Palazzo Porto

Palazzo Porto is a palazzo built by Andrea Palladio in Contrà Porti, Vicenza, Italy. It is one of two palaces in the city designed by Palladio for members of the Porto family (the other being Palazzo Porto in Piazza Castello). Commissioned by the noble Iseppo da Porto, just married (about 1544), this building had a rather long designing stage and a longer and troublesome realization, partially unfinished.

With the other palladian architectures in Vicenza, the palazzo is listed since 1994 in the World Heritage Sites by UNESCO.

Historical and architectural description

, 1776)]]

It is very probable that Iseppo (Giuseppe) Porto’s decision to undertake construction of a great palace in the Contrà (Contrada) dei Porti was taken to emulate the edifice that his brothers-in-law Adriano and Marcantonio Thiene had begun to erect, in 1542, only a stone’s throw away. It is also possible that it was Iseppo’s very marriage to Livia Thiene, in the first half of the 1540s, which provided the concrete occasion for summoning Andrea Palladio.

Allied with the Thiene, the Porto were one of the city’s rich and powerful families, and the palaces of the family’s various branches were ranked along the Contrada which today still bears their name. Iseppo was an influential personality, with various responsibilities in the public administration of the city, responsibilities which on more than one occasion were intertwined with the assignments entrusted to Palladio. Relations between the two must very probably have been closer than between patron and architect, if we consider that thirty years after the project for Iseppo’s city palace Palladio designed and began to build a great villa for him at Molina di Malo, subsequently never completed. The two friends died in the same year, 1580.

The palace was inhabitable from December 1549, though less than half the façade was standing and would only be completed three years later, in 1552. Numerous autograph drawings by Palladio record the complex design process. They show that right from the beginning Palladio planned for two distinct, residential blocks, one to lie along the street and the other contiguous to the back wall of the courtyard. In the Quattro libri dell'architettura (1570) the two blocks are interconnected by a majestic courtyard with enormous Composite columns: this is quite clearly a re-elaboration of the original idea in the interests of publication.

Compared with the Palazzo Civena, only built a few years earlier, the Palazzo Porto fully illustrates the extent of Palladio’s evolution after the journey to Rome in 1541 and his acquaintance with both antique and contemporary architecture. The Bramantean model of Palazzo Caprini is here reinterpreted, with Palladio observing the Vicentine custom of living on the ground floor, which is higher as a result. The splendid, four-columned atrium represents Palladio’s reinterpretation of Vitruvian spaces, but one where traditional Vicentine typologies also survive.

The two rooms to the left of the atrium were frescoed by Paolo Veronese and Domenico Brusasorzi, while the stuccoes are by Bartolomeo Ridolfi. On the palace attic, the statues of Iseppo and his son Leonida, in antique Roman garb, keep watch over the entrance of visitors to their house.

Images

Re-drawings

3-D model (reconstruction)

Interiors

Sources

  • Palazzo Porto in the CISA website (source for the first revision of this article, with kind permission)
  • E. Forssman, Palazzo di Porto Festa a Vicenza, CISA Palladio, Vicenza 1973

See also

  • Palazzo Porto in Piazza Castello, Vicenza
  • Villa Porto (Molina di Malo)
Listed in the following categories:
Post a comment
Tips & Hints
Arrange By:
Simona Costantini
2 November 2014
Palladio: Progetto: 1546 ca. / Costruzione: 1546 - 1552
Load more comments
foursquare.com
2.5/10
5 people have been here
Map
Contra' Porti, 17, 36100 Vicenza, Italy Get directions

Palazzo Porto Festa on Foursquare

Hotels nearby

See all hotels See all
Antico Hotel Vicenza

starting $159

Hotel Campo Marzio

starting $93

Key Hotel

starting $86

Hotel Cristina

starting $77

Relais Santa Corona

starting $125

'Palace Hotel La Conchiglia D'oro'

starting $0

Recommended sights nearby

See all See all
Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Villa Capra

Villa Capra 'La Rotonda' is a Renaissance villa just outside Vicenza,

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Villa Trissino (Meledo di Sarego)

Villa Trissino is an incomplete aristocratic villa designed by Andrea

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Villa Saraceno

Villa Saraceno is a Palladian Villa in Agugliaro, Province of Vicenza,

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Palazzo della Ragione

The Palazzo della Ragione is a Medieval town hall building in Padua,

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Scrovegni Chapel

The Scrovegni Chapel, or Cappella degli Scrovegni, also known as the

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Ponte Altinate

The Ponte Altinate is a Roman segmented arch bridge in Padua, Italy.

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Stadio Plebiscito

Stadio Plebiscito is a multi-use stadium in Padova, Italy. It is

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua

The Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua (Italian: Sant'Antonio da

Similar tourist attractions

See all See all
Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Summer Palace

The Summer Palace or Yihe yuan (Шаблон:Zh-tspl) is a palace in Beiji

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Chapultepec Castle

Chapultepec Castle (Castillo de Chapultepec in Spanish) is located on

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Sanssouci

Sanssouci is the former summer palace of Frederick the Great, King of

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Blenheim Palace

Blenheim Palace is a large and monumental country house situated in W

Add to wishlist
I've been here
Visited
Alcázar of Seville

The Alcázar of Seville (Spanish 'Alcázares Reales de Sevilla' or '

See all similar places