Palazzo Dei Congressi, Salsomaggiore Terme
History
The building was commissioned in 1898 by the Società Magnaghi, who engaged the designs of the architect Luigi Broggi. After the inauguration in 1901, the hotel was purchased by César Ritz and Baron Pfyffer.
The five-story building has a central core flanked by advancing wings. Originally built to have 300 rooms. The facade has a decorative brick layout, with horizontal rustication in the base but at the top floor, a lively frieze of floral tiles, designed by Gottardo Valentini.
After the first world war, the hotel was ceded to the Società Anonima Grandi Alberghi Salsomaggiore, which enlarged the hotel and added new elaborate rooms, including the Salone Moresco, the Taverna Rossa, and loggia designed by Ugo Giusti and Galileo Chini. The latter also designed the eclectic decorations in neo-moorish style for the Salone, and of peculiar cariatids in another room. The artist Antonio Veronesi helped decorate the cupola of the Salone Moresco, with stain glass windows from the Chini factory of Borgo San Lorenzo. The sculptor Salvatore Aloisi created the stucco decoration. Finally Franco Spicciani created the lacquered tables and chairs of the Taverna Rossa.