Capanna Minolina’s demolition epitomises the neglect and erasure of a unique architectural heritage. This photograph remains as testament to what was lost – a fragment of Italy’s postwar architectural innovation, sacrificed to bureaucracy and indifference.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Archalp14_2025_Capanna Minolina_Gritti.pdf
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