Villa Vizcaya
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A trumped-up pastiche it may be, but Villa Vizcaya is undeniably grand and glorious, with the authentic feel of a 16th-century Italian palace. Which is exactly what its makers, industrial magnate James Deering, designer Paul Chalfin, and architect F. Burrall Hoffman, intended when they built it in the early 1900s. Embodying a 400-year range of styles, both the genuine and ersatz have been skillfully assembled to evoke another culture, another continent, and another age.
For other historic sites See Historic Sites and Monuments
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1. Gardens
The villa’s gardens, although somewhat neglected, will probably give you the greatest pleasure. The many splashing fountains of gracefully carved stone, statuary, and cleverly laid-out formal plantings offer myriad harmonious and ever-changing vistas. The Secret Garden conceals the greatest artistry.
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2. East Loggia
This portico frames magnificent views of the sea and of the quaint breakwater known as the Barge. Carved in the shape of a large ship, it provides a perfect foreground to Key Biscayne, lying off the coast.
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3. Italian Renaissance Living Room
The room includes a 2,000-year-old marble Roman tripod, a 15thcentury Hispano-Mooresque rug, a tapestry depicting the Labors of Hercules , and a Neapolitan altar screen.
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4. Rococo Music Room
All flowers and fluff, the room is graced with an exquisite Italian harpsichord from 1619, a dulcimer, and a harp.
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5. Breakfast Room
Four massive ceramic Chinese Foo dogs guard the steps that ascend to what is probably the most bombastic room in the house.
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6. Empire Bathroom
Few bathrooms in the world are more ornate than this marble, silver, and gilded affair. The bathtub was designed to run either fresh-or salt-water from the Bay of Biscayne.
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7. Italian Renaissance Dining Room
Another echo of the antique Italian taste, featuring a 2,000-year-old Roman table, a pair of 16thcentury tapestries, and a full set of 17th-century chairs.
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8. French Rococo Reception Room
The assemblage is a mix of styles, but the overall look is of a salon under the 18th-century French King Louis XV. The tinted plaster ceiling is from the Rossi Palace in Venice.
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9. Neoclassical Entrance Hall and Library
Though still 18th-century, the mood is considerably more sober in these rooms, which are in the English Neoclassical style, inspired by the work of Robert Adam.
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10. Swimming Pool Grotto
10. Swimming Pool GrottoIn imitation of Italian Renaissance and Baroque architects, who were in turn imitating ancient Roman styles, this pool extends under the house and resemble a natural cave or sea grotto.
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