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The Falansterio in via Saragozza

Via Saragozza in the mid-nineteenth century was an undignified sight – especially regrettable since it was the setting for the periodic processions of the image of Madonna di San Luca. Following the Unification of Italy, the municipality technical manager Coriolano Monti was put in charge of rectifying the thoroughfare. He proposed the construction of imposing regular buildings for working class accommodation, with the ground floor retaining the portico of the pre-existing building. The plan incorporated two sacred areas, the Church of Santa Sofia dei Domenichini and the Church of the Ascension, also referred to as the Church of the Thirty-three. For the stylistic aspect of these new interventions, Monti reinterpreted – in a more stripped back manner suitable for the tone of the designated recipients – the neo-16th century classicism lexicon adopted in other solutions in more bourgeois areas of the city (Palazzo Vignoli and Palazzina di Santa Tecla in Via Farini).
Falansterio di Coriolano Monti

The term ‘Falansterio’ alludes to the type of social settlement introduced by the French philosopher and economist Charles Fourier. Originally, the basic unit of the settlement, composed of 450 households, is also referred to as ‘phalanx’, hence the name, which is also used in different contexts.

The Porta Saragozza was also the subject of exterior renovation projects. Enrico Brunetti Rodati's Porta Saragozza inaugural architectural endeavour, completed in 1858 prior to the Unification of Italy, fell short of expectations: the grandiose medieval-style entrance remains obscured from view for those approaching from within the city walls, owing to the curvature of the thoroughfare. Giuseppe Mengoni proposed the rectification of Via Saragozza, which was to end in an oval square in which the gate would be set.

Coriolano Monti, for his part, was dissatisfied with the arrangement and drafted a design for a hexagonal porticoed square to connect the interior and exterior of the city walls via a covered thoroughfare.

The dispute remained unresolved and none of the projects were executed.

Sources

Daniele Pascale Guidotti Magnani, Palazzo Ratta Agucchi, via Farini 2-4-6, in Giornate Nazionali ADSI, Bologna, 2011, pp. 15-16.
 

https://www.bibliotecasalaborsa.it/bolognaonline/cronologia-di-bologna/1865/il_taglio_stradale_e_il_falansterio_di_porta_saragozza