Villa Annoni Explained

Villa Annoni
Namesake:Alessandro Annoni
Coordinates:45.504°N 8.8166°W
Status:In use
Building Type:Renaissance Villa, used as a public office and museum
Architectural Style:Neoclassic
Architect:Leopoldo Pollack Giuseppe Zanoia
Location:Cuggiono, Italy
Address:Piazza XXV Aprile
Current Tenants:Public building
Start Date:1805
Completion Date:1809
Renovation Date:1987
Owner:Municipality of Cuggiono

Villa Annoni is a historical, 19th-century villa located in the Cuggiono municipality, in the greater Milan urban area. Since 2007, the buildings have housed municipal public offices and a museum.

History

The neoclassic villa was commissioned in the early 1800s by Alessandro Annoni, a wealthy Milanese who owned a sizable amount of land in the town of Cuggiono. As it was common at the time for families not belonging to the nobility, the Annonis sought to emulate certain habits of noble families, one of which was the construction of "majestic" villas. The family had risen in status through their service to the Napoleonic regime, and was then attempting to have their position fully recognized in society.

The Annonis descended from Paolo Annoni, a wealthy banker who lived in the 17th century and conceived their residence in Cuggiono as the ultimate showcase of their wealth. In keeping with the neoclassic style, the villa was built with great pomp and on a monumental scale.

The original idea to build a villa in Cuggiono is attributed to Alessandro's father, Giovanni, who started buying land in the late 1700s with a view to expand on the family's existing estate in the area. The villa would only be built, however, by his son Alessandro, who commissioned a well-known Milanese architect, Leopold Pollack, who was often engaged by the Austrian nobility.

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