Villas and palaces in Milan
Milan has always been an important centre of construction of historical villas and palaces, ranging from the Romanesque to the neo-Gothic, from Baroque to Rococo.
History
The spread of the construction of patrician villas to Milan has remote origins. From the diggings and the ritrovamenti a complex system of villas of the first imperial age carries out to you is uncovered, going back to the 1st century AD approximately.
After the passage of Barbarian and the periods oxen of the Middle Ages, Milan before found again one new dimension of refined court and good noble taste to the court of the Visconti and of Sforza then. For all the 15th and the 16th centuries, in fact the pleasure is found again to construct of the residences for the noble premises, that they love to be able itself to guarantee one dwelling in city that manifest their power and their influence in the transactions of the Ducato. Of these complexes, solos little examples can be admired still today: a small jewel is constituted from the ducali apartments of Castello Sforzesco, beyond to other private villas like House Missaglia (today demolished), Borromeo House, Pallavicini House. For these constructions, according to the taste of the age, Lombardic, but also venetian, Ligurian, Piedmontese and Tuscan artists carried them out.
The successive Spanish domination little refrained spensierati enthusiasms that had been learnt during the humanism, favoring however (seppur in minimal part) a sure development of private architecture and increasing it with the demolition of buildings of previous ages.
The century that but more than every other saw the construction of the “villas of delight” was the 18th century. When the concept of villa for the summery stay was diffused, Milan copied the palatial styles of Rome, Venice, Turin, Bologna and Naples.
The industrial evolution favored one new age of increase and widening of the architectonic beauties of the city in 19th century with the attention of the Habsburgs, that they tried to give again to Milan one new dimension, also system, inasmuch as the second city of the Empire was hour after Vienna.
The 20th century was the last great parenthesis of the delight villas: with the income of Milan in the Kingdom of Italy, it had become an industrial centre of fundamental importance for the new economy and above all it had become one of the nodal points of exchange with Europe. To Milan the bourgeois, new the noble ones of the second industrial revolution began to build new buildings and homes in the city.
A list of palaces
Roman
13th century
14th century
15th century
- Casa Parravicini (Via Cino del Duca)
- Casa Missaglia (demolished)
- Casa Atellani (Corso Magenta)
- Casa Fontana Silvestri (Corso Venezia)
- Palazzo Castelli-Borromeo (Piazza Borromeo)
- Palazzo Acerbi
- Palazzo Pozzobonelli-Isimbardi
- Palazzo Castani (Piazza San Sepolcro), seat of the Questura di Milano
- Villa Mirabello (Via Villa Mirabello, 6), also known as the "Cascina Mirabello"
- Palazzo Isimbardi
16th century
- Palazzo dei Giureconsulti (Piazza Mercanti)
- Palazzo Marino (Piazza della Scala)
- Palazzo Stampa di Soncino, Casati
- Palazzo di Brera (Via Brera)
- Palazzo Recalcati
- Palazzo Taverna (Via Bigli)
- Villa Simonetta (Via Stilicone)
17th century
- Casa degli Omenoni (Via degli Omenoni)
- Casa Crespi (Corso Venezia)
- Palazzo del Capitano di Giustizia (Corso Europa)
- Palazzo del Senato (Via Senato)
- Palazzo Dugnani (Via Manin, 2)
- Palazzo Annoni (Corso di Porta Romana, 6)
