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Palazzo Lancia

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Alternative names
  
Grattacielo Lancia

Completed
  
March 1956

Height
  
62 m

Floors
  
17

Construction started
  
March 1954

Country
  
Italy

Roof
  
62 m (203 ft)

Opened
  
1964

Town or city
  
Turin

Architects
  
Gio Ponti, Nino Rosani

Palazzo Lancia httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Address
  
Via Vincenzo Lancia, 26

Named for
  
Vincenzo Lancia, Lancia & C.

Similar
  
Savoy Senate Palace, Ethnographic Museum of Consolata, Museo della Marionetta, Piedmont Region Headquarters, Palazzo Asinari di San Marz

Palazzo Lancia (Lancia Palace), also known as Grattacielo Lancia (Lancia Skyscraper), is a high-rise building located in the northern Italian city of Turin. It was originally commissioned by Gianni Lancia, president and son of the founder of Italian automobile manufacturer Lancia, to serve as main headquarters for the company.

Contents

History

In the early 1950s Lancia produced cars, buses, trucks, motors, spare parts and panels for vans. The company had less employees and workers per head than Fiat, but needed to build central headquarters within which it could house offices and important meetings. In Turin, no such place existed amongst the small company-owned factories.

Gianni Lancia, president of the company, wished to bring management, accountancy and engineering offices under one roof. The project was laid down in 1953 by Lancia's own Servizio Costruzioni under Italian architect Nino Rosani, with consultancy from GiĆ² Ponti.

The contract was given to SAICCA, and construction started in March 1954. Gianni Lancia never saw the building he wanted become operational, as control of the Lancia company was passed to cement industrialist Pesenti family in 1956, and the building was finally completed in March 1956.

Ownership

From 1957 the building served its intended function of Lancia's management and technical headquarter. In 1969 Fiat S.p.A. took over an heavily indebted Lancia from the Pesenti family, and with it the ownership of Palazzo Lancia. By the 1990s Fiat started to move offices away, progressively emptying the building.

In March 2005 Fiat S.p.A. sold the unoccupied Grattacielo to Torino 05, a joint venture between real estate firms Beni Stabili and Gefim (42.5% each) and Fiat Partecipazioni (15%). In 2008 another real estate developer, Patio Immobiliare, purchased in turn the building for a reported 15 million Euros, planning to transform it into luxury flats. After having carried out some renewal work the company filed for bankruptcy in 2013; Palazzo Lancia is currently awaiting to be auctioned to pay off its owner's debts.

Description

Palazzo Lancia is built like a bridge over Via (street) Vincenzo Lancia, which passes underneath it. In such as position it joined together the northern and southern halves of Lancia's Borgo San Paolo plant, which was crossed by tre pre-existing road as it had been built and acquired in various stages between the 1910s and the 1940s as Lancia's operations grew. Most of the building consists of office space, with an added meeting room for the top board of the manufacturer's executives.

References

Palazzo Lancia Wikipedia