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The Villa Pisani is a patrician villa designed by Andrea Palladio, located in Bagnolo, a hamlet in the comune of Lonigo in the Veneto region of Italy.
The Pisani were a rich family of Venetian nobles who owned several Villas Pisani, two of them designed by Andrea Palladio. The villa at Bagnolo was built in the 1540s and represents Palladio's first villa designed for a patrician family of Venice: his earlier villa commissions were from provincial nobility in the Vicenza area. The villa at Bagnolo, the earlier of Palladio's Pisani villas, was the centre of a vast agricultural estate, the significance of villa for Palladio, and was designed with rusticated features to complement its rural setting; in contrast, the Villa Pisani at Montagnana utilizes more refined motifs.
In 1570 Palladio published a version of the villa in his Four Books of Architecture. The executed villa differs noticeably from the design. The deviations may have been in response to certain conditions on the actual site.
An engraved ground plan by Ottavio Bertotti Scamozzi, 1778 gives a clear idea of the villa as it appeared in the 18th century. There was originally a a long barchessa (wing) at the back of the courtyard terminating in dovecotes that kept the villa supplied with squab; this wing was admired by Vasari, but it was demolished in the nineteenth century and replaced by a structure that bears no relation to the Palladian facade it faces.
The interior features a central T-shaped salone with barrel vaulting inspired by Roman baths; it is decorated with frescoes.
In 1996, UNESCO included the villa in the World Heritage Site "City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto".
The Villa was built for Vettor Pisani, Son of Giovanni, born in 1520. A young member of the patrician family, it was likely built in 1542 on the occasion of his marriage to Paola Foscari. In 1523 Vettor's father, Giovanni, confiscated the property from the Vicentine nobility on behalf of Venice.
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