- Palazzo Durini-Caproni or "Palazzo Durini" (Via Durini)
- Palazzo Litta or Palazzo Arese (Corso Magenta, 24)
- Palazzo Erba Odescalchi
- Palazzo Orsini (Via Borgonuovo)
- Palazzo Sormani (Corso di Porta Vittoria, 6), seat of the Biblioteca Comunale di Milano
- Palazzo Cusani (Via Brera, 15)
- Palazzo Toscanini (Via Durini)
- Palazzo Olivazzi (Via Bigli)
- Palazzo Pusterla Brivio
18th century
- Casa Monti (Via G. Verdi)
- Palazzo Clerici
- Palazzo Trivulzio
- Palazzo Serbelloni (Corso Venezia)
- Palazzo Litta-Cusani (Corso Europa)
- Palazzo Mellerio
- Palazzo Morando-Attendolo-Bolognini (Via S. Andrea, 6)
- Palazzo Moriggia (Via Borgonuovo, 23), today the Museum of the Risorgimento
- Palazzo Reale
- Palazzo Sormani Andreani
- Palazzo Toscanini
- Palazzo Gallarati-Scotti
- Palazzo Beccaria
- Palazzo Greppi
- Palazzo Belgiojoso d'Este (Piazza Belgiojoso)
- Palazzo Visconti di Grazzano
- Palazzo Confalonieri
19th century
- Casa Ciani (Corso Venezia, corner with Via Boschetti)
- Casa Bottelli (Via Dante, 12)
- Casa Candiani (Via G.B. Vico, 20)
- Casa Bettoni or dei Bersaglieri (Corso di Porta Romana, 20)
- Casa Negri (Corso di Porta Romana)
- Casa Celesia (Via Dante, 7)
- Casa Chicchieri (Via Dante, corner with Via San Tommaso)
- Casa Pirovano (Via Giulini 2, corner with Via Dante)
- Casa Gadda-Portaluppi (Piazza Castello 20, corner with Via Lanza 5)
- Casa Dell'Acqua (Piazza Castello 27)
- Casa Sardi (Via Paleocapa, 3)
- Casa Poldi Pezzoli (Via Manzoni 12-14), seat of the Museo Poldi Pezzoli
- Casa Rossi (Corso Magenta, 12)
- Casa Fasoli (Via Torino, 50)
- Casa Bosi Pelitti (Via Castelfidardo, 10)
- Casa Sartorelli (Via San Raffaele, 4)
- Casa Borella (Via Berchet 2, junctions with Via San Raffaele and Via U. Foscolo)
- Casa Grondona (Corso Italia 57, corner with Via San Martino)
- Casa Rigamonti (Via Solferino, 24-24a)
- Casa Alesina (Via Cappuccio, 11)
- Casa Manzoni (Via Morone 1 / Piazza Belgiojoso)
- Casa Castini (Via Dante 4, corner with Via S. Prospero)
- Ca' Brutta
- Ca de' Facc (Piazza Baiamonti, 3)
- Ca' de Sass (sede della Banca Cariplo)
- Villa Belgiojoso-Bonaparte also known as the "Villa Reale"
- Palazzo Bonacosa (Via Q. Sella 4 / Piazza Castello)
- Palazzo Rusconi-Clerici (Piazza Castello, 16)
- Palazzo Savonelli (Via Dante, p.zza Cordusio, Via Broletto, Via S. Prospero, 1)
- Palazzo Luraschi (Corso Buenos Aires 1 / Piazza Oberdan)
- Palazzo della Banca d'Italia
- Palazzo del Museo di Scienze Naturali (Corso Venezia, 55)
- Palazzo della Permanente (Via Turati, 34)
- Palazzo Brentani or Brentano (Via Manzoni, 6)
- Palazzo Bagatti-Valsecchi (Via Santo Spirito, 7), seat of the Museo Bagatti-Valsecchi
- Palazzo Cagnola
- Palazzo Serbelloni
- Palazzo Anguissola (Via Manzoni)
- Palazzo Saporiti
- Palazzo Torelli-Viollier (Via Paleocapa 4-6, corner with Via Jacini)
- Palazzo Haas (Via U. Foscolo, 1-3)
- Palazzo Francesco Turati (Via Meravigli, 7-9)
- Palazzo Ercole Turati (Via Meravigli, 11)
- Palazzo Belgiojoso-Besana (Piazza Belgiojoso)
- Palazzo Talenti (Via G. Verdi)
- Palazzo Melzi d'Eril
- Palazzo Tarsis (Via S. Paolo)
- Palazzo Porro-Lambertenghi (Via Monte di Pietà)
20th century
- Villino Hoepli (Via XX Settembre)
- Villino Calabresi (Via XX Settembre)
- VIllino Gotico (Via Cernaia)
- Casa Piana (Via Sant'Ambrogio 29, corner with Via Lanzone)
- Palazzo Mezzanotte, seat of the Borsa d'Italia
- Palazzo Castiglioni (Corso Venezia)
- Palazzo dell'Arte
Sources
- I palazzi della vecchia Milano G.C. Bascapé, Ulrico Hoepli Editore, Milano, 1986
- Milano di terracotta e mattoni O.P. Melano, Mazzotta Editore, Milano, 2002