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Villaverla

Villaverla è un comune della pianura vicentina, pochi chilometri a nord di Vicenza, noto soprattutto per la concentrazione straord...

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Villaverla è un comune della pianura vicentina, pochi chilometri a nord di Vicenza, noto soprattutto per la concentrazione straordinaria di ville venete che ne caratterizzano il centro storico. In epoca antica il territorio era chiamato 'Roburetum' per la presenza di boschi di rovere, poi nel medioevo prese il nome dalla famiglia sassone dei Verla che vi si insediò. A partire dal Cinquecento, due casate rivali, i Verlato e i Ghellini, vi costruirono le proprie residenze di prestigio affidandosi ad architetti di primo piano: Vincenzo Scamozzi per Villa Verlato e Antonio Pizzocaro, tra i maggiori architetti vicentini del Seicento, per la scenografica Villa Ghellini, rimasta incompiuta. Oggi Villaverla è un comune di impronta residenziale e agricola, che convive con questo straordinario patrimonio architettonico, meta per chi ama scoprire l'architettura delle ville venete lontano dai grandi circuiti palladiani.

更新于 12 七月 2026

Villaverla 32°
周六 32° 20°
周日 34° 22°
周一 34° 22°
周二 35° 21°

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故事

Villaverla 的故事

From oak wood to the village of the Verla

The name of Villaverla tells two different chapters of its history. In ancient times the area was known as 'Roburetum', a toponym referring to its extensive oak woods, typical of the Vicenza plain before agricultural reclamation. In the Middle Ages the name changed following the settlement of the Saxon Verla family, giving rise to the current toponym. From that point the town's history became intertwined with that of the noble families who settled here, above all the Verla themselves and, later, the Ghellini, who entered into a long social and architectural rivalry with the Verla's descendants, later known as Verlato.

Villa Verlato and Scamozzi's architecture

In the second half of the sixteenth century the Verlato family entrusted the architect Vincenzo Scamozzi, one of the greatest interpreters of Vicenza architecture after Palladio, with the construction of their representative residence. Villa Verlato thus became one of the most significant examples of Scamozzi's style applied to the country villa, with a rigorous layout and classical proportions. Its construction should also be read as a response to the parallel ambitions of the Ghellini family, in a context where the great Vicenza families competed for prestige partly through the architecture of their homes, turning Villaverla into a small laboratory of sixteenth-century Venetian villa design.

Villa Ghellini, the unfinished Baroque masterpiece

A century later, in 1664, the Ghellini family commissioned the architect Antonio Pizzocaro, considered the most important Vicenza architect of his time, to build an even more ambitious residence. Villa Ghellini thus emerged as an extraordinary example of Vicenza Baroque, with a theatrical curved facade and a monumental layout. Work was interrupted in 1679, however, following the architect's death and the financial difficulties of the commissioning family, leaving the building's northern wing unfinished. Even today the villa, with its suspended, never fully completed beauty, remains one of the most fascinating and photographed monuments of the Vicenza foothills.

The farming landscape of the Vicenza plain

Around the historic core formed by the villas, Villaverla retains a farmed plain landscape, with fields of cereals and fodder, irrigation channels and small rural clusters that reflect the area's agricultural vocation, never entirely replaced by the residential and craft development of recent decades. The nearby Astico stream has historically supported field irrigation and the establishment of mills and small water-related activities. Walking among the farmhouses surrounding the villas reveals the contrast, typical of the Vicenza countryside, between aristocratic architecture and the everyday reality of farm work.

Local life and economy

Villaverla today is a mainly residential town, with a significant part of the population working in the nearby industrial areas of the Vicenza foothills or commuting daily to Vicenza. Alongside craft and manufacturing activities, plain-based farming remains far from marginal, while the historical heritage of the villas is more an element of identity than a fully structured tourism economy: visits are often tied to special open days, such as those organised by FAI, rather than a steady tourist flow.

Getting there and surroundings

Villaverla is just a few kilometres from Vicenza, easily reached by car along the road heading toward Thiene and the foothills, or from the Vicenza Nord motorway exit. Its location makes it a convenient stop for those visiting Vicenza who wish to extend their itinerary to discover the lesser-known Venetian villas, less famous than the great Palladian circuits of the city centre but just as significant for understanding how widespread this architecture became across the Vicenza countryside. Nearby are other foothill towns with further villas and historic buildings to discover.

Experiences not to miss

  • Admire the curved facade and unfinished grandeur of Villa Ghellini
  • Discover the rigorous architecture of Villa Verlato, designed by Vincenzo Scamozzi
  • Take part, when possible, in FAI's special open days
  • Walk among the farmhouses and fields of the Vicenza plain surrounding the villas
  • Use Villaverla as a stop on an itinerary through the lesser-known Venetian villas of the foothills

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