Palazzo Sirignano
No doubt it will be
some
time before residents of the Chiaia section of Naples start calling Palazzo
Sirignano by its
new name, the “Tirrenia” building, or something like that. After all,
it has always
been Palazzo Sirignano. That
”always” goes back to the year it was built, 1535, when the new Spanish
nobility
in their new vice-realm of Naples
started to build out to the west along the Riviera di Chiaia and what
was then
the seaside. (The more recent Villa Comunale
and the road, via Caracciolo, now
stand between the older thoroughfare and the water.
Some
sources claim that
Palazzo Sirignano was, indeed, the first Spanish villa along the
Riviera di
Chiaia to be completed. The year 1535 is early enough to make that
claim
plausible. Thus, the large Palazzo Satriano—a
few hundreds meters to the east at
the very beginning of the Riviera di Chiaia—from 1605, even though it
is placed
first in a long row of impressive buildings stretching towards Mergellina, is somewhat
of a late-comer.
The
great viceroy, Pedro
de Toledo, authorized the construction of Palazzo Sirignano for one
Don
Ferdinando Alarcon, Marquis of the Valle and captain of the Spanish
army. The
original building was in Renaissance style with the main entrance
facing the
shoreline, and a quadrangular tower for the defence of the building and
surrounding area against attacks by Saracen
pirates. The building remained
substantially unchanged until the Bourbon
dynasty took over the kingdom
of Naples in the
1700s; further changes
were made after 1889, the year in which ownership of the building
passed to Prince Caravita di Sirignano, whose name the villa still
bears in popular
usage. The changes were radical and involved the complete restructuring
of the
exterior in a Neo-Renaissance style and changes to much of the
interior.
The
building was sold in
1917 to the Tirrenia Navigation company, which did some needed
renovation; since
1937 Palazzo Sirignano has been the headquarters of that company in Naples. The eye
of the
casual passer-by is more likely to be caught by the adjacent and
opulent
neo-Classical Villa Floridiana; yet,
Palazzo Sirignano is worth a look and a
visit, as the Tirrenia company also maintains a public art gallery on
the
premises.
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