Showing posts with label Barolo Palace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barolo Palace. Show all posts

Barolo Palace Buenos Aires Argentina


Luis Barolo, a progressive and powerful agricultural producer, arrived in Argentina 
in 1890. He was the first to bring machines to spin cotton and 
dedicated himself to the importation of fabrics. He installed the first combed wool 
spinning mills in the country and started the first 
cotton crops in the Chaco. On the centenary of the May Revolution, he met Architect 
Mario Palanti (1885-1979), whom he hired to carry out the project of a building 
that he had in mind. This would become a rental-only property. Luis Barolo thought, 
like all Europeans living in Argentina, that Europe would 
suffer numerous wars that would destroy the entire continent.
Desperate to preserve the ashes of the famous Dante Alighieri, he wanted to build a 
building inspired by the poet's 
work, “the Divine Comedy.” The land chosen to build the palace had an area of ​​1,365 m2 
and a front of 30.88 
meters. With a total of 24 floors (22 floors and 2 basements), 100 meters in height were 
made possible thanks to a special concession granted by Mayor Luis Cantilo in 1921, since 
it exceeded the maximum 
allowed by the avenue by almost four times. The highest point of the dome measures 
90 meters, reaching 100 meters with a large rotating lighthouse of 300,000 
candles that made it visible from Uruguay. Its own power plant supplied it with 
energy. In the 1920s, this would make it what we would call a “smart building”
 today. Since then there have been 2 freight  elevators and 9 elevators, two of which 
are hidden.
Architect Palanti was also a scholar of the Divine Comedy, and filled the Palace with 
references to it. The floor
 plan of the building is built based on the golden section and the golden number. 
The general division of the 
Palace and the Divine Comedy is into three parts: hell, purgatory and heaven. The nine 
access vaults represent the nine steps of initiation and the nine infernal hierarchies; 
The lighthouse represented the nine angelic choirs. 
Above the lighthouse is the constellation of the Southern Cross that can be seen 
aligned with the axis of Barolo in thefirst days of June at 7:45 p.m. The 
height of the building is 100 meters and 100 are the edges of Dante's work;It has 
22 floors, as many as there are stanzas of the verses of the Divine Comedy. 
The careful details characterize this project: 
from the personal
 quotes in Latin about Dante's work in the building, to its opening, carried out on the 
date of the poet's anniversary. Architect Carlos Hilger details the similarities of the 
building 
with Dante's work, “The Divine Comedy.” “The distribution of the building is 
based on the meter of Dante's Divine Comedy. In architecture this is known as a Danteun. 
Building is divided into two blocks, with 11 offices per block on each level. The 
remaining number, 22, responds to the meter used by Dante in the 100 cantos In the 
central passage, the palace has 9 access vaults that represent hell: for Dante, this 
was not a theological goal, but rather the starting point in the initiation stages 
undertaken for the arrival of paradise. The 9 vaults are divided, from the center, 
as follows: three towards Avda. de Mayo, three towards HipĆ³lito Yrigoyen, the central 
vault extends towards the dome, and those that contain the stairs towards the sides. 
bronze in which a statue of a condor was originally located with the body of 
Dante elevating it to paradise. The current owner of the piece is a Mar del Plata 
collector who refuses to sell it to the owners of the building. The upper floors and 
the dome symbolize the
 seven levels of purgatory. The dome is inspired by a Hindu temple dedicated to love, 
and is the emblem of 
the completion of Dante's union with his beloved Beatrice.