

Palazzo Strozzi
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Situated between Piazza Strozzi and Via Tornabuoni, Palazzo
Strozzi is one of the symbols of Renaissance architecture. Filippo Strozzi,
the merchant who commissioned the palace, bought and had many of the surrounding
buildings demolished to make way for his palace. Benedetto da Maiano was
appointed to design the building but in fact confined himself to executing
a model of the palace for his client. Building thus began in 1489 under
the supervision of Simone del Pollaiolo, known as Cronaca. Filippo Strozzi
died before the palace was completed and his sons were the first to take
up residence there around the year 1505. After a long period during which
the Strozzi family resided mainly in Rome, the palace was restored to new
splendour around the middle of the nineteenth century, initially under Princess
Antonietta and later, under Prince Piero who had the building renovated
by the architect Pietro Berti between 1886 and 1889.
Reflecting the desire of Filippo Strozzi, the palace appears as a small
fortress in the heart of the city. Built to a rectangular plan, its three
storeys are each divided by linear cornices. One of the building's main
features is the accuracy with which the canons of fifteenth century architecture
were observed in constructing the façade: symmetrical and linear, it is
built from massive blocks of stone, large and rough-hewn in the lower part
of the building, smoother towards the upper storeys.
The imposing doorways on three sides of the palace, in via Tornabuoni, Piazza
Strozzi, and Via Strozzi, are surrounded by rectangular windows bordered
by rough masonry. Around the two upper storeys are two orders of mullioned
windows with the Strozzi family coat of arms in the arch of each. The impressive,
splendidly decorated, projecting cornice is supported by great brackets.
The exterior is further embellished by magnificent torch-holders, forged
by Niccolò da Nofri, known as Caparra, to a design by Benedetto da Maiano.
Inside, the attractive courtyard executed by Cronaca is surrounded on all
four sides by arches resting on columns with Corinthian capitals. On the
ground floor it is possible to observe the splendid Sala Ferri, and on the
second floor, overlooking the courtyard, a portico with columns on which
timber truss beams rest.
The palace belonged to the Strozzi family until 1937, when it was bought by the Istituto Nazionale delle Assicurazioni, and later turned over to the State in 1999, who assigned it to the City of Florence.