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The Covid-19 health emergency has contributed to exacerbate imbalances and marginality and to make concrete the risk of an increase in internal disparities between countries.
The RESTARTHealth project (Renewable Energy Systems To Activate Recovery Through the Health Sector) will act in a vulnerable area, the sub-Saharan Africa, in order to strengthen health infrastructures and related community services by studying efficient energy management for hybrid microgrids. The goal is to ensure a more reliable and appropriate energy system, promoting related business development and local entrepreneurship.
The projects involves the departments of Energy, Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering and Mechanical Engineering. Testing and demonstrations will be held in the St. Mary’s Hospital Lacor and in three health centers in the Gulu District, in Uganda, and will allow establishing general guidelines.
RESTARTHealth is one of the high social impact projects awarded in the 2021 edition of Polisocial Award, dedicated to the theme “Equity and Recovery”: the winning projects are financed by funds from the 5×1000 donations (a fraction of the personal income tax each Italian citizen can donate to support a non-profit organisation).
THE PROJECT TEAM
Marco Merlo, Department of Energy (principal investigator) Riccardo Mereu, Department of Energy (project manager) Irene Bengo, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering Veronica Chiodo, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering Marco Mauri, Department of Mechanical Engineering
EQUI_06 is a multidisciplinary project involving the Departments of Architecture and Urban Studies (DASTU), Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering (DIG) and Design of the Politecnico di Milano. It aims at defining guidelines and general rules for the creation of integrated preschool service hubs in urban areas facing educational poverty.
Following an in-depth pilot study of needs and resources relating to early childhood (0-6 years), the project aims to promote principles of equity and quality.
Defining guidelines and general rules for the creation of integrated preschool service hubs, following an in-depth pilot study of needs and resources relating to early childhood (0-6 years).
THE PROJECT TEAM
Stefania Sabatinelli, Department of Architecture and Urban Studies (principal investigator)
Marta Cordini, Department of Architecture and Urban Studies (project manager)
Carolina Pacchi, Department of Architecture and Urban Studies
Cristina Renzoni, Department of Architecture and Urban Studies
Paola Savoldi, Department of Architecture and Urban Studies
Marta Cannistrà, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering
Mara Soncin, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering
Filippo Bolzoni, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering
Ambra Borin, Department of Design
Luisa Collina, Department of Design
Laura Galluzzo, Department of Design
Claudia Mastrantoni, Department of Design
EQUI_06 is one of the high social impact projects awarded in the 2021 edition of Polisocial Award, dedicated to the theme “Equity and Recovery”: the winning projects are financed by funds from the 5×1000 donations (a fraction of the personal income tax each Italian citizen can donate to support a non-profit organisation).
COVID-19 pandemics and related politics have strongly impacted on people’s life and, even more dramatically, that of people with visual impairment – 4% of the planet population. This is due to the fact that blind and visual impaired (BVI) people need tactile contact with the environment and a guide for moving and orienteering.
The goal of the BUDD-e (Blind-assistive aUtonomous Drive Device) project is to make public spaces and services, such as shopping centers and cultural centers/museums, accessible, functional and usable by BVI persons.
The project will be divided into two sub-objectives:
design and realize a first prototype of the innovative autonomous robotic guide BUDD-e for blind and visually impaired (BVI) persons;
design accessible and inclusive public places and indoor environments where BUDD-e can take the role of a guide for BVI persons and permit the fruition of the offered services.
BUDD-e is one of the 5 high social impact research projects of the Politecnico di Milano selected via the last edition of the Polisocial Award to be financed by funds from the 5×1000 donations (a fraction of the personal income tax each Italian citizen can donate to support a non-profit organisation).
THE PROJECT TEAM Marcello Farina, Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering (principal investigator) Emanuele Lettieri, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering (project manager) Luca Bascetta, Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering Matteo Corno, Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering Manuela Galli, Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering Giuseppe Andreoni, Department of Design Paolo Perego, Department of Design Andrea Rebecchi, Department of Architecture, Built Environment and Construction Engineering
UNPark / FREESTYLE was the concluding act in the field of a research project launched in 2019 by a multidisciplinary team of architects, designers and engineers from Politecnico di Milano as part of Polisocial Award, our social responsibility programme.
The event was organised with the support of various local associations (sports, cultural, social promotion) and thanks to the support of the public administration.
