Old Xewkija milk plant architectural features protected
The former milk plant, designed by renowned architect Joseph Huntingford, now enjoys protection status
The Planning Authority has recently given protection status to the administration building of the former milk factory in Xewkija, Gozo, as a scheduled Grade 2 building, including a buffer zone.
The 1950s modernist building, designed by the renowned Maltese architect Joseph Huntingford (1926-1994), is located in Triq l-Imgarr and Triq il-Pitkali. The building itself is made of exceptional architectural elements, all mirroring the Modernist Movement.
In the 1950’s and early 60s, Huntingtford was the architect engaged by the government for the design and construction of some of its most important buildings in Gozo, such as the milk factory, and public schools.
Huntingford’s architectural design follows an international trend of the times, known as ‘Modernist’. The approach used is characterised by a streamline design, devoid of any ornamentation, using cantilevered canopies and window hoods only possible by the use of concrete whilst keeping within classical architectural rules such as proportion, rhythm, balance, symmetry, purity of lines, juxtaposing solids and voids ratios, play of light and shade.
Huntingford’s hallmark is his capability of inserting local characteristics in the design of his Modernist buildings. In the administration building of the milk factory, he uses a concave façade, inspired by the curved megalithic temples facades of the Maltese Islands, the pseudo rubble wall effect motif on the façade, as well as the use of ‘vernacular’ or most commonly found simple materials, such as the concrete brick common at the time, in creating the brise soleil corridors which shelter users from the elements and filter natural light.