Giuseppe Zanoia
{{Short description|Italian architect}}
File:Milano Porta Nuova 1.jpg]]
Giuseppe Zanoia (1752–1817) was an Italian Neoclassical architect who is remembered for his Porta Nuova in Milan. He also collaborated on the Neogothic design of Milan's Duomo.
Biography
File:Milano-duomodimilano01.jpg]]
A canon at Milan's Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio, he also taught at the Brera Academy, taking the position of Giacomo Albertolli.*{{cite book| first=Antonio| last=Caimi| year=1862| title=Delle arti del designo e degli artisti nelle provincie di Lombardia dal 1777–1862| pages=16 | publisher=Presso Luigi di Giacomo Pirola|location=Milan, Italy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W_FYAAAAYAAJ&q=Antonio+Caimi}} He was a friend of the Enlightenment poet Giuseppe Parini. From 1807, he was a member of the Ornato Commission appointed under Napoleon to redesign Milan.[http://www.myword.it/arte/dictionary/4034 "Zanoja (o Zanoia), Giuseppe"], my.word.it. {{in lang|it}} Retrieved 11 September 2012.
In architecture, he mainly adopted the Neoclassical style as can be seen from his design for Milan's Porta Nuova, inspired by Rome's Arch of Titus and completed in 1813.Attila Lanza and Marilea Somarè, Milano e i suoi palazzi: porta Vercellina, Comasina e Nuova, 1993, Vimercate, Libreria Meravigli editrice, p. 134. {{in lang|it}} However, when working on the design of Milan Cathedral's facade in 1805 under direct orders from Napoleon, his approach was Neogothic. The work was in fact completed by Carlo Amati in 1813.[http://www.to.chiesadimilano.it/or/ADMI/esy/objects/docs/65361/Morlin.pdf Benigno Mörlin Visconti Castiglione, "La facciata del Duomo: un lungo cantiere"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304203936/http://www.to.chiesadimilano.it/or/ADMI/esy/objects/docs/65361/Morlin.pdf |date=2016-03-04 }}, www.to.chiesadimilano.it. {{in lang|it}} Retrieved 11 September 2012.
Other works included the Santa Savina altar in Sant'Ambrogio (1798), extension of the Palazzo della Canonica (1802). He restored the church of S. Ambrogio in Stresa (1790) and was at work at the nearby Palazzo Borromeo (Isola Bella) (1795).
See also
{{Commons category|Giuseppe Zanoia}}