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Tonnara Florio

Discesa Tonnara, 4, 90142 Palermo PA, Italia ★★★★☆ 568 views
Clara Illy
Palermo
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Palaces, Villas and Castles · Palermo

Tonnara Florio - Palermo | Secret World Trip Planner

The complex of the Tonnara dell'Arenella has very ancient origins, as well as the fishing system to which it referred. It was bought in 1830 by Vincenzo Florio, who commissioned the transformation to his friend and collaborator Architect Carlo Giachery. Thus was born the building called "I Quattro Pizzi", a neo-Gothic quadrangular building, so called because of the four spires that overlook it. This is the only neo-Gothic building constructed by Giachery, whose interests were rather directed towards functional projects of industrial architecture and the study of new materials. The unusual design recalls an English Gothic style, softened by a romantic Mediterranean setting. In 1852 Giachery himself was commissioned the windmill for the milling of sumac, also included in the Arenella complex, from which tannin was extracted, then the subject of flourishing trade in Sicily. A part of the complex was used as a home for the weekend and many famous people were hosted there, not least the Czarina of Russia, during her stay in Palermo. The latter fell in love with it so much that she had the "Quattro Pizzi" faithfully reproduced in Snamenka, near St. Petersburg, on the shores of the Gulf of Finland, in the park of her summer residence of Peterhof which, in memory of Palermo, she called "Renella". The building still stands today. Once the golden age was over, Vincenzo Florio retired to the Tonnara dell'Arenella with his family, electing it as his home. The Tonnara remained in operation until the early twentieth century: being then changed the route of tuna, closed permanently the fishing activity. THE FLORIOS The story of the Florios is the exciting and dramatic story of a great family of entrepreneurs and patrons of the arts, who lived in Palermo in the years between the 19th and 20th centuries and changed the course of the history of Sicily. It all began in 1786, when the Bagnarote Paolo Florio and the Palermitan Giovanni Custos met in Naples. In their story, in a Palermo that no longer exists, there are riches and troubles, illnesses, births, mourning, vices, sumptuous receptions with kings and queens, emperors and empresses, tsars and czarinas. There is the world of high finance with the Rothschilds, the Morgans and the Liptons. The splendour of the Florio family reached the height of its power with Vincenzo I and was consolidated with Ignazio senior. Until the last heirs, Ignazio junior and Vincenzo III, with whom the curtain fell on the eventful history of the family. In the foreground, Donna Franca, the famous wife of Ignazio Junior, touched by success but also by much pain. She was one of the most influential "ladies of the court" in Italy until the advent of Fascism. A woman of strong temperament, she even justified her husband's betrayals. The disappearance of three children in little more than a year leads her to depression and brings her husband Ignazio to Schopenhauerian pessimism: "God forgive me, I begin to doubt justice, everything".

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  1. 🌅
    Morning
    Tonnara Florio
    📍 Palermo
  2. ☀️
    Afternoon
    Palermo and the Sanctuary of Santa Rosalia
    📍 0.9 km · Palermo
  3. 🌆
    Evening
    Branciforte Palace Museum in Palermo
    📍 3.5 km · Palermo

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Frequently Asked Questions

The Quattro Pizzi is a distinctive neo-Gothic quadrangular building named for its four prominent spires, commissioned by Vincenzo Florio in 1830 and designed by architect Carlo Giachery. It's the only neo-Gothic structure Giachery ever built, blending English Gothic style with a romantic Mediterranean setting, and represents a unique architectural gem in Palermo's industrial heritage.
Yes, the Czarina of Russia visited the Tonnara during her stay in Palermo and fell in love with the Quattro Pizzi building so much that she had it faithfully reproduced in Snamenka near St. Petersburg as part of her Peterhof summer residence, which she named 'Renella' in memory of Palermo. This replica building still stands today on the shores of the Gulf of Finland.
Beyond its primary tuna fishing operations, the complex included a windmill built in 1852 for milling sumac, from which tannin was extracted for a flourishing trade in Sicily. Part of the complex also served as Vincenzo Florio's weekend home where he entertained famous guests, including the Russian Czarina, before he eventually retired there with his family.
The Tonnara remained in active operation until the early twentieth century, when it was forced to close permanently due to the tuna fish changing their migration route away from Palermo. This marked the end of a centuries-old fishing tradition at the site, though the historic buildings from its industrial heyday remain standing today.
Vincenzo Florio was a visionary entrepreneur who purchased the ancient Tonnara dell'Arenella complex in 1830 and commissioned its architectural transformation into the landmark industrial site it became. He hired architect Carlo Giachery to design the iconic Quattro Pizzi building and later developed the sumac windmill, eventually making it his family residence where he lived during the complex's golden age.