I Have Read And Accept Your Terms & Conditions/Privacy Policy*
PREVIOUS ARTICLE
READ MORE >
The townhouse in Milan’s historic center seems to have evolved effortlessly as if every stone, vault, and fenestration were dictated from deep in its bones. Don’t be fooled: the building’s old-world grandeur was summoned from thin air by Roberto Peregalli and Laura Sartori Rimini of Studio Peregalli.
The 19th-century table is Italian, the settees are custom, and the antique gilt-bronze chandelier is French. The tapestry consists of a 19th-century English canvas panel in the center with new panels painted by decorative artists on both sides to match.
The five-story building was radically transformed not once, but twice. Built in 1908 in the Rococo style, it had been stripped of all detail in the 1970s as part of a Brutalist makeover. The current owners, a family with three children, moved from London with an eye to buying a townhouse, especially one with a garden. But such properties are rare in the heart of Milan, where the preference is for larger apartment buildings with units on a single level.
COVETED MAGAZINE 22nd Edition LA VITA È BELLA REQUIRED REQUIRED required COUNTRY* Andorra United Arab Emirates Afghanistan Antigua and Barbuda Anguilla Albania Armenia Angola Antarctica Argentina Austria Australia Aruba Aland Islands Azerbaijan Bosnia and Herzegovina Barbados Bangladesh Belgium Burkina Faso Bulgaria Bahrain Burundi Benin Saint Barthélemy Bermuda Brunei Darussalam Bolivia, Plurinational State of Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba Brazil Bahamas Bhutan Bouvet Island Botswana Belarus Belize Canada Cocos (Keeling) Islands Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Central African Republic Congo Switzerland Cote d'Ivoire Cook Islands Chile Cameroon China Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Cape Verde Curaçao Christmas Island Cyprus Czech Republic Germany Djibouti Denmark Dominica Dominican Republic Algeria Ecuador Estonia Egypt Western Sahara Eritrea Spain Ethiopia Finland Fiji Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Faroe Islands France Gabon United Kingdom Grenada Georgia French Guiana Guernsey Ghana Gibraltar Greenland Gambia Guinea Guadeloupe Equatorial Guinea Greece South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Guatemala Guinea-Bissau Guyana Heard Island and McDonald Islands Honduras Croatia Haiti Hungary Indonesia Ireland Israel Isle of Man India British Indian Ocean Territory Iraq Iran, Islamic Republic of Iceland Italy Jersey Jamaica Jordan Japan Kenya Kyrgyzstan Cambodia Kiribati Comoros Saint Kitts and Nevis Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait Cayman Islands Kazakhstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Lebanon Saint Lucia Liechtenstein Sri Lanka Liberia Lesotho Lithuania Luxembourg Latvia Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Morocco Monaco Moldova, Republic of Montenegro Saint Martin (French part) Madagascar Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Mali Myanmar Mongolia Macao Martinique Mauritania Montserrat Malta Mauritius Maldives Malawi Mexico Malaysia Mozambique Namibia New Caledonia Niger Norfolk Island Nigeria Nicaragua Netherlands Norway Nepal Nauru Niue New Zealand Oman Panama Peru French Polynesia Papua New Guinea Philippines Pakistan Poland Saint Pierre and Miquelon Pitcairn Puerto Rico Palestinian Territory, Occupied Portugal Paraguay Qatar Reunion Kosovo Romania Serbia Russia Rwanda Saudi Arabia Solomon Islands Seychelles Sudan Sweden Singapore Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Slovenia Svalbard and Jan Mayen Slovakia Sierra Leone San Marino Senegal Somalia Suriname South Sudan Sao Tome and Principe El Salvador Sint Maarten (Dutch part) Syrian Arab Republic Swaziland Turks and Caicos Islands Chad French Southern Territories Togo Thailand Tajikistan Tokelau Timor-Leste Turkmenistan Tunisia Tonga Turkey Trinidad and Tobago Tuvalu Chinese Taipei Taiwan Tanzania, United Republic of Ukraine Uganda United States Uruguay Uzbekistan Holy See (Vatican City State) Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Virgin Islands, British Vietnam Vanuatu Wallis and Futuna Samoa Yemen Mayotte South Africa Zambia Zimbabwe required Wait while you being redirected
The 19th-century armchair (left) is English, the console is Napoleon III, and the antique round table and mirror are Italian. The marble mantel is antique, and the walls are sheathed in reclaimed French boiserie.
Studio Peregalli reinvented the house again. They chose not to return to the early 20th century and copy the original building’s rehash of an 18th-century style, but to impose an internally consistent structural and decorative logic that didn’t reflect any particular era.
Studio Peregalli designed the bookshelves and wall paneling with rounded corners and trompe l’oeil grisaille golden friezes. The antique Isfahan rug is Persian, and the artwork is an 18th-century engraving of Rome.
“Our style is to reinvent the past in a way that is a sort of dream, invention, and memory all mixed together.” – Roberto Peregalli
He and Sartori Rimini compare their method to cooking, a balance of rigor and innovation that depends on carefully selected ingredients and extreme technical competence. There is no recipe. “Every room is a new invention,” she says.
The antique dresser is French, the walls are covered in a custom damask, and the 19th-century watercolor depicts a Roman column.
© Elle Decor
What do you think about this classic Milan townhouse update by Studio Peregalli?
Interpreting Memories And Creating Dreams With DIMORESTUDIO
Did you like this article? Follow CovetED on Instagram, Tik Tok, and LinkedIn and don’t miss out on your top source for interior design and luxury lifestyle news.
< PREVIOUS ARTICLE
NEXT ARTICLE >
NEXT ARTICLE
OPULENCE REVEALED