The Veneto by bicycleVenetian Villas
Villa Zeno at Cessalto (TV)
Villa Toderini at Codognè - Villa Emo at Fanzolo - Villa Barbaro at Maser Flag

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Cessalto (TV), 12 m/40 feet above sea level, Via Donegal 85 – 87 near the border with the town of Ceggia (VE); train station at Ceggia 2 km/1.2 miles to the south on the Venezia-Trieste line. By bicycle one can easily reach the villa from the train station at Ceggia by following the Percorso ciclopedonale dei fiumi e dei vini [The bike route of rivers and wines] which is signed with reliable frequency.

The villa was commissioned before 1566, when it was already recorded in the land registry, by the Venetian nobleman Marco Zeno to Andrea Palladio, who lists the project in his Second Book of Architecture. The main body corresponds pretty faithfully to the Palladio design except for the lack on the facade of the three half-moon windows [thermal window] walled in during the 18th century and replaced with two normal, rectangular windows. Missing also are the three statues on top of the triangular pediment. And above all it lacks the large porticos that would have connected the main house with the barchesse [farm support buildings]. The actual farm buildings are from a later period and have nothing to do with the original Palladio design.

Rather unusual, the most monumental facade is the one that faces the countryside with its three large arches that define a recessed loggia [porch]; the whole thing looks pretty run down.

The villa, the easternmost of the Palladio villas, is currently privately owned and is not open to visitors.



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