Davide Galleri is a senior architect based in Naples, Italy, with a Ph.D. in Architecture History and Conservation. He is a Fulbright Fellow and conducted a visiting Ph.D. research period at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago.
His research topics relate mainly to modern architectural heritage, and he is keenly interested in transatlantic dialogues in the field of preservation. His doctoral dissertation consisted of a critical investigation into the conservation of Frank Lloyd Wright’s built heritage in the United States, with a case study dedicated to the preservation history of the Robie House in Chicago.
His research topics relate mainly to modern architectural heritage, and he is keenly interested in transatlantic dialogues in the field of preservation. His doctoral dissertation consisted of a critical investigation into the conservation of Frank Lloyd Wright’s built heritage in the United States, with a case study dedicated to the preservation history of the Robie House in Chicago.
More About
He is currently a post-doc research fellow at the University of Naples Federico II with a research project about AI models for preserving case studies at the Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
Davide Galleri has published several scientific papers, has taken part in scientific conferences in Europe and the United States, has been part of numerous research agreements, and has conducted relevant restoration projects on architectural heritage, with themes including modern design on historic buildings and accessibility. In 2021, his master’s degree thesis in modern heritage preservation was nominated as the most valuable in Italy in 2018-2021 by the Italian Scientific Society for Architectural Restoration.
Davide Galleri has published several scientific papers, has taken part in scientific conferences in Europe and the United States, has been part of numerous research agreements, and has conducted relevant restoration projects on architectural heritage, with themes including modern design on historic buildings and accessibility. In 2021, his master’s degree thesis in modern heritage preservation was nominated as the most valuable in Italy in 2018-2021 by the Italian Scientific Society for Architectural Restoration.