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Here are some articles that you might find useful during your stay in Florence. Feel free to also ask your guides about any of the attractions of Florence during your tour. |
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> October, 2020 |
The Bardini
Garden magical
silence and
stunning
architectures |
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This 4 hectares garden – many times almost
desert – has been restored recently and slowly
rediscovered by locals and visitors. If you have
already been to Florence or if you are
interested in visiting the hidden gems of this
beautiful city, the Bardini Garden is the
perfect choice for you! In an hour you can visit
the entire garden and we are sure that it will
sooth your soul.
You will need to venture over the Oltrarno to
find the two entrances of the Bardini
Garden which is extended over a large hill area
from the slopes of Piazzale Michelangelo up to
the Arno, near the Ponte alle Grazie. In
addition, a unique “green walk” connects
this park with Forte Belvedere and the Boboli
Gardens to Palazzo Pitti. The origins The Bardini
Garden
Originally the Bardini Garden was a fruit
orchard, because we have to imagine that in the
medieval ages a garden was mostly used for a
practical reason rather than for a decorative
one, and that it was only during the Renaissance
that the word “garden” acquired the
meaning it has today.
At the beginning this garden belonged to the
Mozzi family as testified in a document from the
13th century, and it has been on property of the
same family until 1880.
Over the centuries the Bardini Garden has been
decorated with statues and flowers and at the
beginning of the 19th century the Mozzi family
also acquired the adjacent “Villa Manadora”
with its beautiful park that was transformed by
Giacomo Le Blanc into an English garden with
woods, winding paths, statues, fountains and a
small building for the Kaffeehaus.
After the death of the last descendant of the
family, the garden was bought by Carolath Benten
and it acquired a more “victorian” aspect. In
1913 the complex of Palazzo Mozzi, the Villa
Manadora, the baroque and English garden, as
well as some farmlands, were bought by the
antiquarian Stefano Bardini, who realized a
series of major renovations and changes.
He built an avenue to reach the villa and
sacrificed the walled medieval gardens that
still existed, this unfortunately brought to the
loss of the medieval aspects, even if he was
able to create an enchanting garden to explore.
After Stefano, the property of the Bardini
Garden passed to his son Ugo but after his death
in 1965, as there were no heirs, it was acquired
by the city of Florence after a long
bureaucratic process lasted over thirty years.
Severely damaged by the long abandonment, the
garden was thoroughly restored from the
beginning of the 2000s.
The most interesting part remains the large
baroque staircase that culminates with a scenic
belvedere from which you can enjoy a spectacular
view of the entire city. The highlights
After a massive restoration project, the Bardini
Garden was reopened to the public, and here you
can find camellias, roses, brightly colored
azaleas, viburnums, irises and 60 varieties of
hydrangea, next to garden with a wide collection
of typically Tuscan fruit-trees.
Undoubtedly, the most scenic part of the garden
remains the great Baroque staircase (built in
the17th century) and the Wisteria Tunnel, both
of which lead to the Kaffeehaus and restaurant
with a panoramic terrace where you can enjoy a
spectacular view of the city. The “Belvedere
loggia” was a creation of Stefano Bardini
who enlarged the two small Kaffeehaus buildings
linking them using sandstone pillars from
Pistoia.
At the top of the garden you will find the
“Fontana del Drago”, together with an
Anglo-Chinese garden with a canal running along
the one side. The canal is one of the
distinguishing characteristics of the Bardini
Garden, because the presence of a canal is quite
unique in the Florentine gardens.
The Bardini Garden was included by the European
Garden Heritage Network (EGHN) in their
selected gardens to visit in Europe.
The philosophy of Free
Tour Florence – Another Florence is to
promote the concept of sustainable tourism, for
this reasons our guides are able to give you
some pieces of advice to find the hidden gems of
Florence like the Bardini garden!
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