ABOUT
EDUCATION:

09.2022 - 09.2024, Florence, Italy
University of Florence
Landscape Architecture

09.2016 - 06.2020, Chengdu, China
Sichuan Agricultural University                       Product Design

WORK & ADDITIONAL EXPERIENCE:

04.2024 - 05.2024, Florence, Italy
nuvolaB Associate Architects
Intern Designer

11.2021 - 08.2022, Como, Italy
Telematic University
10-month Italian language course

08.2020 - 08.2021, Chengdu, China
Chengdu FDL Furniture Company
Project Designer

TECHNICAL SKILLS:

Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Indesign
QGIS, ArcGIS, AutoCAD
SketchUp, Rhinoceros

LANGUAGE SKILLS:

Chinese
Italian
English



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LABORATORY 2. HISTORIC GARDENS AND PARKS RESTORATION
03.2023 —— 07.2023


State:
Finished

Topics:
Boboli  garden
Historic garden restoration
Landscape History
Landscape archaeology

Teamwork:
Haiyue Lai
Christie Alelie Garcià Wong
Xiaoxue Wang

Professor:
Prof. Tessa Mateini
Prof. Luisa Ghelardini

Tutor:
Francesco Torelli
Virginia Castellucci
The Boboli Gardens, designed and built by the Medici family in the 16th century and located in Florence, are a quintessential example of Italian Renaissance garden design. Not only are they a beautiful landscape, but they also symbolize the art, culture, and social structure of their time. The restoration and preservation of the Boboli Gardens are crucial not just for maintaining their historical value but also for continuing their cultural and educational functions in modern society. One of the key principles of garden restoration is maintaining historical accuracy, which implies a thorough historical research, while preserving and restoring the garden's historical features, it is important to integrate the perspectives and principles of landscape architecture to improve and optimize traditional maintenance practices. Emphasizing the importance of finding a balance between cultural heritage preservation and ecological sustainability is crucial.

The interaction between the historical structures and vegetation in the garden is rich and complex, potentially presenting conflicts and potential risks. This juxtaposition of historical vegetation and structures represents a dialectic contrast between Nature and Architecture, and their dissonant pace of transformation is paradigmatic of the continuous evolution and the dynamics of becoming. To address this issue, it is necessary to conduct surveys of the vegetation, architecture, and sculptures within the archaeological area to facilitate further research. This research should recognize the multiple roles of vegetation and the importance of plant biodiversity in historical landscape enhancement. Appropriate vegetation structures should be recomposed to support key ecological functions, and accurate and sustainable restoration actions should be proposed for the mineral components of buildings and sculptures.

In the context of global climate change and environmental protection, the maintenance, reinterpretation, and restoration of historical gardens are not merely technical challenges but also cultural and ecological missions, for future shared “public use” of historical open spaces in which the value of biological and temporal diversity is finally recognized and so preserved and fostered.




Florence, Italy / Chengdu, China