Picture by Zairon, through Wikimedia Commons
Among the many non-wine-related factors of interest within the Loire Valley, the Château de Chambord stands tall — or reasonably, each tall and broad, being easily the most important château within the area. “A Unesco World Heritage website with greater than 400 rooms, including reception halls, kitchens, lapidary rooms and royal asidements,” writes Adrienne Bernarduous at BBC Travel, it “boasts a hearthplace for day-after-day of the 12 months.” No much less huge and elabocharge a hunting lodge would do for King Francis I, who had it constructed between 1519 and 1547, although the identity of the architect from whom he commissioned the plans has been misplaced to history. However the unusual design of its central staircase — and central vacationer attraction — suggests an intriguing title certainly: Leonardo da Vinci.
“In 1516, Leonardo left his studio in Rome to hitch the court docket of King Francis I as ‘premier peintre et ingénieur et architecte du Roi,’ ” Bernarduous writes. “Francis I enthusiastically embraced the cultural Renaissance that had swept Italy, keen to place his imprimatur on the humanities, and in 1516 commissioned plans for his dream castle on the website of Romorantin. For Leonardo, it was an ideal assignment – the culmination of an illustrious profession, enableing the artist to specific a lot of his passions: architecture, city planning, hydraulics and engineering.” However not lengthy after its construction started, the Romorantin challenge was abandoned, and by the point Francis obtained begined on what would turn out to be Château de Chambord, Leonardo was already useless.
Leonardo’s influence neverthemuch less appears current within the finished castle: in its Greek cross-shaped ground plan, in its massive copula, and most of all in its “double helix” staircase, which resembles certain designs contained in his Codex Atlanticus. “The celebrated staircase consists in a hollowed central core and, twisting and switching one above the other, twinned helical ramps servicing the principle flooring of the constructing,” says the Château de Chambord’s official website. “Magazineically sufficient, when two persons use the different units of staircases on the identical time, they’ll see every other going up or down, but never meet.” (Weblogger Gretchen M. Greer writes that “one girl I traveled with discovered the staircase so strikingly symbolic of the marital disharmony and disconnect that consequenceed in her divorce that she declared the beautiful architectural feature the ugliest place within the Loire.”)
Some scholars, like Hidemichi Tanaka, identify the hand of Leonardo in practically each element of the château. “Seen from afar, the roof terrace, with its multitude of architectural embellishments, is suggestive of a soaring metropolis skyline,” he writes in a 1992 article within the journal Artworkibus et Historiae. “It could be value comparing the ‘metropolis in stone’ with the cityscape within the againfloor of Leonardo’s Annunciation within the Uffizi Gallery, Florence, in addition to with the structures within the drawings of floods which the artist made in his later years.” Although perhaps a chronologically implausible obtainment, the design of the Château de Chambord would have been neither technically nor aesthetically past him. And certainly, who wouldn’t be happy to see medieval castle architecture paid such extravagant and still-impressive tribute by the quintessential Renaissance man?
Related content:
Leonardo da Vinci Designs the Ideal Metropolis: See 3D Models of His Radical Design
Discover the Largest On-line Archive Exploring the Genius of Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci’s Elegant Design for a Perpetual Movement Machine
Based mostly in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His tasks embody the Substack newsletter Books on Cities, the ebook The Statemuch less Metropolis: a Stroll by means of Twenty first-Century Los Angeles and the video collection The Metropolis in Cinema. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Faceebook.