
2 Bedrooms
2 Bathrooms
131 sq.m
Minimum 3-month Rental: charm and design in the heart of Milan.
In Milan, Via Santa Maria Fulcorina 17, in the seventeenth-century Palazzo Alari Visconti, with concierge service, apartment, completely renovated in 2023, for Rental on the second and third floor, with independent heating and air conditioning, overlooking two internal courtyards but very bright and quiet, despite being in the middle of the city.
The landing is accessed both through the monumental staircase and by the elevator.
Arranged on two levels, connected by an internal staircase, it consists of:
on the lower level, entrance hall, double-height living room with dining corner and fireplace, kitchen, laundry (with washer-dryer, sink and independent boiler), double bedroom with walk-in closet and bathroom ensuite with shower;
on the upper level, studio (or second living room) overlooking the living room, double bedroom, hallway with closets and second bathroom.
Fully equipped with original and well-known "design" pieces.
It is Rented only with transitional contracts (minimum 12 months,maximum 18 months possibly renewable).
A security deposit equal to three months and a bank guarantee equal to an annuity of the Rental are required.
The Rent is 5.000,00 Euros + 10% VAT.
Palazzo Alari Visconti, although built in the '500 (the oldest Renaissance nucleus, overlooking Via Borromei 4-6), took on its present character in the eighteenth century, when, between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, diffeRent buildings were combined and made homogenous.
The reconstruction of the facade (built around 1775) is the work of Carlo Felice Soavi (Lugano, 8 October 1749 - Milan, 29 April 1803) while the restoration is by Achille Castiglioni.
It curRently has three floors and seven openings on the left side and two floors and seven openings on the right side.
The neoclassical façade is characterized by a sober, essential and rigorous decorative plan with an elegant round portal and, on the first floor, sandstone windows with overlapping curved and triangular gables, supported by "corbelled" bodies on small masks; on the second floor, French windows, always with sandstone contour and balconies, with straight parapets little protruding, brought by scroll shelves, regent festoons in full relief, detached from the bottom.
The façade is crowned by a plastic eaves cornice.
The courtyard has three porch wings, two with architraved Tuscan columns and wooden coffered ceiling and one with lowered arches and a sail vault on pillars.
From the left side of the courtyard we access, through a seventeenth-century monumental staircase with stone balustrade, as well as the apartment, the main floor where some rooms with vaulted ceilings with rich decorations are preserved.
