Palazzo Rucellai
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Palazzo Rucellai is a Renaissance palace in Florence, Italy, designed by Leon Battista Alberti between 1446 and 1451. Its splendid facade was one of the first announcing the new ideas of Renaissance architecture based on pilasters, entablatures in proportional relationship to each other. The rusticated masonry creates an impression of strength, especially on the ground floor, which contained storerooms. The three stories of its facade have different classical orders, as in the Colosseum in Rome, but with the Tuscan order at the base, an Alberti original in place of Ionic order at the second level, and a very simplified Corinthian order at the higher level. There are double windows on the upper storeys combined arches with highly articulated voussoirs that spring from pilaster to pilaster.
The palace is built around a central court, with the design adapted from Brunelleschi's forms in the loggia of the Foundling Hospital. It is unlikely that Alberti was responsible for this aspect of the palace. Across the street there is the Rucellai Loggia which was built as backdrop of family celebrations and weddings.
There is no documentary evidence that the palace and loggia were actually designed by Alberti, the confirmation coming from Giorgio Vasari in his Le Vite delle più eccellenti pittori, scultori, ed architettori (or, in English, Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects) from 1568.[1]
[edit] External links
- Images of Palazzo Rucellai
- [Great Architecture of the World. John Julius Norwich.150]
- Satellite image from WikiMapia or Google Local
- Street map from Multimap or GlobalGuide
- Aerial image from TerraServer