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Via XX Settembre is one of the main thoroughfares in the center of Genoa, Italy, located within the ''San Vincenzo'' district. It is slightly less than a kilometer long.


Location

It runs east–west and, along with Corso Italia - the promenade along the seafront - is one of the main streets for strolling and shopping in the city, located in the city center. It traverses the two central districts of Portoria (the first stretch, with arcades, from Piazza De Ferrari to the Monumental Bridge) and San Vincenzo (from the Monumental Bridge to the junction with Via Cadorna near Piazza della Vittoria). It intersects with numerous streets along its length, some of which were pedestrianized during the renovation work for the G8 Summit in 2001, and is rich with elegant shops. It serves as a link between the eastern part of the city, which faces east of the Bisagno river, and the western part developed beyond Largo della Zecca, towards Principe. In particular, it connects Piazza della Vittoria to Piazza De Ferrari, two of the city's major squares. Almost exclusively lined with shops and city offices, Via XX Settembre slopes slightly upwards towards the west (although vehicle traffic flows in the opposite direction) and is adorned with some of the city's most imposing buildings; in the upper part of the street, a series of long arcades stretch along both sides, reaching the entrances of the Teatro Carlo Felice on the right side. Along Via XX Settembre are some of the most prestigious shops and elegant cafés. Until the
1980s File:1980s replacement montage02.PNG, 420px, From left, clockwise: The first Space Shuttle, ''Columbia'', lifts off in 1981; US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev ease tensions between the two superpowers, leading to the ...
, the street was also rich in cinemas and theaters (such as Cinema Olimpia and Teatro Margherita), making it nationally known as "the street of cinemas".


