Residence of Portela
Residence of Portela (Casa da Portela) | |
Residence (Casa) | |
Named for: Portela | |
Country | Portugal |
---|---|
Region | Centro |
Subregion | Baixo Vouga |
District | Aveiro |
Municipality | Santa Maria da Feira |
Location | Paços de Brandão |
- coordinates | PT 40°58′13.7″N 8°35′28.1″W / 40.970472°N 8.591139°WCoordinates: PT 40°58′13.7″N 8°35′28.1″W / 40.970472°N 8.591139°W |
Style | Medieval |
Owner | Portuguese Republic |
For public | Public |
Easiest access | Portela |
Management | Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico |
Operator | DRCCentro[1] |
Status | Property of Public Interest Imóvel de Interesse Público |
Listing | Decree 28/82, Diário da República, Série 1, 47, 26 February 1982 |
The Residence of Portela (Portuguese: Casa da Portela) is a 17th-century country house located in the civil parish of Paços de Brandão, in the municipality of Santa Maria da Feira, in the Portuguese Centro district of Aveiro. It was classified as a monument in 1982.[2]
History
By 1629, the residence was identified as the property of Francisco Saraiva and his wife Britis Aranha.[3]
The home was acquired by the noble family Pintos e Almeidas in 1788.[3]
During the 19th century there were various projects to reform the building and its spaces.[3]
Architecture
The manorhouse is located in an urban space, on a berm along a main roadway, that includes gardens and forest to the rear of the building.[3]
The two-storey horizontal "U"-shape plan extends across the property, with inset secondary vain and a transversal chimney along the rectangular corp, covered in tiled rooftops.[3] The structure includes a central portico with semi-circular frontispiece, interrupted by the coat-of-arms of the Pintos e Almeidas clan.[3] The frontal facade includes fenestration that divides the floors in two, and includes a symmetrical layout, with framed windows and doors.[3] On the first floor, from the main door, there are graded lateral rectangular windows, separated by larger double windows.[3] On the second floor, are windows broken by a dual window-doors with varanda.[3] The reclined secondary space, also two floors high, with rectangular doors and niches, and second floor that includes four vains broken by a pronounced cornices.[3]
To the left, is a small terrace accessible by simple staircase consisting of six columns.[3] To the rear, the open patio includes varanda and staircase, also accessible by annex gate.[3]
References
Notes
- ↑ Ordinance 829/2009, Diário da República, Série 2, 163 (24 August 2009)
- ↑ Património Cultural
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Alçada, Margarida; Ruão, Carlos (1996), SIPA, ed., Casa da Portela (IPA.00000788/PT010109190006) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 4 October 2016
Sources
- Regaleira, Vasco de Morais Palmeiro (1927), "Casa da Portela", Arquitectura (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal, pp. 6–7
- Gonçalves, Nogueira; Dias, Pedro (1979), Concelho de Vila da Feira. História e Arte (in Portuguese), Santa Maria da Feira, pp. 18–19
- Gonçalves, Nogueira (1981), Inventário Artístico de Portugal. Distrito de Aveiro (in Portuguese) (X ed.), Lisbon, Portugal, p. 98
- Azevedo, Carlos de (1988), Solares Portugueses (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal