Ca’ Gioia Villa

Francesco Pascali Architetto created a space of connectedness and continuity when designing Ca’ Gioia Villa, a four-year project with every detail thoughtfully and carefully considered.

  • area / size 6,028 sqft
  • Year 2021
  • Location Veneto, Italy,
  • Type House,
  • The entrance to the Ca’ Gioia, delimited by a long glass covering, perfectly frames one of the magnificent 16th century works by architect Andrea Palladio, as well as the first foothills of the Venetian Prealps. Between these two buildings – on the one hand the famous Villa Angarano, a UNESCO World Heritage Site built in Bassano del Grappa in 1556, on the other the house designed by Francesco Pascali – lies only a large park, which separates them while permitting a continuous dialogue. Both pursue the same logic in their relationship with the territory and interpret the two paradigms of Veneto residences: encapsulating both the theme of the urban villa, and the country estate opening onto the surrounding landscape.

    Completed in early 2021, Ca’ Gioia is set on gently sloping ground, planted with olives and other fruit trees, and developed on an area of 8,000 m2. Constructed in an L-shape, which retraces the lines of a pre-existing agricultural building, the new residential structure interprets the guiding principles of Palladian architecture in a contemporary key. The long, lower building with a pitched roof, facing west and set at a slightly higher level, is connected to the main two-storey building, recreating, in the style of the great Renaissance master himself, a wonderful balance between monumental forms and simplicity. The volumes here are pure and meticulously geometric, characterised by a very precise rapport between empty and filled spaces. On the ground floor the rooms are more open and flowing, with large windows creating a direct connection with the large garden.

    Inside, the two-storey section houses the entrance space with a living and dining area, the kitchen and a study, while on the upper floor the staircase in white painted metal and oak leads to the sleeping area and its three bedrooms, four bathrooms and a large walk-in closet serving the rooms. The single-storey section, meanwhile, is home to garages, a guest room with bathroom, a studio apartment for staff and a large open space, whose function can be adapted depending on the needs of the family. Light colours have been chosen for the homogeneous interior finishes, increasing the light flooding into the environment: the flooring is in large slabs of Lapitec in the Bianco Crema shade and the Vesuvio finish, while natural wooden beams and panelling outline the ceiling and some of the internal walls.

    The classical rigour of Ca’ Gioia, the clean and linear profiles of its external casing and internal areas, are the result of a long design process that saw the owner and architect Francesco Pascali equally involved. “We worked for almost four years on the design of this building to make it a conceptually complete work, based on using practically exclusively a material that is very dear to me – Lapitec, in all its forms: the facade, the roof, floors, coverings in the bathrooms, the kitchen worktop and some of the furniture.” explained the architect, who looked after this project from the preliminary phases through to delivery.

    Design: Francesco Pascali Architetto
    Photography: Andrea Martiradonna