History

File:Genova centro 1886.png, The central area corresponding to Via Giulia, Via della Consolazione, and Via Porta Pia, map published in 1886 File:Genova centro 1906.png, The central area corresponding to Via Giulia, Via della Consolazione, and Via Porta Pia, map published in 1906, after the construction of Via XX Settembre. The street was built in the last decade of the 19th century, rectifying and expanding the path of Via Giulia and Via della Consolazione, to create a new route towards the east, which until then had inadequate outlets for the city's urban expansion. The name of the new street was the subject of heated discussions at the time, until the desire of many citizens to have the historic date of the
Capture of Rome The Capture of Rome ( it, Presa di Roma) on 20 September 1870 was the final event of the unification of Italy (''Risorgimento''), marking both the final defeat of the Papal States under Pope Pius IX and the unification of the Italian Peninsula ...
recognized prevailed.''Genova tra ottocento e novecento - Album storico-fotografico'', Nuova Editrice Genovese, 2006, ISBN 8888963073 The street was strongly advocated by Mayor Andrea Podestà, but opposed by the resident population because building it required demolishing houses and shops. Especially opposed were the religious of the Church of the Remedy, expropriated to make way for the artery. Among the other necessary demolitions was the one, hindered by the government, of the Sant'Andrea prisons. The stretch of road affecting the district of San Vincenzo (from the Monumental Bridge to Via Fiume), while not having the sumptuous appearance of the part between Piazza De Ferrari and the Monumental Bridge, characterized by high arcades with Venetian flooring, is equally filled with elegant palaces and shops, making the street one of the city's most frequented destinations for shopping and strolling. At the time of its opening, the street, wide, straight, and lined with buildings of unusual height for the times, more similar to the sumptuous Via Giuseppe Garibaldi of the Renaissance period, represented a novelty for the area, which until then had narrower streets and characteristic alleyways. The competition for the construction of the new street was announced in 1883, after nearly twenty years of debate, and only in 1887 was the project by Cesare Gamba approved. Work began in 1892. The lower part was first completed, with the reorganization of the former Via della Consolazione, finished the following year; the street was inaugurated on January 18, 1896. The construction of the various buildings facing the street would be completed only in 1913. All pre-existing buildings, except for the Church of the Consolation and the attached convent, were demolished and replaced by new buildings, constructed for the first time in Genoa in reinforced concrete.F. Caraceni Poleggi, Genova - Guida Sagep, 1984. The street was built on the route of the previous via Giulia, for the stretch from Piazza De Ferrari (then Piazza San Domenico, named after the homonymous church no longer existing) to the Monumental Bridge, and Via della Consolazione, for the stretch beyond the Monumental Bridge to Porta Pila. A project to expand via Giulia (a road dating back to the 17th century and modified several times to improve its accessibility for carts and carriages) had already been approved in 1840, but the practice was then blocked due to appeals by the owners of the buildings that would have been demolished or modified, and therefore in the following decades only minor works were carried out to reduce the slope by lowering the road level. Via XX Settembre was redesigned on the axis of the two streets when, at the end of the 19th century, starting from 1892, the urban reorganization of the entire city center was decided. The design of the street was entrusted to the engineer Cesare Gamba. Along its route, and likewise in adjacent streets, the most emphatic Liberty-style buildings in the city were erected between 1892 and 1912. The street was built in two stages (a first lower stretch from Porta Pila to Porta d'Archi and an upper one from Porta d'Archi to Piazza De Ferrari), not without economic difficulties (the banking crisis of 1894 affected some of the entities that had financed the works) and the projects related to individual buildings, as well as the characteristics of the future street (such as the presence or absence