From 24 to 26 September, a series of free events open to the public took the place of a parking area under the Serra – Monte Ceneri (SMC) flyover in Milan, between Via Plana and Via Bartolini, illuminating spaces usually lit only by car headlights. The aim is to envisage a second life for infrastructures in high-density urban contexts, under the banner of social inclusion and urban regeneration through sport.
The UNPark – Urban Nudging Park research has – starting from its name – the ambitious objective of encouraging citizens and the Public Administration to trigger a shared process of regeneration of that infrastructure, which can be scaled up also in other contexts.
Built in the early 60s to alleviate access traffic to the Fiera Campionaria, the SMC flyover has over time become an increasingly critical element for the urban quality of the area, being seen by the inhabitants as a visual and physical barrier that makes the area suburban, despite being relatively close to the city centre. Not only is the SMC one of the main contributors to the deterioration of the area, but also the parking spaces underneath it are regarded as an element of insecurity and confusion, with serious repercussions on air quality due to fine dust and other pollutants. These areas create daily problems of health and safety, as well as the resulting commercial devaluation of the area and the delay in the innovation of urban services.
Working on the spaces at the SMC flyover therefore involved thinking not only about the infrastructure itself, but also about the regeneration of the places around it and, above all, the quality of life of the people who live there.
UNPark / FREESTYLE has been described in many ways: “courageous”, “visionary” and even “innovative”. But UNPark / FREESTYLE certainly didn’t go unnoticed, and that was the aim of the initiative. The Serra – Monte Ceneri flyover is in fact an opportunity for continuous experimentation, a permanent urban laboratory: it is a dilemma that has its own solution within it.
This initiative wanted to demonstrate that even the most neglected and abandoned space, with the involvement of the local inhabitants, can find its own redemption, also thanks to sport. Residents, associations, amateur sports clubs and groups in the area brought the flyover to life, demonstrating their skills by getting involved before, during and after UNPark / FREESTYLE.
For eighteen months, in fact, UNPark worked on topical issues such as: new models of collection, reuse and recycling of materials for the creation of social spaces; actions and methods of engagement of the population in urban regeneration processes; monitoring of air quality by means of open data collected by volunteer citizens; study of the opportunities offered by Nature Based Solutions (NBS) and the IoT world, technologies and lightweight textile components for environmental and acoustic mitigation.
Can we imagine a different future for urban infrastructure? Can infrastructures become part of public spaces and become “multi-systemic urban services”? For UNPark researchers, the answer is yes.
For general information on UNPark research, see www.unpark.it.
UNPark Research Group, Urban Nudging Park, Polisocial Award 2019:
Paolo Carli (Scientific Coordinator, DAStU), Luigi De Nardo (Project Manager, CMIC Natta), Matteo Clementi, Patrizia Scrugli (DAStU), Carol Monticelli, Giulia Procaccini (DABC), Barbara Di Prete, Agnese Rebaglio, Davide Crippa, Emilio Lonardo (DESIGN), Francesco Bruschi (DEIB).
Project partners and co-funders UNPark, Urban Nudging Park, Polisocial Award 2019:
Municipality 8 of the City of Milan; l’Assessorato Urbanistica, Verde e Agricoltura (through AMAT) del Comune di Milano; Open4Citizens (Open Data Lab Milano) H2020/CAPSI; Textile Hub – Politecnico di Milano.
UNPark project partners, Urban Nudging Park, Polisocial Award 2019:
Assessorato Partecipazione, Cittadinanza Attiva e Open Data del Comune di Milano; Liceo Scientifico Statale Piero Bottoni; ICS Rinnovata Pizzigoni; Citizens’ Committee of Milan in High Altitude; ARCI L’Impegno; Vittoria Insurance; Radio Popolare; OSG2001 Sports Association; Soulbasket Sports Association; Ass. Italian Catholic Guides and Scouts – Milan Group 20;15. ESO – Ecological Services Outsourcing company.
Project partner UNPark / FREESTYLE:
Municipio 8 of the City of Milan; DASTU Department Politecnico di Milano; Urban Planning, Green and Agriculture Department (through AMAT) of the City of Milan; ASD Disc Golf; ASD SkateMI; ASD Soul Basket; Giovanni Testori Association; Catholic Italian Guides and Scouts Association – AGESCI Group 20; Bar Via Plana 32; Bendy Dance Studio; Serra flyover – High-altitude Milan; Circolo Arci L’Impegno; Garage Moulinski; Istituto Comprensivo “Rinnovata Pizzigoni”; Radio Popolare; Soulfood Forestfarms Hub Italia.
