The Moncloa Palace was originally a farm for agricultural use, which, due to its good situation, later became a palace-house. In 1660 it was bought by Gaspar de Haro y Guzmán, Marquis of Carpio and Eliche, owner of the neighboring orchard of La Moncloa, a name that came from its former owners, the Counts of Monclova, which later gave rise to Moncloa, as known today. When the two gardens were joined, Gaspar de Haro had a palace built on the highest part of the land, known first as Eliche's Palace and also as Painted House, in reference to the frescoes that adorned the exterior walls, and later as Palace of La Moncloa. The Palace passed through different owners until reaching
María del Pilar Teresa Cayetana de Silva Álvarez de Toledo, 13th
Duchess of Alba de Tormes. After her death without descendants in 1802, King
Charles IV acquired the mansion and the orchard and added it to the Royal Site of La Florida, which was then named the Royal Site of La Moncloa. In 1816, King
Ferdinand VII ordered the restoration of the palace. Thirty years later, Queen
Isabella II ceded the property of La Moncloa to the State, and it went on to become part of the
Ministry of Development. The palace was restored again in 1929, when it was reopened as a museum. The Palace was destroyed during the
Siege of Madrid in the
Spanish Civil War. A decade after its destruction, the architect Diego Méndez built, between 1949 and 1953, the present building following the model of the
Casa del Labrador of
Aranjuez. Then it was destined to official residence of heads of State in visits to
Spain and high personalities. By a law of July 15, 1954, the Moncloa Palace and its gardens, with an area of 58,293.81 square meters and adjoining the four cardinal points with land of the
University City of Madrid, was integrated into the
National Heritage. The new design was adapted to the new functions assigned to the palace, which was inaugurated by
Francisco Franco in 1953. On June 3, 1954, arrived the palace's first visiting foreign head of state,
Rafael Leonidas Trujillo; on November 28, 1976, the last one,
Carlos Andrés Pérez. In 1977, Prime Minister
Adolfo Suárez moved the headquarters of the Presidency of the Government, located until then in the central Villamejor Palace, to the far more remote La Moncloa. The change occurred for security reasons, in the face of concern that an attack against the young prime minister, newly appointed by
King Juan Carlos I. With the new palace was also established on it the official residence for the Prime Minister and his family. ==Renovations==