of arcades), were modified several times over the years to adapt to the changing demands and needs of the municipality and the companies constructing them. Crossing it longitudinally, approximately halfway along its route, is the Monumental Bridge, an imposing marble structure with multiple arches. The Monumental Bridge stands in the same place where the Porta dell'Arco, of the 16th-century walls, the so-called New Walls, once stood. Its role, like that of the Porta dell'Arco, is to link two systems of viaducts, one lower (Via XX Settembre) and one upper (Corso Podestà). It was built with a double design. The engineering part was again entrusted to the engineer Cesare Gamba, who realized (1895) an immense arch with a structure similar to those of railway bridges; it was overlaid with a monumental marble apparatus, with columns and sculptures. Just before the Monumental Bridge is the Church dedicated to
Santa Rita Santa Rita may refer to: * Rita of Cascia (1381–1457), Catholic saint *Associação Atlética Santa Rita, a Brazilian football (soccer) club *Santa Rita de Cássia FC, an Angolan football (soccer) club Places Belize * Santa Rita, Corozal, a Ma ...
, called the Nostra Signora della Consolazione e San Vincenzo martire, whose entrance, corresponding to the level of the old streets, remains slightly lower than the current roadbed. Immediately beyond, raised above the street, is the Church of Santo Stefano, of Romanesque architecture and rebuilt on the remains of an ancient abbey Benedictine. The street and its buildings, like much of the city, suffered heavy damage during the bombings on Genoa during World War II. Many civil and public structures were almost completely destroyed and then rebuilt, including: the aforementioned Church of Santo Stefano, the Teatro Margherita, and various others. Others were more or less seriously damaged, such as the Palazzo Orzali, the Palazzo Pesce Manieri, and some of the palaces of Dario Carbone and others. During the city's redevelopment for the G8 summit in 2001, the sidewalks on half of the street facing Piazza De Ferrari were widened by several meters to allow for increased pedestrian traffic.


Palaces

The long artery opened in the late nineteenth century is divided in two by the Monumental Bridge: the buildings in the upper part are equipped with arcades and architecturally more elegant, while in the eastern part prevail structures in reinforced concrete, innovative for the time, enriched by typical decorations of the
Art Nouveau Art Nouveau (; ) is an international style of art, architecture, and applied art, especially the decorative arts. The style is known by different names in different languages: in German, in Italian, in Catalan, and also known as the Modern ...
, which characterizes much of the new central areas of the city, or by traditional elements, inspired by Mannerist architecture or Florentine Gothic. There are numerous buildings of architectural interest, many of which are subject to architectural constraints.Via XX Settembre on www.liguri.net
Mauro Ricchetti, "Liguria sconosciuta - itinerari insoliti e curiosi", Rizzoli, Milan, 2002, ISBN 88-7423-008-7 The University of Genoa highlights among those worthy of artistic and architectural interest the civic buildings 1, 2, 3, 5, 8c, 10 - 12, 16 - 18, 19, 21, 23, 26, 28, 29, 30 - 32, 34, 36, 42. In the design, some of the most well-known Italian engineers and architects of the time were involved, such as
Gino Coppedè Luigi "Gino" Coppedè (26 September 1866 – 20 September 1927) was an Italian architect, sculptor and decorator. He was an exponent of Art Nouveau. Biography Coppedè was born in Florence, a son of Mariano Coppedè and brother of Adolfo Co ...
,
Luigi Rovelli Luigi Rovelli (1850–1911) was an Italian architect, a key figure in the eclecticism movement in Liguria. Biography Luigi Rovelli was born in Monza on March 23, 1850. A student of Camillo Boito, he graduated from the Brera Academy. Following ...
, Benvenuto Pesce Maineri, Cesare Gamba,
Dario Carbone Dario is a masculine given name, etymologically related to Darius. Given name *Dario Allevi (born 1965), Italian politician *Dario Argento (born 1940), Italian film director *Dario Badinelli (born 1946), Italian triple jumper *Dario Bellezza (19 ...
, Gaetano Orzali, Stefano Cuneo, Raffaele Croce, Giuseppe Tallero, G. B. Carpineti, the Celle brothers, and others. Among the most significant buildings are:


Palaces on the South Side

* Civic 2, Palace of the Domes (Dario Carbone, 1909). Located at the intersection with Via Brigata Liguria, on the south side, it was built between 1905 and 1909 according to the design of Dario Carbone. Constructed entirely in reinforced concrete, even in the vertical structures, its facade is decorated with typical Art Nouveau motifs. It is characterized by four corner towers topped with domes. * Civic 4, White Palace (Cesare Gamba, 1892). Inspired by a Renaissance style with
Baroque The Baroque (, ; ) is a style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished in Europe from the early 17th century until the 1750s. In the territories of the Spanish and Portuguese empires including t ...
influences and embellishments, it can be originally dated between the 16th and
17th century The 17th century lasted from January 1, 1601 ( MDCI), to December 31, 1700 ( MDCC). It falls into the early modern period of Europe and in that continent (whose impact on the world was increasing) was characterized by the Baroque cultural moveme ...
. * Civic 6, Boggio-Rosazza Palace (Cesare Gamba, 1892). Inspired by a Florentine Gothic style, particularly that of the
Medici-Riccardi Palace The Palazzo Medici, also called the Palazzo Medici Riccardi after the later family that acquired and expanded it, is a Renaissance palace located in Florence, Italy. It is the seat of the Metropolitan City of Florence and a museum. Overview T ...
, it has a basement finished in rusticated masonry. * Civic 8 (Giuseppe Rosso, 1933). The only building constructed significantly later than the arterial road, it presents a clear rationalist architecture with less marked classical influences. Its designer was also the author of the Civic Theatre of Vercelli and other significant works of the time. * Civic 10-12, Zuccarino Palace (Stefano Cuneo, 1901). Designed at the beginning of the 20th century, it was built on the area where the Church of S. Maria della Pace stood. It has the shape of an inverted "E", with two internal courtyards open at the rear. In this case as well, the style appears as a contamination between Romanesque- Gothic and 16th-century
Mannerism Mannerism, which may also be known as Late Renaissance, is a style in European art that emerged in the later years of the Italian High Renaissance around 1520, spreading by about 1530 and lasting until about the end of the 16th century in Italy, ...
. * Civic 2 of Via Maragliano, Zuccarino Palace (Gino Coppedè, 1907). Adjacent to the previous one, excessively rich in the most classic decorative elements typical of the famous Florentine architect, it is considered one of the finest Liberty-style buildings in the area. * Civic 14, Giants' Palace (Dario Carbone, Eugenio Fuselli, 1895). In Art Nouveau style, it is located opposite the Church of Nostra Signora della Consolazione e San Vincenzo martire. The facade, tripartite at the base by four rusticated pillars, is adorned with four pairs of concrete
atlases An atlas is a collection of maps; it is typically a bundle of maps of Earth or of a region of Earth. Atlases have traditionally been bound into book form, but today many atlases are in multimedia formats. In addition to presenting geographic ...
supporting four sets of paired columns. The palace housed the Genoese headquarters of Bureau Veritas, one of the oldest naval classification agencies, present in the Ligurian capital since 1848. * Civic 16-18 (Adolfo Bisso, 1898). Adjacent to the Monumental Bridge, the palace was designed with an irregular shape to follow the course of the square in front of the bridge. It was severely damaged by the bombings on Genoa during World War II, but later restored. Through the palace, one accessed the Margherita Theatre, occupied since the 1990s by commercial activities. The entrance to the former theatre divides the building into two distinct wings, which also differ in the decorations of the facade: the eastern side has decorations inspired by 16th-century Mannerism, while the western side is in neo-romanticism style, with hanging arches. * Civic 26 ( Benvenuto Pesce, 1909). Also in Art Nouveau style, with orientalizing decorations, it has five floors plus a mezzanine, with a richly decorated facade featuring two polygonal turrets extending for four floors. * Civic 28 (Raffaele Croce, 1909). The building has five floors. The brightly colored facade is decorated with pierced balconies and bifora and trifora windows. The palace is topped by two pagoda domes with copper coverings. * Civic 30-32 (G. B. Carpineti, 1902). The building has a three-part facade both in width and height, decorated with pilasters and rustication on the corners. * Civic 34 (
Luigi Rovelli Luigi Rovelli (1850–1911) was an Italian architect, a key figure in the eclecticism movement in Liguria. Biography Luigi Rovelli was born in Monza on March 23, 1850. A student of Camillo Boito, he graduated from the Brera Academy. Following ...
, 1902). The palace, with a neomanierist facade, has an irregular plan due to its location. The large projecting
cornice In architecture, a cornice (from the Italian ''cornice'' meaning "ledge") is generally any horizontal decorative moulding that crowns a building or furniture element—for example, the cornice over a door or window, around the top edge of a ...
, in which the windows of the fifth floor open, is characteristic. * Civic 36 ( Benvenuto Pesce, 1909). The facade has narrow elongated windows, well-spaced and surrounded by elegant decorations. The top floor consists of a loggia with paired columns. * Civic 42 (G. B. Carpineti, 1905). The five floors are well highlighted by horizontal pilasters and vertical balconies, with alternating windows and bay windows on the lower floors. Originally built as a hotel structure, the ground floor features a large open space supported by columns with a semi-circular exedra from which an elliptical staircase begins. File:Palazzo delle Cupole, Genova.jpg, Civic 2 File:Genova - Palazzo dei Giganti.jpg, Civic 14 File:Palazzo Benvenuto Pesce Maineri, via XX Settembre n. 26, Genoa, Italy.jpg, Civic 26 File:Via XX Settembre 28, Genova.jpg, Civic 28 File:Via XX Settembre 34, Genoa, Italy.jpg, Civic 34 File:Palazzo Benvenuto Pesce Maineri, via XX Settembre n. 36, Genoa, Italy - edit.jpg, Civic 36 File:Via XX Settembre 42, Genova.jpg, Civic 42


