Palazzo Rusticucci-Accoramboni

Palazzo Rusticucci-Accoramboni
The building's main facade along Via della Conciliazione
Map
General information
LocationRome, Italy
Coordinates41°54′9.70″N 12°27′36.00″E / 41.9026944°N 12.4600000°E / 41.9026944; 12.4600000

The Palazzo Rusticucci-Accoramboni (also known as Palazzo Rusticucci or Palazzo Accoramboni) is a reconstructed late Renaissance palace in Rome.[1] Erected by the will of Cardinal Girolamo Rusticucci, it was designed by Domenico Fontana and Carlo Maderno joining together several buildings already existing. Due to that, the building was not considered a good example of architecture. Originally lying along the north side of the Borgo Nuovo street, after 1667 the building faced the north side of the large new square located west of the new Saint Peter's Square, designed in those years by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The square, named Piazza Rusticucci after the palace, was demolished in 1937–40 because of the erection of the new Via della Conciliazione. In 1940 the palace was dismantled and rebuilt with a different footprint along the north side of the new avenue, constructed between 1936 and 1950, which links St Peter's Basilica and the Vatican City to the center of Rome.

  1. ^ Castagnoli (1958) p. 419

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