Since 1994 Bianco has held various visiting teaching posts, lecturing on the philosophy of restoration of heritage sites, industrial and environmental geology, and minerals planning. He is a resident academic at the Department of Architecture and Urban Design of the University of Malta where he teaches and directs research on the history and philosophy of architecture.[4]
He is a professor of the International Academy of Architecture
[5]
and a visiting professor in history and theory of urban design at the University of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy, Sofia.[6]
In 1997 he set up his architectural firm, Lino Bianco & Associates.[2] From 1997-8, he was Chairman of the Planning Council Malta and, from 1997 until 2000, a member of the Planning Appeals Board (Malta). He was a member of the Board of Directors of the Housing Authority, Malta,[7] member of the Board of Directors of WasteServ Malta Ltd[8] and member of the General Services Board, Malta.[9]
Bianco is acknowledged for challenging developments which impinge negatively on natural and/or cultural heritage, such as the multimillion touristic development of Ramla l-Hamra in Gozo, a site associated with the legendary Homeric nymph Calypso.[10] This case was eventually taken up at the national political level[11] and took more than six years.[12] Bianco describes himself as pro-development but against speculation,[13] and the Times of Malta had described his approach to environmental protection as innovative.[14]
In 2012, he was elected professor of the International Academy of Architecture at the World Triennial of Architecture held in Sofia in 2012; he is one of the youngest architects to hold this post.[15] A project in Zabbar, Malta, received a special prize from the Ministry of Building of Ulyanovsk Region, Russia, for innovation in traditional architecture at InterArch2012.[16] In 2015, he received a special prize of the Embassy of the Russian Federation in Sofia for his project in Gozo entitled ‘A Home of Time and Memory’[17]
Bianco was a candidate of the Labour Party for the 2014 European elections in Malta.[18][19]
His stand on irregular immigration,[20] spring hunting[21] and the environment,[22] themes which ran high on the political agenda, illustrated his political philosophy of toleration applied to real scenarios. He was not elected.
The same year, Bianco was appointed non-resident Ambassador of Malta to Bulgaria,
[23]
a position which he held until 2019.
[24]
Our Diezsa (2013). A 20-minute film on the Dgħajsa tal-Pass (The Maltese Gondola), the Seatoland project of Temi Zammit Foundation. Lino Bianco was architect responsible for the architectural design. Film directed by Narcy Calamatta.
24 05: Profil ta’ Lino Bianco (2014). A 27-minute documentary on Lino Bianco, one in a series prepared by ONE TV. It gives a background of his life, education, career, and his philosophy. Directed by Matthew Carbone.
References
^"Bio Note"(PDF). uacg.bg. Retrieved 29 October 2014.