Green Kilometer Public Park | GHISELLINI ARCHITETTI
Green Kilometer project for the new public park in Mulazzano aims at creating an inclusive and safe urban space, a protected and passable place where the complex of new collective activities that the local community is called to cultivate can be concentrated.
A network of pedestrian paths innervates the green area, generating a rich and dynamic “fabric” of movement, always different at every step. The system of “paths”, penetrating from the main directions of approach to the park, generates a multifaceted and articulated circulatory system that allows you to cross the area in any direction and from any point you come from.
The paths wind around themselves, drawing ring convolutions that cut out a series of specialized circular surfaces on the ground: inside, a series of functions and opportunities for use related to outdoor play, leisure time, physical activity, relaxation, and, more generally, the well-being of the person.
It is a place for which the dimensional depth of the spaces, the variety of equipment offered, and the quality of the landscape events will constitute a decisive added value.
The historic wall remains as an iconic and ordering presence, establishing the characters of the margin and regulating the incoming flows.
Inside, a landscape of innovative functional, formal, and landscaping matrix rewrites the characteristics of the contemporary public park: no longer a closed and timed place, a remnant of a replicated and protected landscape, but an open and transparent place, a dimension of sharing and well-being, a territory of encounter and exchange.
Project Info
Architects: GHISELLINI ARCHITETTI
Area: 10000 m²
Year: 2025
Country: Mulazzano, Italy
Photographs: Marcello Mariana
Manufacturers: iGuzzini, Archiform, Metalco srl, Nola, ZANO
Lead Team: Tomas Ghisellini, Lucrezia Alemanno
Design Team: Giorgio Barba, Gianluca Cesari
Technical Team: Sandro Formignani, Dario Delfino Dovera, Beatrice Bergamini































Sophie Tremblay is a Montreal-based architectural editor and designer with a focus on sustainable urban development. A McGill University architecture graduate, she began her career in adaptive reuse, blending modern design with historical structures. As a Project Editor at Arch2O, she curates stories that connect traditional practice with forward-thinking design. Her writing highlights architecture's role in community engagement and social impact. Sophie has contributed to Canadian Architect and continues to collaborate with local studios on community-driven projects throughout Quebec, maintaining a hands-on approach that informs both her design sensibility and editorial perspective.





