Alvar Aalto's Church in Riola

Alvar aalto riola bologna church outside

Why Alvar Aalto, one of the most important architects and designers of the XX century, would create a church in a tiny village of 300 people on the hills of Bologna?

The story is long and complex. Let's start from the beginning.

Alvar aalto riola bologna church

From Finland to Riola: Alvaar Alto in Bologna

1955.
Cardinal Giacomo Lercaro established a commission for the creation of new churches around Bologna as a symbol of renovation and inclusion of the suburbs.

After a first missed attempt for a church in Bologna by Le Corbusier, Lercaro asked the Finnish architect Alvar Aalto to create a church in Riola, a small village between the mountains, close to Rocchetta Mattei castle.

Aalto accepted the assignment and arrived in Riola with his wife Elissa on a snowing day in January 1967 for a first visit, welcomed by locals waving Finland flags.

It was an incredible event for the village that would have finally had a square, a church and the first and only Aalto's building in Italy.

Alvar aalto riola bologna church inside

Riola's church doesn't have windows. The light arrives reflected from skylights on the roof.

Painting with the light: the project of the church

Riola landscape with its mountains, its stones, its river inspired Aalto's design.

The church should have risen from the Reno river, which flows a few meters from it.

But what made Aalto's work unique was the use of light.
He designed a church without windows, but just skylights on the roof. Natural reflected light from the North hits the white walls and paints different shapes with contrast.

Riola's church looks like extreme and mature development of Aalto's previous works at Otaniemi Conference Hall and Wolfsburg church.

Alvar aalto riola bologna church bench detail

Aalto designed all the accessories of the church like handles, chairs, doors, lamps and benches.​

An unexpected winter: the stop of the works

After a few years of reworks and reviews, the project was completed.
Ready to start?
No.

In February 1968 Lercaro resigned. After 50 years the mystery still floats around that decision.
The result was a cut to the budget and an immediate hiatus of the project.

10 years after the announcement, the church seemed like a beautiful sketch on a napkin, lost in the pocket of an old coat.
​But mountain folk don't give up easily.

Alvar aalto riola bologna church hallway

A portico connects the church to the rectory

The dawn arrives: the church see the light

Contacts between the group of Italian architects who followed the projects and Aalto never stopped.
Riola citizens created a civil committee led by Don Luigi Borri, Riola's preacher.
But it's Mario Tamburini, local surveyor and entrepreneur, who gave the final push to the project.

He decided to build the church at his own expense.
His company Grandi Lavori worked during downtime and used prefabricated elements to lower production costs.

​Works started in 1975.
Lercaro and Aalto couldn't see the result of their efforts.

The first Mass was celebrated on August 15th, 1977 with ​Elissa Aalto, Mario Tamburini and all the group of architects in the crowd.

Alvar aalto riola bologna church bell tower orig

The bell tower

A church without a bell tower is like a face without a nose - Elissa Aalto (Aalto's wife)

Info

Chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta
Piazza Alvar Aalto 1, 40030, Riola (BO)
Tel. +39 051 916355
www.parrocchiariola.it

[credits: 'Alvar Aalto. La Chiesa di Riola' Giuliano and Glauco Gresleri, 2004,' Non abbiamo sete di scenografie', movie by Roberto Ronchi, Mara Corradi 2018]


Related post

  • Modena Cemetery

    Modena Cemetery by Aldo Rossi: The incomplete city of the soul you have to visit

    You can call it Modena's Sagrada Familia. It's San Cataldo Cemetery, designed by architects Aldo Rossi and Gianni Braghieri in the 1970s, that after decades from its birth, is still incomplete. But despite that, this abandoned city is still a masterpiece you need to visit.

  • Scarpa shop bologna Gavina

    Gavina showroom in Bologna: the unique shop by Carlo Scarpa

    If you love modern architecture and interior design you already know that in Bologna there's a precious jewel that draws visitors from around the world: it's Dino Gavina showroom in Via Altabella, 23. It was designed and built in the '60s by Carlo Scarpa, one of the most important Italian architectural designs of the twentieth century, to host Gavina's furniture showroom. Who is Carlo Sc

  • Emilia romagna museums

    12 Unconventional Must-See Museums in Bologna and Beyond

    Can you skip Louvre in Paris, Prado in Madrid or MoMa in NYC? No, but sometimes I've found myself lost and looking for the exit.​These are the best hidden museums to visit in Bologna and Emilia Romagna.


Home page icons22

Tasty newsletter

Stay in touch with monthly news and get my PDF guide with the best restaurants in Bologna, Modena and Parma


Subscribe