Borghese Gallery Faces Pushback Over New Building Plan | Artnet News
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Borghese Gallery Faces Pushback Over New Building Plan | Artnet News
"Heritage groups in Italy are pushing back against the Borghese Gallery 's newly released proposal to build an adjacent facility in Rome, arguing that the move prioritizes commercial over cultural interests. Earlier this year, the 17th century villa, which sits within an English landscape garden and boasts a world-class collection of Baroque art, commissioned an engineering firm to assess the feasibility of constructing a new building that would allow it to display more of its collection and accommodate greater visitor numbers."
"At present, the site limits capacity to 360 visitors who are admitted in two-hour time slots. Although the museum welcomed more than 630,000 visitors in 2025 (a roughly 25 percent increase from 2015), it's a far-cry from other attractions in the Eternal City, which is experiencing a tourism surge in the wake of the 2020 pandemic. Beyond increasing visitor numbers, the museum believes it needs more space to present works from its collection which have long remained in storage."
"The Borghese Gallery is due to hold a press conference on May 19 to provide additional details on the expansion project. Over email, a spokesperson for the museum, stressed that at this stage the process is "purely administrative in nature." Italian Heritage groups and art historians were quick to criticize the potential development, claiming it would disturb the carefully crafted aesthetics of the 400-year-old villa and its gardens."
""No to the construction of a new building next to the [Borghese] Gallery," Friends of Villa Borghese, a nonprofit, wrote on . "One must truly hope that this outrage is cancelled." Another voice joining the backlash is Tomaso Montanari, an art historian and frequent defender of conserving Italy's cultural heritage. "In the logic of a hypermarket, we must increase, increase, increase," Montanari wrote in an op-ed published in the newspaper Il Fatto Quotidiano. "Never mind if we overturn the centuries"
The Borghese Gallery in Rome faces criticism from heritage groups over a proposal to build an adjacent facility. The 17th century villa, set within an English landscape garden and holding a major Baroque collection, commissioned an engineering firm to assess feasibility for a new building. The current site limits entry to 360 visitors in two-hour time slots, even as attendance rose to more than 630,000 visitors in 2025. The museum seeks additional space to increase visitor capacity and to display works that have remained in storage. A spokesperson said the process is purely administrative. Heritage groups and art historians argue the construction would disturb the villa and garden’s carefully crafted aesthetics, and they call for cancellation.
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