Piano nobile dello stabilimento Pedrocchi, Padova ⋆ FullTravel.it

Piano nobile dello stabilimento Pedrocchi, Padova

Piano nobile dello stabilimento Pedrocchi Padova
Redazione FullTravel
4 Min Read

Il Piano Nobile is located above the famous Caffè Pedrocchi, built between 1826 and 1842 by Giuseppe Jappelli. The structure consists of a succession of rooms, each furnished and decorated to recreate the typical setting of a specific historical period. This creation is in line with nineteenth-century eclecticism, the taste, and interest in past styles.

In 1816 Antonio Pedrocchi, son of a coffee maker of Bergamasque origin, with the intention of enlarging his café and making it “the most beautiful on earth,” purchased a group of huts that stood north of his property. The great Venetian architect Giuseppe Jappelli was commissioned for the project, who in 1826 began the work during which important Roman-era architectural fragments were uncovered, now preserved at the Civic Museums at the Eremitani. Jappelli, transferring a secular and enlightened vision of society into architecture, made it his masterpiece, creating one of the city’s symbols. He solved the difficult problem of coordinating spatially different façades, insisting on a roughly triangular area, building from the side of Piazza Pedrocchi two bodies with Doric loggias visually united by another Corinthian loggia on the main floor. The interior is organized around the monumental central red room with a semicircular back, tripartite by Ionic columns and decorated on the walls by large maps. Symmetrically on its sides, the white room to the south and the green room to the north open corresponding to the loggias.

The upper floor was opened in 1842 on the occasion of the Fourth Congress of Italian Scientists and was conceived to serve as a retreat. Its solemn entrance is located in one of the two loggias; the space opens with a grand staircase ending in a large niche decorated with stucco and images of dancing Muses. All rooms revolve around the ballroom dedicated to Gioachino Rossini, a large double-height space compared to the others, with dazzling Empire decoration, all extolling music. A continuation of the Etruscan vestibule and parallel to it is the Greek room, decorated with a fresco by Giovanni De Min depicting the encounter between Diogenes and Plato. This is followed by a small circular room, the Roman room, decorated in 1841 by the Belluno artist Ippolito Caffi with Roman views: Castel Sant’Angelo, the Roman Forum and that of Augustus, the Trajan Column, perhaps the most interesting paintings of the entire complex.

To its left the Renaissance room, with an unfinished ceiling painting by Vincenzo Gazzotto; part of the original furnishings are preserved here; on one side the room overlooks the terrace of the southern façade, on the other you enter the small Herculanean room, decorated by Pietro Paoletti with the Triumph of Diana on the ceiling, and on the walls with other episodes related to the myth of the goddess. On the opposite side of the ballroom, the Egyptian room, a tribute to the well-known discoverer of antiquities Giovan Battista Belzoni, with whom Jappelli had personal contacts. The succession of these environments aims to eclectically retrace the styles of the past, as moments of autonomous aesthetic appreciation in a revival climate.

In 1891 Domenico Cappellato Pedrocchi, adopted son of the founder Antonio, left the Café to the Municipality of Padua with the obligation to “preserve the use of the establishment “as found” neglecting nothing so that it may maintain primacy in Italy.”

Information about the Piano Nobile of the Pedrocchi establishment

Piazzetta Pedrocchi,
35100 Padua (Padua)
0498781231
info@caffepedrocchi.it
https://padovacultura.padovanet.it/musei/archivio/cat_sedi_civiche

 Source: MIBACT

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