Giuseppe Gurrieri

DCS House

DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli

DCS HOUSE

Giuseppe Gurrieri + Valentina Giampiccolo

ARCHITECTS
Giuseppe Gurrieri + Valentina Giampiccolo

LOCATION
Ragusa, Italy

AREA
400.0 sqm

PROJECT YEAR
2014

PHOTOGRAPHS
Filippo Poli

DESIGN TEAM
Valentina Occhipinti, Dario Gulino, Giulia Filetti

CONTRACTOR
Angelo Ferraro

Text description provided by architect.

DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli

The closely-knit urban fabric of the upper section of the oldest part of Ragusa has a clear 19th-century feel, with longitudinal streets running parallel at different levels, following the natural slope of the land and tied together by a criss-cross of steps.

The current sequence of buildings is the result of combining or subdividing properties and sometimes even modifying the old connections between levels, which once tended to be divided between the ground floor production areas and the upper floor lodgings.

Our project is about the renovation of a portion of the fabric originally used for the production and sale of the traditional cheese. Over the years, the building has been transformed and modified several times.

DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli

The solution adopted was to create a central courtyard by removing a volume from the section of the building. 

Such a decision reduces the living space but brings considerable benefits and allows an optimal reorganization of the spaces, making the new void the heart of the building.

After the renovation, each room faces the new courtyard on the southern side; the house is closed on itself, ensuring more privacy and distance from the neighborhood. 

DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli

Thanks to the natural ventilation, the courtyard acts as a chimney and contributes to the power performance of the entire building.

The new courtyard, and the arrangements of the vertical connections with the north acts like a buffer between the façade (more cold and damp in the winter) and the main spaces.

DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli

The courtyard, that became the new entrance of the house, crystallizes an attitude that sees rigorous composition as the best way to combine conservation and innovation. After all, a courtyard is an element taken from a well-established building tradition.

The interiors are marked by a careful balance between the re-use of traditional materials and contemporary elements such as interior doors, fencing and tiles that were removed and reassembled in a modern atmosphere.

DCS House
© Filippo Poli
DCS House
© Filippo Poli

The original tanks used for the brine cheese and located in the basement, are re-used as cisterns where rainwater gathered and is also used for the sanitary system and irrigation the plants of the courtyard.


DCS House
Ground Floor Plan
DCS House
First Floor Plan
DCS House
Second Floor Plan
DCS House
Existing Ground Floor Plan
DCS House
Existing First Floor Plan
DCS House
Existing Second Floor Plan
DCS House
Mezzanine Floor Plan
DCS House
Existing Roof Plan


DCS House
Existing South Elevation
DCS House
Existing North Elevation


DCS House
Section 1
DCS House
Section 2
DCS House
Section 3


DCS House
Diagram 1
DCS House
Diagram 2
DCS House
Diagram 3


DCS House
Concept Diagram
DCS House
Axonometric
DCS House
Existing House

Giuseppe Gurrieri
T +39 0932 220083
Giuseppe Gurrieri
Via Archimede, 278, 97100 Ragusa RG, Italy
Arch. Valentina Giampiccolo
T +39 347 1379529
Arch. Valentina Giampiccolo
Via Ecce Homo 123, Ragusa, Italy