Giardini Papadopoli Explained

Giardini Papadopoli
Type:
    Location:Venice, Italy
    Area:8800m2
    Created:1834
    Designer:Francesco Bagnara

    Giardino Papadopoli is a terraced garden filled with shade trees in the Venetian sestiere of Santa Croce, between the Venezia Santa Lucia train station and Piazzale Roma.[1]

    History

    The gardens occupy the lands of the demolished monastery of Santa Croce. Inhabited by a community of Poor Clare nuns, it was closed in 1810 during the Napoleonic suppressions and reduced to civilian use. The complex was demolished a few years later along with other buildings to make way for the park.

    The first park was laid out in 1834 by Francesco Bagnara for Teresa Mosconi, wife of Count Spiridione Papadopoli, who had become owner of the land. They owned the . A follower of Giannantonio Selva and Giuseppe Jappelli, Bagnara created an English-style park to the north, toward the Grand Canal, in line with the romantic tendencies of the period, characterized by sinuous avenues and small hills. The remaining part, however, was more regular with geometrically shaped flowerbeds.

    In 1863, and Angelo commissioned Marco Quignon to expand and modify the gardens. There was also an aviary with silver parrots and pheasants and a circular terrace overlooking the Grand Canal.

    Damaged by World War I bombing, around 1920 the garden was opened to the public. A third of its area was destroyed in 1933 when the canal was constructed. The western part was largely flattened and separated from the rest by the excavation of the Rio Novo, necessary for the disposal of traffic from the new terminal. On the same occasion a large hotel complex was erected on the south side.

    Description

    The park currently occupies an enclosed area of 7,500 m² in an insula bounded on the north by the Grand Canal, on the east by the Rio dei Tolentini, on the south by the Rio del Magazen, and on the west by the Rio Novo.

    It is dimly lit both because of the fairly dense tree cover and the presence of evergreen species such as holm oaks, cypresses and cedars. Other species present are hackberry, sofore, linden, yew, maple and oak. Theundergrowth consists of specimens of laurel, evonymus, aucuba, viburnum and patches of Ruscus hypoglossum.

    The southern part of the park is overlooked by the winter garden of the Papadopoli Hotel, built in 1970 to a design by Pietro Porcinai.

    Beyond the Rio Novo, adjacent to Piazzale Roma, two small, unfenced patches of the original gardens still survive, measuring 655 and 710 m² respectively. The first is basically reduced to a flowerbed over which a few cypresses stand; the other is more interesting for the presence of a small fountain set among "fake" rocks and is what remains, perhaps, of a nymphaeum or cliff.

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Giardini Papadopoli . Reid Bramblett . July 2013 . Reids Italy . July 10, 2017.