restorations
the Zisa

Restorations

Studies began in 1972 and made it possible to carry out a precise survey of the entire building in order to assess its consistency and reliability in relation to the restoration techniques that had been proposed at the time. Construction began in the mid-1970s and, with a series of ups and downs, the work lasted about 15 years.
The collapse and previous unsuitable interventions unfortunately caused the loss of documents essential for understanding the history of the building. Until then, it had only undergone transformations, according to the customs of the time, starting in the 17th century, with juxtapositions or superimpositions that in some way altered its consistency, layout and original image. The collapsed wing had inflicted a serious wound on the building, jeopardising the stability of the entire complex. The reconstruction followed philological criteria for the recovery of structures and spaces based on the design and composition of the surviving wing of the palace.
Mixed structures with tuffaceous stone were used as materials, recovered as much as possible from the original elements that survived the collapse, integrating the reconstructed part with pressed bricks and concrete vaults. The work was carried out in accordance with the restoration culture of the time, which favoured differentiating the materials and colours of the structure, an aspect considered decisive in order to avoid creating situations of interpretative confusion between the original part and the part to be restored. The most important technique used to ensure the solidity of the building, also considering the recent seismic event, was internal masonry tensioning. A vertical and horizontal grid was thus created, with a series of steel bars, plated on the end curb of the construction, which perforated the entire length of the masonry and were then anchored to the ground with a coupling bulb. The horizontal strengthening was carried out in a similar way, with regular grids of tie rods secured with plates at the ends.
The reconstruction made it possible to recover the original volume and architectural style of the Zisa façades, which had already been affected by Baroque and 19th-century alterations to enlarge the façade and build balconies. The interior had also been altered by the creation of unsuitable vertical connections, the presence false ceilings in some rooms, the concealment of the original vaults and the subdivision of rooms to create flats, as well as, other changes that, until then, had prevented an organic reading of the Zisa Palace system.

The loca solatiorum: dwellings for recreation, well-being and hunting

The Norman conquest of Sicily and the birth of a new Latin kingdom

A building constructed in a short space of time

The Palace of Kings

The Admiral’s dedication

The Royal Throne

The flooring: shapes, motifs and iconography

The beautiful Zisa and its garden: solacium regi among sounds, colours and scents

the roof of Paradise: one of the most representative works of medieval art

The rediscovered palace

The mosaics of the transept and the apses

The senses tell the mosaic cycle

The senses tell the ceiling

the Baroque interior

Decorations

The mosaic cycle, an ascending path towards the light

The senses tell the historical context

The decorations on the bell tower

The ancient convent of the Martorana, a history of devotion and tradition

The architectural space

The interior of the church

From earthquake to collapse

Gold and light: the splendour of the mosaics in the Royal Chapel

The architectural envelope: the Greek cross layout oriented towards the light

Restorations

Saint Peter’s Chapel in the Royal Palace

The Genoard Park, the garden of pleasures and wonders

The senses tell the external architecture and the original layout

The senses tell the architecture and decorations

The senses tell restorations

the Baroque exterior

From oblivion to the recovery of memory

The Cassaro

The senses tell baroque decoration

Intertwining of knowledge in Norman Palermo

The senses tell the historical context

The opus sectile floor of the Palatine Chapel

The senses tell the flooring

The return of water

The senses tell the historical context

Shapes and colours of the wooden ceiling

Different styles and transformations of “one of the most beautiful monuments in the world”

The senses tell the architecture

The birth of the Norman kingdom

The mosaics of the naves

The senses tell the interior

The senses tell the Zisa over the centuries

An architectural crescendo

The architectural appearance and transformations over time