This Exquisite Milan Apartment Is an Homage to ‘the Wild Women of the ’70s’

hexagonal dining room with green walls, oblong white and black marble table, wood chairs with orange fabric seats, glass sculptures on table, five armed pendant, glass floor lamp, patterned floor
This Apartment Is a Nod to the Women of the 70sHelenio Barbetta

Wealthy cities tend to get remade, frequently and boldly, and Milan is undoubtedly a child of this type of reinvention. The collision of industry, artistry, and finance has created a layered urban archaeology that jumps from Roman to Renaissance to postmodern.

So when ELLE DECOR A-List architect Hannes Peer first saw his client’s second-floor apartment in Milan’s center, it felt like a rare opportunity. The homeowner, Francesco Dagnino, a lawyer and single father of two young children, pushed the designer to be daring in his renovation of the three-bedroom home. “I am easily bored,” Dagnino says. Peer agreed that the space, in the bustling Brera neighborhood, needed a new start, and embarked on a gut renovation.

dining room with green walls, white and black marble table and chairs, white and black swirl patterned floor, goldenrod colored chairs, glass sculptures on table, five armed chandelier, interior hexagonal windows
The table in Pele de Tigre marble is by Hannes Peer for La Chance, the Franco Albini dining chairs are by Cassina, the chandelier is by Serge Mouille, and the glass sculpture is by Ursula Huber.Helenio Barbetta

The change begins in the bold entry, where movable walls of Roman travertine are paired with a bas-relief artwork by Ursula Huber, who happens to be Peer’s mother. The Palladiana terrazzo floor was the only remaining element from before the renovation—when the space was the client’s law office—and even that was ripped up and reinstalled.

To the left of the entry, a home gym, complete with punching bag, sports mustard walls and rubber tile flooring. The Venetian blinds here and in the bedrooms are the only window treatments in the apartment, which is surrounded on three sides by a small park, lending a sense of privacy. On the entrance’s opposite flank is a more fanciful space: a vestibule painted a glossy goldenrod, with a chamfered ceiling and inset seating that feels intimate and inviting.

living room with white walls and ceiling with square panels, ocher colored marble fireplace, blue and ocher rug, white boucle chairs and sofa, blue wire chair, metal based cocktail tables with marble tops

Peer’s approach is always scholarly, but here the dial is turned up so that even for the uninformed, a ziggurat-shaped transom window or mosaic floor seems in keeping with the metropolis around it. But in a city where architects and designers are household names, design buffs will notice the many references to Milan’s architectural legacy: They’ll spot the link, for instance, between the vestibule and dining room’s mosaic floor and ante-chambers designed in the 1950s and ’60s by artist Francesco Somaini for modernist buildings by Luigi Caccia Dominioni.

Entry

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The wall frieze is by Ursula Huber, the flooring is in Verde Alpi, Carrara, and Bardiglio marbles. The pendant is by Angelo Lelli.

Vestibule

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The flooring was created using the Venetian Seminato technique. The custom daybed is in a Dedar fabric, the sconces are vintage, and the pendant is by Tetrarch Studio.

Dining Room

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The table in Pele de Tigre marble is by Hannes Peer for La Chance, the Franco Albini dining chairs are by Cassina, the chandelier is by Serge Mouille, and the glass sculpture is by Ursula Huber.

Dining Room

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

In the hexagonal dining room, the floor lamp sculpture is by Marco Acerbis, and the miniature artworks (back wall, from left) are by Nicola Samorì, Lucio Fontana, and Philippe Rinaudo (two at right).

Kitchen

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The island and wall column are clad in Cipollino Rosso marble.

Kitchen

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The dining chairs in black stained oak and Vienna straw are by Cassina, and the emerald green ceramic floor tiles are by Fornace Bernasconi. The photograph above the shelf is by Renée Jacobs.

Living Room

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The living room overlooks a garden and has a custom Art Deco–inspired mantel in Giallo Siena marble. The sofa is by Hannes Peer for Spotti Edizioni Milano, the custom cocktail tables with mosaic tops are by Paolo Racagni, and the lounge chairs by Martin Eisler. The blue wire chair is by Tom Dixon, and the photograph (left) is by Federica Belli.

