The Main House Also known as
‘La Delizia dei Pianciani’ (The Piancianis’ Delight), the spacious central construction of the Villa is characterised by the panoramic scene. It was conceived by Valadier as an elongated facade of 11 openings spatially extended within the
exedra of the square. The main house is typical of the Roman baroque style of French contemporary buildings at the time the Villa was built. The construction expands towards the top of the hill and towards the rear of the chapel in the direction of the sunset. Pietro Ferrari (1762–1825), an architect from Spoleto, took over the completion of the works and finished the east wing of the house. Inside the building, there are three levels: the ground floor, the mezzanine, and the noble level. The ground floor has huge halls and a wide patio. The mezzanine level holds a small library and service rooms and runs through the northwest side of the Villa. The noble level has rooms with balconies on both sides and a vast terrace overlooking Spoleto and the valley below. Villa Pianciani has preserved the decoration and furniture of the century: ceiling panels, paintings on the walls with eloquently painted landscape scenes, door frames and framed displays, faux marble, and
chiaroscuro with small floral elements or with small figures. The decorative elements are mainly handworks by unknown craftsmen, dating back to the years following the construction until the first decade of the 19th century. The techniques used were water paintings for plaster and for canvas, tempera paintings, and decorative carvings on paper using the technical skills of the local workers of the era.
The Chapel The chapel is also the work of Valadier and is situated behind the main house, on the highest point of the hill. The triangular
tympanum, the four columned doric porch, the symmetric structure of the barrel-vaulted isle, and the two lateral sacristies show strong ties to
Palladian architecture. However, the inside, decorated with precious decorations of the decade, is unrestored.
The Secret Garden When entering the property, there is a small forest on the left where the
Neoclassical style of the Secret Garden is visible. Designed by Valadier as an entity that unites with the rest of the Villa, the Secret Garden is composed of an elliptic wall, cobbled stairs, a shrine arch and the remains of a fountain and a sundial. Roman statues and iron banisters were characteristic in this period and used to adorn the garden. The influences of the
Enlightenment are also evident, with a passageway and fake ruins to create a space in which to wander and dream.
The Annex The Annex is traditionally called the ‘Casino delle Vecchie Cucine’ (a lodge of the Old Kitchens). It is an independent building close to the Villa with three levels that originally housed the kitchen and the majority of the services. This building, more linear than the Main House, is on the northwest side of the hill and offers a magnificent view of the valley in the direction of
Montefalco and
Assisi. The third floor is on the same level as the main entrance of the Villa and overlooks the park. The second floor is internally connected to the ground floor of the Villa via an underground tunnel excavated into the hillside. The two bottom floors of the Annex follow the natural height difference of the hill and stop at the independent and spacious garden of the ‘Piazzale del Tramonto’ which can also be reached by a separate
driveway (‘Viale dei Gelsi’).
Building in the park An additional building, recognizable today only as a ruin, represents the unique survivor of two symmetric artifacts originally set at the sides of the main avenue of entry and named barracks’. These buildings, located at the sides of the path to the main house and inclined parallel to the axis, guided the gaze of the visitor along the entrance to focus the attention on the facade of the main building.
The Park Giuseppe Valadier also designed a large park around the Villa. Across from the entrance surrounded by oaks, is a 2000 m2 park where cypress trees lead to the peak of the hill with two lateral paths that guide the way along the property. The central axis continues through a geometric square that contains two large pavilions made of wrought iron and decorated with roses ending in an elliptical square limited by exedras. The layout is in the geometric and symmetric lines of traditional Italian gardens, while the park as a whole follows the contour of the land in the style of English naturalism with hundreds of box hedges that create shaded winding walkways called ‘
Cocchi’, bounded by pergolas and flowers. == The restoration ==