Grand plans: Leonardo’s architectural designs

Architecture represents a very particular area of ​​Leonardo's work because of its “virtual” character. We know that he received commissions yet we have no proof of anything he built. If any of his designs were realised, none of them survive today. However his surviving architectural drawings have no equal with the architects of his time in quality, quantity and variety. By Dr. Domenico Laurenza, Museo Galileo, Florence.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, f.126r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

This sheet shows Leonardo's designs for a house with three terraces.

The accompanying text note allows us to better understand Leonardo's sketches for the house: in section...

... and in elevation ...

...for a villa placed on the crest of a hill, which develops into three floors, each with a large terrace overlooking the landscape.

It was in these years that the Marquis of Mantua commissioned Leonardo to design a villa in imitation of a Medici villa, located south of Florence.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, f.145v (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

A bath fit for a Duchess

In 1499 Leonardo designed a “stove” for a bathroom equipped with every comfort including hot water, a real luxury for the time.

It was the bathroom of the duchess Eleonora of Aragon's residence, who had married a member of the Sforza family and resided in Milan.

In the upper left drawing the coal burns inside the domed structure with the water at the bottom, while in the drawing on the right…

…the coal is under the dome and the water is in a container at the bottom. In both cases there is a narrow inlet and outlet so that “the coal remains alight for long enough”.

He also makes a note to himself to study “the vortex motions of fire” similar to those of water and air.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, f.141v (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

Structural Investigations

Leonardo analyses a crack in the lower part of an apse in which, at the top, a window was opened. He deduces general rules to avoid similar structural problems: avoid altering the original balance of the arch structure, that lead to weight disproportions.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, f.157r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

On this sheet Leonardo plans a treatise on “the generative causes of the breaking of walls ... and their remedies”, using his knowledge of geology.

He proposes to build supporting pillars, founding them on the firmest underground rock strata, something he intended to explore through the excavation of a well.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff.157v-158r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

Here Leonardo studies the potential problems of lime cement. When the humidity of the lime dries, the wall shrinks in height. Some drawings illustrate various types of wall cracks.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff.270v-263r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

The royal palace of Romorantin

Leonardo spent his last years in France. Having recently acquired the Mona Lisa, Francis I commissioned Leonardo to work on a grand hunting lodge, the Château de Chambord.

Leonardo envisaged a grandiose royal palace, the plan of which shows various buildings with a central focus, and dominated by the regularity and geometric proportionality that guided other fields of his research.

Besides the architectural extravagance, Leonardo devised ways in which to bring water into the complex, using a branch of the Loire River. He planned a dam to store clean water for the residential complex, and the means to discharge sediment into the surrounding lands for use as fertiliser.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, f.121r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

Can't see the fortress for the trees

Leonardo designs, in a very
original way, a bastion to protect a military
fortress formed by a forest of willows. 

These trees are not very expensive, he writes, and have the advantage of weaving their branches more and more over time, in order to increase the effectiveness of the defensive system.

The drawings represent, among other things, the order in which to plant the trees.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff.159v-160r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

The wall of a villa

In a sheet full of notes and drawings of various subjects, the drawing for the façade of a building can be recognised in the bottom left corner

The presence of pillars and wide openings allow us to hypothesize its connection with the project for the villa of Charles d'Amboise, the French governor of Milan in the early 16th century, known through drawings from other manuscripts.

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