Living Room

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

Hannes Peer designed the Murano glass floor lamp and chaise lounge (left) and the travertine sideboard. The vintage armchairs are by Giancarlo Piretti, and the cocktail table is by Gubi. The photograph (left) is by Federica Belli, and the painting is by Donna Huanca.

Living Room

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The bookshelf is by Michael Anastassiadis for B&B Italia, and the wall sculpture is by Pietro Campagnoli.

Primary Bedroom

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The floor lamp is by Frank Lloyd Wright, and the bed is by Paola Navone for Baxter. The bench is by Pierre Jeanneret for Cassina, the nightstand by Nanda Vigo, and the vintage sconce by Luigi Caccia Dominioni. The artwork is by Hannes Peer.

Dressing Room

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

The primary dressing room has a custom closet in mahoganized birchwood. The chair sculpture is by Anacleto Spazzapan.

Primary Bath

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

Inspired by Jean-Michel Frank’s 1925 Paris sanctuary, the bathroom’s walls and floor are in Calacatta Paonazzo marble, and the mirror is custom. The sculptures are by Laboratorio Avallone.

The Architect and Designer

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

Hannes Peer in the dining room. The floor lamp sculpture is by Marco Acerbis, and the artwork is by Nicola Samorì.

The Homeowner

Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta
Photo credit: Helenio Barbetta

Francesco Dagnino in the living room. The custom fireplace is in Giallo Siena marble, the sconces are by Gino Sarfatti, and the objects on the mantel are by Ceramiche Milesi.

The ode to his adopted city (Peer is originally from South Tyrol, in northern Italy) continues. “I have included references to Gio Ponti,” Peer notes. A case in point: the dining room, lacquered a vivid green, where the Italian modernist’s sway is evident in the room’s hexagonal shape. Another influence: “the wild women of the ’70s like Gae Aulenti, Nanda Vigo, and Gabriella Crespi.” The latter designer has always been inspirational to Peer, who admires her uncompromising boldness.

In an apartment where only the bedrooms have doors, Peer found clever ways to demarcate spaces: Elsewhere, he employed one of his signature moves, lining open thresholds in exquisite marbles. Another of his classic devices is the studied use of a sophisticated palette. The colors begin with a bang, with strong hues that lessen in intensity as one moves deeper into the space, toward the minimally furnished living room. Then the focus shifts to the view of the Perego Garden, one of the few remaining plots of green space within Milan’s inner ring.

a bedroom with gray walls, bed with blue upholstered headboard with sconces above, blue pillows and bedcover, green blanket at foot, multilevel floor lamp with red tinted light, side table with magazines
In the primary bedroom, the floor lamp is by Frank Lloyd Wright, and the bed is by Paola Navone for Baxter. The bench is by Pierre Jeanneret for Cassina, the nightstand by Nanda Vigo, and the vintage sconce by Luigi Caccia Dominioni. The artwork is by Hannes Peer. Helenio Barbetta

Peer’s own furniture designs contribute a strong, cohesive point of view; the dining room table is from his collection for La Chance. Throughout the apartment, similar shapes repeat in a variety of materials, whether marble, wood, or resin. The cocktail table reinterprets the massive modularity of Peer’s Quadro tables but then adds mosaics in a subtle echo of the tilework in the vestibule and dining room. It is an approach that elevates his interiors to the level of a Gesamtkunstwerk, or a total artwork.

a bathroom with a white and ocher marble floor and three steps up to a bathtub, a counter with two sinks, two meal sculptures, wood cabinets beneath and large mirror above counter
The primary bath is inspired by Jean-Michel Frank’s 1925 Paris sanctuary. The walls and floor are in Calacatta Paonazzo marble, and the mirror is custom. The sculptures are by Laboratorio Avallone.Helenio Barbetta

In the private areas of the apartment, walls in a cement resin finish create a peaceful, organic atmosphere. The innermost space, the primary bath, opens to the outside. Here, Calacatta Paonazzo marble, a favorite of Jean-Michel Frank’s, is butterflied with precision, while the recessed ceiling references James Turrell. “Every room has its own story, its own boldness, its own quietness,” Peer says.

While almost everything refers back to history, the effect is fresh and luxurious and an illustration of how Peer is creating a new vernacular of design. “This project,” he says, “is my love letter to Milan.”

summer 2024 cover elle decor
Hearst Owned

This story originally appeared in the Summer 2024 issue of ELLE DECOR. SUBSCRIBE

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