Bottega d’Erasmo is erected in via Gaudenzio Ferrari, the building designed by Roberto Gabetti and Aimaro Isola for residential purposes and home to an antiquarian bookshop on the ground floor. This building, one of the most debated by Italian architectural critics in the second post-war period, deviates from the traditional genealogy of the Modern Movement and creates a language controversially defined by historian Reyner Banham as neo-liberty. In the same year, the construction of Borsa Valori is completed in via San Francesco da Paola, based on the design by Gabetti and Isola together with Giorgio and Giuseppe Raineri. This work experiments unprecedented technological and language solutions for Torino, with the construction of one single square-shaped room of 40 m on the side, covered by a pavilion vault made of reinforced concrete and several expressive elements, from Art Nouveau to the Modern Movement.