Pietro Arrigoni

Pietro Arrigoni (August 9, 1856 – 1940) was an Italian architect from Milan, mostly known for his work in the city of Thessaloniki in northern Greece.

Life

Arrigoni was born in 1856 in Milan and studied architecture. In 1890 he settled in Thessaloniki. He was hired by the "Compagnie de Tramways et d' Éclairage Électrique de Salonique" and designed its central tram station. Among his works in the city are also Villa Bianca, Villa Achmet Kapanci, Villa Mechmet Kapanci, Aslanian mansion, the old building of the Ippokrateio Hospital (Hirsch), the "Limodon" Hospital (former Regina Margarita), Villa Hirsch, Moskof mansion, the Railway Museum of Thessaloniki and others. He operated also a mine in Chalkidiki.

He temporarily left the city due to the Italo-Turkish War and returned in 1912. In 1921 he founded an architectural office with his son, and between 1923 and 1926 he designed a settlement for Greek refugees.

Arrigoni died in 1940, when he was murdered by a thief that had broken into his house.[1] He is buried in the Catholic cemetery of St Vincent in Thessaloniki.

The Thessaloniki poet Kostis Moskof was his grandson.

Sources

  1. Μουτσόπουλος, Νικόλαος (1998). Η ζωή στη Θεσσαλονίκη γύρω στα 1900, το αρχοντικό του Dino Fernandez Diaz Casa Bianca Ιστορική σκιαγραφία και μελέτη αναστηλώσεως. Thessaloniki: Οργανισμός Πολιτιστικής Πρωτεύουσας της Ευρώπης Θεσσαλονίκη 1997. p. 140.
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