LONE PALM - FRANCE, PARIS
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LONE PALM - FRANCE, PARIS
Dark, intimate, muffled, the Lone Palm is a bar with a sleek design influenced by the clear and innovative line of American modernists. Olivier Chiron, a young contemporary artist, plunges us here into his vision of a place inspired as much by the work of a Charles Eames or a Georges Nelson as cities like Palm Springs or Miami. Add to that some visual touches to the Lynch and a soundtrack or invite Chet Baker and Sinatra ... The cocktail menu echoes the classic assumed: the inevitable Dirty Martini, Pisco Sour or Clover CLub rub shoulders Signatures such as the Salton Sea, Canyon Drive or California Cool.
Address: 21 Rue Keller, 75011 Paris, France
Phone: +33 1 48 06 03 95
lonepalm21@gmail.com
Copyright © 2018 Lone Palm
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By Willo’s Worlds
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Christopher Columbus' house, Genoa, Liguria, Italy, Europe
The house of Christopher Columbus in Genoa is the reconstruction (dating back to the eighteenth century) the building in which he lived in his youth Columbus. Now used as a museum center of the City, the house is located a short distance from the Gates, just outside the medieval walls. Historical records have enabled us to ensure that the browser you lived in the time range, roughly, between 1455 and 1470. The building has undergone many changes over the centuries, the main one being due to the bombardment of Genoa in 1684, then maritime republic, initiated by the Sun King These changes were made to the contextual those Ravecca area - once known as the Bridge (Pontexello in the original language) named after the small artery called Vico Straight Jumper, now no longer existing, located just outside the ancient Gates, the Plan of St. Andrew - where is the house. The management of the museum is entrusted to the Cultural Genovese Gates. The house that presents itself to the visitor is most likely a contemporary reconstruction, carried out in the early years of the eighteenth century the original medieval building. The house was almost certainly struck and destroyed, like others in the same area, from the bombing of the naval fleet of King Louis XIV of France in 1684, as noted in the historic Marcello Staglieno. According Staglieno, the building at the time of Columbus had two or maybe three floors and was restored over time on the basis of the original remains. Archive documents that attest to being the home of the family of Colombo.Le research Staglieno have been more recently confirmed by the historian Paolo Revelli (of whose writings, however, there are few and old editions), and another scholar of Colombian Paolo Emilio Taviani, who has extensively dealt with the topic. At the time of Columbus's house was to return in the expansion of the walls of the fourteenth century and the area had become the subject of intense building development, with houses mostly popular. It was part of the parish of Santo Stefano. It is possible that after the reconstruction made necessary because of the bombing, they are also added to the plans to those found in the original building, to reach a total of five floors at the end of the eighteenth century. The house is situated in the urban fabric then revised during the Renaissance, or outside the medieval walls. The old alley Right to bridge remained for centuries as it was at the time of Christopher and so does the structure of the house: the ground floor is a shop and to the left of this, compared to the main façade, is the gateway . A wooden beams to ceiling, dividing the upper floor and probably so was in the beginning (as can be inferred from the act of sale of the Colombo family to family Bavarello). In 1887 the house was bought by the City of Genoa (during the second term of Mayor Andrea Podesta) in order to give a tangible proof of the veracity of the birthplace of the navigator. Next to the house of Colombo is the XII century cloister of the church and convent of St. Andrew, which was demolished in 1904 at the time of excavation of the hillside of: the stones that make up the architecture, saved by the architect Alfredo d'Andrade, were recomposed in a second time in the current site. With the demolition of the north side of the alley Straight Jumper around the year 1900, in the work that led to the building of Via XX Settembre, Columbus' house, which was built by placing its beams on the load-bearing walls of the houses side by side , could not remain standing once demolished the two sides to it, so the three upper floors were eliminated, reducing it to the current system. Domenico Colombo, father of the great Genoese navigator, he moved with his family in vico Straight Bridge in 1455. Christopher, in that year, it did four years. In the opinion of several historians, Colombo would be born in a day indefinitely 1451 between August 26 and October 31 in alley Olivella, in the district of Portoria. Since 1455 the Colombo family lived in vico Straight Jumper (in ancient times called the Straight Path or better Carrubeus rectus usque in Ponticellum (as stated on the lease preserved in the Vatican - note: from carrubeus may have been made to derive the term caruggio), also owned by the monastery). Lost his job as guardian of the Gate, Domenico worked at the lab as a weaver and as a dealer in wines and cheeses. The dual labor did not improve, however, the family condition. The debts piled up enormously. He decided to sell the family land. Meanwhile, Christopher, out of adolescence, had already embarked on a career as a sailor would have consigned to history as one of the greatest surfers of all time.