Santa Flavia
Santa Flavia is a town in the Metropolitan City of Palermo, Sicily, southern Italy.
Overview
The town is situated between the Gulf of Palermo and the town and hot springs known as Termini Imerese, on the Tyrrhenian Sea, east of Palermo. Inside the town are the remains of the ancient city of Soluntum.The main agricultural product of Santa Flavia is the grapefruit. The town is known for its variety of fresh fish. The town caters to tourism and has numerous seaside resorts.
Archeology
There is an archaeological area of the Phoenician and then the Hellenistic city of Solunto. In addition to the ruins of the ancient site, a small museum, the Antiquarium, located at the entrance to the excavations, can be visited; various types of materials are on display: ceramics, fragments of painted plaster, steles, statuettes, votive reliefs, capitals and coins from Solunto and other origins.Monument
The town is famous for being one of the favorite places of the Sicilian aristocracy who built numerous residences there which represent architectural masterpieces and are rich in works of art.- Villa Filangeri, seat of the town hall.
- Villa San Marco
- Villa Sperlinga
- Villa Valdina
- Villa Campofranco is a holiday residence, built at the beginning of the 18th century by the Lucchesi Palli, Princes of Campofranco.
- Villa Oliva is an incomplete holiday residence commissioned by a cadet member of the Branciforte family, princes of Butera. Probably originally consisting of a vast courtyard on which a tower rose which must have ended up as a tower of the winds. Never completed, in the 19th century, it was owned by Baron Riso who sold it to the Countess of Asaro. Characteristic of the villa is the large horseshoe-shaped stable based on the French model. In the 20th century the villa, now a ruin, was purchased by a food industrialist who radically renovated it while maintaining both the stables and the grandiose holm oak avenue that constituted the courtly access.
- Villa Cefalà was built by the Pilo Counts of Capaci to manage a lush citrus grove. The tuff portal has the year 1778 engraved in the keystone. In the 20th century, the building underwent interventions. Today the complex has been converted into a farmhouse.
- Villa Torremuzza was the holiday residence of the Castelli di Torremuzza princes. Dating from the 18th century, it was destroyed after the Second World War.
- Villino Basile. First work by Ernesto Basile, created between 1874 and 1878 with the collaboration of his father Giovan Battista Filippo, the villa was the bizarre residence for the family's summer holiday, which combines a neo-Renaissance style structure with lively phytomorphic decorations that adorn the cylindrical tower on the left side, which anticipate the Liberty style. The exteriors are enlivened by the chromatic contrast between the smooth surfaces covered with red hexagonal tiles, and the decorations and ashlars in golden-yellow tuff. The building is currently in a worrying state of disrepair.
- Castle and Royal Palace of Solanto
- Perez-Raimondi building
- Giuseppe Pezzillo Orphanage
- Graveyard
Designed by Roberto Narducci in 1932, it presents a language adhering to fascist architecture, lightened in the rational façade with an asymmetrical clock tower. In the square in front, noteworthy is the Monument to Francesco Paolo Perez, a marble bust from the 1910s by the sculptor Francesco Sorgi, placed on a high base with Liberty ribbon friezes.
- Basilica Soluntina di Sant'Anna
- Chiesa di Maria Santissima del Lume – Porticello
- Chiesa di Maria Santissima Addolorata
Twin towns
- Ondarroa, Spain