Culture

Colosseum is brushed with toothbrushes

Little by little, centimeter by centimeter, the Colosseum is being cleared of a centuries-old layer of pollution. Nearly 2,000 years have passed since Emperor Titus built an arena for bloody gladiatorial battles, hunting for wild animals and public executions. And now the world's largest amphitheater, located in Rome, waited for its reconstruction.

On the forests established around the most famous symbol of Rome, specialists work who thoroughly clean the dirt and soot that have deeply eaten into the walls of the building over the centuries of its existence. Their tools are simple but effective - toothbrushes. They are ideal for cleansing small cracks and cracks formed in the originally creamy white travertine (limestone variety) that the Colosseum is built from. Larger brushes are used to brush off giant stone blocks forming the 50-meter-high walls of the Flavian Amphitheater.

To soften the stone, small clouds of water suspension are sprayed over a contaminated area using a system of pipes and nozzles. After several hours of water exposure, specialists dressed in rubber boots, waterproof suits and gloves and armed with brushes set to work. “Here you need to be very attentive to details. That's why everything is done manually,” comments one of the project participants, architect Pia Petrangeli.

It is worth noting that the Colosseum, the construction of which began in 72 A.D. at the behest of Emperor Vespasian, and ended eight years later already under his son Emperor Titus, it is cleaned for the first time. Restorers remove the thick crust of black mud and streaks of green mold covering the walls of the historical monument, and leave behind a clean surface with a pinkish coating, which naturally forms on a creamy white travertine. This plaque is a kind of oxidation that does not harm the stone blocks, but protects them from urban pollution.

"The Colosseum is like an old man with a lot of wrinkles. We don’t want to do a facelift, just wash it. It is very important to preserve traces of past times," said Rossella Rea, director of the Coliseum. 80 giant vaulted arches leading to the arena will also be cleaned.

The restoration project, scheduled for completion in October 2016, is valued at 25 million euros. His sponsor was Tod's, an Italian high-quality shoe company. However, permission for the reconstruction was signed only a few years after the proposal made by Tod's owner, billionaire Diego Della Valle. All this time was spent on bureaucratic procedures and the struggle with various organizations to control cultural heritage.

The restoration team hopes that after them the Colosseum will not need cleaning for a long time. Especially if the mayor of Rome, Ignazio Marino (Ignazio Marino), keeps his promise and reduces the volume of transport moving along Via dei Fori Imperiali, passing in the immediate vicinity of the Coliseum.

Watch the video: 3D Printing: Sonicare Toothbrush Holder from Thingiverse (March 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Culture, Next Article

Germany
Germany

Germany

I share with you guides in Germany. Germany Germany is a state in the center of Europe, a developed power with an exemplary domestic political structure, one of the recognized leaders in the global economy. A country with an original culture of regions, with a great history and unshakable traditions. Beautiful land with protected forests, mountains and valleys, with excellent roads, well-groomed cities and carefully preserved monuments.
Read More
Bode Museum
Germany

Bode Museum

The Bode Museum is visited less frequently than other museums. And this is good. Not crowded here. You are practically alone with antiquity, art and architecture. There are no "hit" exhibits, but there is an excellent collection of medieval "naive" and wooden German Gothic. A beautiful collection of bronze figurines - plastic, “verbose" and bewitching.
Read More
Augustus Bridge
Germany

Augustus Bridge

Augustus Bridge is captured in a painting by Italian artist Bernardo Bellotto. Looking at it, you can compare how the city has changed over three centuries. Augustus Bridge (Augustusbrücke), photo webjoy Augustus Bridge (Augustusbrücke) in Dresden was built in the 13th century. In the years 1727-1731, by order of Elector Augustus the Strong, it was renewed.
Read More
Kete Kolwitz Museum
Germany

Kete Kolwitz Museum

The museum exhibits the works of Kete Kolwitz, a German artist, graphic artist and sculptor, one of the most striking expressionist figures of the early 20th century. Self-portrait of Kethe Kollwitz Museum Käthe Kollwitz Museum is located on the top floor of the Neumarkt Passage shopping center. It contains the largest collection of gloomy, but very emotional drawings, prints, posters and sculptures of Kolwitz.
Read More