ABSTRACT

Milan and Lombardy have played an important role in the Italian country since the Roman period. This importance is reflected also by the diffusion of stone architecture: a persisting trait of Milan architecture was the use of different stones in the same building. Milan lies in the middle of the alluvial plain of the Po, far from the stone quarries; some waterways were dug out in order to supply the building stones from the surrounding territories.

The study of stone as building material was significant at the end of 19th century, but then it was largely neglected by both architects and geologists. So it is significant to suggest a study about the stones employed to build in Milan (Volume 1) in relationship with a petrographic study about the features of the stones quarried in the whole Lombard territory (Volume 2).

Volume 2 contains the description of the features of the stones reported in Volume 1. These features include metamorphic and magmatic rocks of the Alpine area; sedimentary rocks and loose materials of the Prealpine area; sedimentary rocks of the Apennine area; and loose sediments of the Padania plain. Some stones, coming from other northern Italian regions, and used in Lombard architecture, are also described. Each stone is described in a "card" containing commercial and historical names, petrographic classification, macroscopic features, mineralogical composition, microscopic features, geological setting, quarry sites, transport to yards, morphology of dressed elements and surface handworking, use in architecture in the whole Lombard territory and abroad and decay morphologies. A particular investigation is addressed to the stones used during the 20th century; a great part of them were never used before in Milan and in Lombardy.

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Geology of Lombardy

Geological chronology and petrographical classification of Lombard stones

chapter Chapter 3|6 pages

Decay phenomena on building stones of Lombardy

part I|76 pages

Lombardy

chapter Chapter 4|14 pages

Stones from province of Bergamo

chapter Chapter 5|10 pages

Stones from province of Brescia

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

Stones from provinces of Como and Lecco

chapter Chapter 7|2 pages

Stones from province of Pavia

chapter Chapter 8|6 pages

Stones from province of Sondrio

chapter Chapter 9|13 pages

Stones from province of Varese

chapter Chapter 10|16 pages

Stones from province of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola

part II|68 pages

Other Italian regions

chapter Chapter 11|2 pages

Stones from Apulia

chapter Chapter 12|10 pages

Stones of Friuli Venezia-Giulia

chapter Chapter 13|5 pages

Stones from Latium

chapter Chapter 14|5 pages

Stones from Liguria

chapter Chapter 15|7 pages

Stones from Piedmont

chapter Chapter 16|5 pages

Stones of Trentino-Alto Adige

chapter Chapter 17|17 pages

Stones from Tuscany and Sardinia

chapter Chapter 18|10 pages

Stones from Veneto

part III|10 pages

Foreign countries

chapter Chapter 19|8 pages

Stones from Europe, Africa, the Americas

part IV|74 pages

Stone materials

chapter Chapter 20|27 pages

Coloured marbles (opus sectile, inlay)

chapter Chapter 21|20 pages

Mortar and plaster

chapter Chapter 22|24 pages

Brick and artificial stone

part V|29 pages

Building structures

chapter Chapter 23|8 pages

Masonry

chapter Chapter 24|19 pages

Pavements

part VI|51 pages

Special artefacts

chapter Chapter 25|14 pages

Church altars

chapter Chapter 26|22 pages

Monuments

chapter Chapter 27|13 pages

Funeral chapels of Cimitero Monumentale

chapter |50 pages

Atlas of stones and their textures