Thanks to:
Simone Zambelli, Paolo Romano (Municipio 8, Comune di Milano); Federico Confalonieri (Direzione Mobilità e Trasporti, Comune di Milano); Eugenio Petz (Ufficio Servizi civici, Partecipazione e Sport, Comune di Milano); Lorenzo Lipparini (Assessorato Partecipazione, Cittadinanza Attiva e Open Data); Stefano Maldifassi e la squadra del NU.I.R (NU.I.R., Comune di Milano); Nicoletta Cappellini, Concetta Scatozza, Carlo Gallon, Enrico Maestri (Polizia Locale, Comando Decentrato 8); Stefano Ragazzo, Massimiliano Ferioli (AMAT); Luca Masseroni, Alberto Beretta (AMSA); Claudia Reati, Elaheh Qazalifard, Qin (PoliMI); Alberto Ruffini (ASD Soul Basket); Giulio Mirulla (Agesci); Matteo Fonso, Alessandro Bruni (Bar Via Plana 32); Giulio Ambrosio, Edoardo Arcuri, Andrea Barbieri, Beatrice Fragasso, Daniele Grossi, Simone Italiano, Anna Libman, Matteo Mucciarini, Maddalena Pernechele, Enrico Recalcati, Stefano Recalcati, Alberto Tansini, Francesca Zambrini (Circolo Arci L’Impegno); Alessandro Balzani (Garage Moulinski); Anna Teresa Ferri (ICS Rinnovata Pizzigoni); Catia Giarlanzani, Alessandro Gilioli (Radio Popolare); Alessandro Didonna (Soulfood Forestfarms Hub Italia); Massimiliano Cason Villa, Federico Bielli, Davide Stanga, Christian Scenini (IDEAS bit factory); Roberto Bresciani, Roberto Stuani (AUSER Piazza Prealpi); Silvia Di Stefano (Serra flyover – Milan at high altitude); Wendy Lynton e Sig. Wanda (Bandy Dance Studio); Davide Dall’Ombra e Francesca Pinna (Testori House Association); Giulio Mirulla e Marco Tamburini (Agesci); Bruno ed Erica Ferrari (SkateMi); Ricky e TIStee (Disc Golf); Sara Gué; Spino. And also: Matteo Di Giovanni; Marina Fiore; Marco Giorgio; Ornella Scarpa; Tommaso Scrugli; Piero Volpe; teachers, parents and students who took part in the competitions.
For technical support:
Lucia Balestrieri and Domenico La Scala (Stagedeck); Alessandro and Marianna (POLIPRINT); IDEAS bit factory; Textile Architecture Network (TAN, PoliMI); Nicolas Meletiou (ESO Società Benefit arl); Angela Di Lorenzo (DECATHLON Milano Portello); Pierpaolo Poli Cappelli (KOH I NOOR); VOLVERUP – Melina Benetton
TMek is the new rapid and accurate diagnostic test for malaria developed by the Politecnico di Milano, following on-field trials held in Cameroon involving 75 patients with clinical suspect of malaria.
During the validation study TMek, due to the absence of false negatives and a few false positive results, confirmed its potential as a quantitative, stage-selective, rapid test for malaria.
Currently the most sensitive malaria detection method is based on gene recognition of the various strains of plasmodium through the PCR method, which is complicated, expensive and not available in African dispensaries. The standard method that is currently used in Africa due to its ease of use involves placing infected red blood cells in a drop of blood on an optical microscope. Although this method is sufficiently sensitive, it requires very skilled staff, there can be variability in interpreting the results and analysis times are long.
The system designed by the team led by Riccardo Bertacco, professor at the Department of Physics of the Politecnico di Milano, is based on a ‘lab-on-chip’ approach, where complex operations are engineered and miniaturised into a low-cost, disposable microchip which is connected via USB to an electronic reading device, and aims to provide a rapid and cost-effective solution for malaria diagnosis, compatible with adoption in tropical areas where there are no specialised staff.
TMek came from a research project financed by the Polisocial Award, the Politecnico di Milano’s social responsibility programme.
The device has been patented by the Politecnico di Milano as a “Social patent”. The research group launched an ethical start-up with social objectives
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