Elegant and functional, the custom cast-iron kiosks by Neri are the architectural highlight of the newly opened Water Park in National Landing, Arlington (Washington, D.C. area). Ten custom structures welcome visitors into a refined, inviting atmosphere. Designed to blend seamlessly into the urban landscape, these kiosks serve as key reference points in the public space, turning everyday moments into opportunities for interaction, exchange, and community.
2024
Antonio Neri
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Pictor Urban Furniture Enhances Forte dei Marmi’s Cityscape
Essential design, bold character, flexible spirit: the Pictor urban furniture collection, developed in collaboration with the architecture studio Lombardini22, transforms public space into a dynamic and contemporary experience. Benches, planters, litter bins, bike racks, and bollards make up a modular collection designed to interact with any urban context. Each element, whether used individually or in combination, integrates seamlessly into the cityscape, offering endless configurations and visual connections. In Forte dei Marmi, the Pictor collection has taken shape along the town’s shopping streets: planters of various sizes, benches with and without backrests, litter bins, and other elements have created small green rest areas—welcoming and functional.
Pictor: adaptability and performance in three urban contexts
Pictor, our lighting system that perfectly adapts to every context, is the star of three installations. In Riccione, it enhances the small harbor, playing with two different heights between Viale Bellini and the walkway alongside the water. In San Salvo, it brightens the Ciclovia Adriatica, the award-winning bike path along the coast. In Logroño, Spain, it both decorates and illuminates a new residential center, adding visual rhythm and atmosphere to the urban landscape. A lighting system designed to blend elegantly: essential design, top performance, total adaptability.
Preserving History: The New Light of Sulmona
Sulmona, Italy
In Sulmona, during the historic Good Friday procession, the hand-carried lanterns held by the young members of the Confraternity of the Holy Trinity have been a recognizable symbol for centuries. But behind their elegance lay a concrete issue: the risk posed by fire and glass over more than four hours of continuous use. In 2022, the Confraternity turned to Neri to find a solution that was safe — yet invisible. The result? An LED system powered by a single battery for each lantern, ensuring full autonomy and safety without altering the original appearance. The warm glow of candlelight was precisely recreated thanks to a custom LED filter; the spheres were reproduced in polyethylene using 3D printing, and the golden leaves were carefully restored to their original brilliance.