Giovanni Battista Milani


Giovanni Battista Milani was an Italian architect and engineer.

Life and career

After graduating in engineering in Rome in 1899, Milani began his career working with the engineer and architect Guglielmo Calderini before establishing his own professional practice. In 1905, he succeeded Enrico Guy as full professor of technical architecture at the Royal School of Engineering in Rome. Together with Gustavo Giovannoni, he was one of the founders of the School of Architecture in 1920.
Among his works in Rome are the church of San Lorenzo da Brindisi on Via Sicilia ; the apartment buildings for the Istituto Romano di Beni Stabili on Viale Mazzini and the Villino Campos in Piazza d'Armi ; the Palazzo Coen and other projects for prominent Jewish families; the expansion of the School of Engineering in the former convent of San Pietro in Vincoli ; and the "Roma" seaside resort in Ostia. Outside Rome, he most notably designed the headquarters of the Banca Popolare Cosentina in Cosenza, the psychiatric hospital in Rieti, and Villa Milani in Spoleto, purchased and renovated between 1920 and 1927 as his summer residence.
Milani was also a member of the Accademia di San Luca, the Accademia Raffaello of Urbino, and the Academy of Fine Arts of Perugia.