Palaces on the North Side

* Civic 1 (Cesare Gamba, 1892), is in the classical style and features a tripartite division. * Civic 3 (Giuseppe Tallero) reflects the refined taste of the late nineteenth century, with plastic decorative elements and projecting bodies and cornices, and is part of the first phase of construction. * Civic 11-13, known as the Mercato Orientale, is a complex designed to relocate the agricultural market from Piazza De Ferrari. It occupies 5,500 square meters with a circular portico of 360 meters, initially conceived with a metal structure but later built in reinforced concrete. * Civic 19 (Stefano Cuneo, 1897) has a tripartite facade and detailed decoration with chromatic accents, with a distinctive rounding towards Via della Consolazione. * Civic 21 (Fratelli Celle, 1896) features a large, austere facade in traditional style, with particularly prominent decorative elements on the doorway and a balustrade on the cornice. * Civic 23, known as Palazzo Zuccarino-Cerruti (Gino Coppedè, 1912), is the most significant on the north side, near the Monumental Bridge. Built between 1909 and 1913, it has an irregular plan and a facade rich in Liberty-style decorative elements, with Egyptian and Sino-Japanese inspirations. * Civic 29, Palazzo Orzali (Gaetano Orzali, 1905), is characterized by three large bay windows extending for three floors and notable Liberty-style decorated railings. The atrium features a double-ramp staircase, and the underlying porticos are connected to those of the next building by a wide portal in pink marble. * Civic 31 and 33 (Dario Carbone) present similar structures and decorations, with facades enlivened by richly decorated bay windows. * Civic 35, known as the
Hotel Bristol Palace Hotel Bristol Palace is a 4-star Luxury hotel in Genoa, Italy on Via XX Settembre. History The hotel was designed by Dario Carbone and built in 1905. During World War 2, it housed the German command. At the end of the war, it housed the Natio ...
(Dario Carbone, 1905), was designed and inaugurated in 1905 as the location for a luxurious hotel. * Civic 37 (Dario Carbone, 1905) is another Liberty-style building, designed in the style of the previous one. * Civic 41 is the post-war reconstruction (1951) of the original building, destroyed during the Second World War. Overlooking Piazza De Ferrari with a curved facade, it is topped by a dome and houses the Genoese offices of La Repubblica and Telenord. File:Mercato Orientale, Genova, full.jpg, Civics 11–13, Mercato Orientale File:Palazzo Zuccarino-Cerruti, Genova.jpg, Palazzo Zuccarino-Cerruti, civics 23 File:Palazzo Orzali, lato ovest - crop, via XX Settembre 29, Genova, Italia.jpg, Civic 29, by Gaetano Orzali File:Via XX Settembre, civv. 33-31, Genova.jpg, Civics 31–33 File:Palazzo dell'Hotel Bristol, Genova.jpg, Civic 35,
Hotel Bristol Palace Hotel Bristol Palace is a 4-star Luxury hotel in Genoa, Italy on Via XX Settembre. History The hotel was designed by Dario Carbone and built in 1905. During World War 2, it housed the German command. At the end of the war, it housed the Natio ...
File:Genova_via_XX_Settembre_%28xilografia%29.jpg, Civic 37 File:Genova - Palazzo di Via XX Settembre, n° 41.jpg, Civic 41 from piazza De Ferrari File:Historical image of piazza De Ferrari, Genoa, Italy.jpg, Civic 41, before
Bombing of Genoa in World War II Owing to the importance of its port (the largest and busiest port in Italy) and industries (such as the Ansaldo shipyard and Piaggio), the Italian port city of Genoa, the regional capital and largest city of Liguria, was heavily bombarded by both ...


Monumental Bridge

The Monumental Bridge, connecting the walls of Acquasola with those of S. Chiara, was built according to the design of Cesare Gamba and Riccardo Haupt between 1893 and 1895, replacing the Porta degli Archi, dismantled and rebuilt on the Walls of Prato. On the bridge, which crosses Via XX Settembre, runs Corso Andrea Podestà, which runs along the bastions of the sixteenth-century walls and connects Piazza Corvetto with the area of
Carignano Carignano may refer to: Places * Carignano, Piedmont, a municipality in the Metropolitan City of Turin, Italy * Palazzo Carignano, a historical building in the centre of Turin, Italy * Teatro Carignano, a theatre in Turin, Italy People * Hou ...
. Becoming one of the symbolic places of the modern city, it divides the Portoria area from that of S. Vincenzo and offers an excellent view over the underlying Via XX Settembre. The bridge, 21 meters high above the street level of Via XX Settembre, is built of stone and bricks, following the typology of the railway arches in use at that time, but was later externally clad in white stone from
Mazzano Mazzano (Brescian: ) is a ''comune'' in the province of Brescia, in Lombardy, northern Italy. The Municipality of Mazzano has a population of 12500 inhabitants and consists of three hamlets, Mazzano, Molinetto and Ciliverghe Twin towns Mazzano i ...
. In 1949, the two side arches, decorated with statues by Nino Servettaz, were dedicated to the fallen for freedom: some epigraphs remember the names of the Resistance fighters, the surrender of the German troops under General Meinhold to the Ligurian National Liberation Committee (April 25, 1945), and the text of the motivation for which Genoa was awarded the gold medal of the Resistance in 1947.A. Torti, Vie di Portoria, 1996
Touring Club Italiano, Guide of Italy - Liguria, 2009


References


Bibliography

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External links

* * {{Commons category-inline
XX Settembre XX Settembre is an urban zone of Rome, Italy, identified by the initials 1F. It takes its name from the main road, Via Venti Settembre, established on 30 November 1871Proposta al Consiglio Comunale n. 16 del 30 novembre 1871. and dedicated to t ...