Giuseppe Poggi


Giuseppe Poggi was an Italian architect, mainly active in Florence. From 1864 he designed the city's urban renovation, which included the demolition of the walls, and the creation of the Viali di Circonvallazione to encircle the city. At the sites of the former gates of the city, he created scenographic squares, such as the Piazza Cesare Beccaria and the Piazza della Libertà. He also designed the viale dei Colli, a panoramic walk ending with the Piazzale Michelangelo.

Biography

Early career

A native of Florence, he was articled to the architect and engineer Bartolommeo Silvestri. From 1835 to 1838 he practised engineering, but in the late 1830s he took up architecture.
Poggi received numerous commissions from the city's upper bourgeoisie for renovations of palaces and gardens. His first commission was the remodelling of the villa of Conte Giuseppe Archinto alle Forbici in the hills between Florence and San Domenico, and the layout of the adjoining park. Other early works, which were Neoclassical in style, included designs for a villa at Porta al Prato and refurbishment of a palazzo in the Via Cavour, Florence, for the Poniatowski family; and restoration of the Palazzo Guicciardini in the Lungarno Guicciardini, and of the Villa Guadagni, known as ‘Delle Lune’, at San Domenico Fiesole.

Mature work

After service as a volunteer in the First Italian War of Independence, and marriage in 1850 to the daughter of Pasquale Poccianti, Poggi resumed his busy architectural practice. During the next 15 years he became the most sought-after architect in Florence, both for new work and restorations for Florentine high society, which was much impressed by the grandeur of the Second French Empire. His new buildings included the Ospizio Marino in Viareggio; the Palazzo Calcagnini Arese and the Villa Favard on the Nuovo Lungarno next to the Parco delle Cascine, Florence; a new atrium, inspired by Brunelleschi, for the Villa Normanby, east of Florence; and the Palazzo Valery in Bastia, Corsica.
The Villa Favard represents the highpoint of Poggi’s Renaissance Revival classicism, expressed in the façades and in the rich and refined decoration of the interiors, for which he engaged a number of artists, including the painters Annibale Gatti and Cesare Mussini and the wood-carver Rinaldo Barbetti. Poggi also designed for the Baronessa Favard an elegant funerary chapel in the Villa di Rovezzano on the eastern outskirts of Florence.
His numerous commissions for restoration and remodelling work in Florence included the Palazzo Gerini in the Via Ricasoli; Palazzo Antinori, Piazza Antinori; Palazzo Orloff, Via della Scala; and Palazzo Strozzi, Via degli Strozzi, as well as several villas, notably Villa Stibbert at Montughi. He also designed parks and gardens, becoming recognized as an authority on garden architecture and a sensitive and enlightened interpreter of landscape gardening theory.

Urban renovation of Florence

When the capital of the new kingdom of Italy was transferred from Turin to Florence in 1865, Poggi was appointed to direct the expansion of the city to reflect its new status. This important public commission took up all his time from 1864 to 1877 and brought him wide recognition. His work involved the creation of new avenues and squares for the city; flood defences; modernization of the sewage system; an official plan for new residential areas and road layout; improvement of the water supply; a new livestock market and public abbatoirs; the relocation of the railway network and the creation of a new station on the outskirts of the city; and the construction of the Viale dei Colli and Piazzale Michelangelo, for which he achieved most renown.
The demolition of the early 14th-century walls on the right bank of the River Arno, their replacement with wide boulevards and the creation of new squares around the old city gates made an enormous contribution to the establishment of a modern image for Florence.

Architectural restoration theories

Poggi exerted considerable influence on the theory of architectural restoration in Italy, both in his executed projects and in his writings. In contrast to the contemporary, fashionable ideas of Viollet-le-Duc, Poggi was among the first to assert the need for restoration that preserved existing work of all periods, including the then unfashionable Baroque, and he played an important role in the Servizio Nazionale di Tutela dei Monumenti created after the political unification of Italy.