Lualdi
San Siro Door
The San Siro door in Lualdi recalls the slightly retro shapes of a typically Milanese tradition. It is also enhanced by the prestigious signature of an architect who made the history of the city, Luigi Caccia Dominioni who, with his palaces, helped to shape the image of the city in the immediate post-war period and who also left a strong mark on the world of design with the Azucena foundation. Apparently very classic, the San Siro door, however, reveals a slight dissonance in the design of its side bands, a designer touch capable of infusing a modern spirit in a rather traditional object. The door is framed by a large casing and can be customized through the selection of different matt lacquer colors.
Available in several configurations
Salvioni Design Solutions delivers all around the world. The assembly service is also available by our teams of specialized workers.
Each product is tailor-made for the personal taste and indications of the customer in a customized finish and that is why the production time may vary according to the chosen product.
To discover the full range of services available, visit our delivery page.
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Lualdi is one of the most important Italian brands in the field of doors design. The luxury interior doors produced by Lualdi succeed in combining high-quality craftsmanship with high-tech workmanship, proposing a product that is not only aesthetically pleasing, but also resistant to wear and perfectly functional. Lualdi is a historical brand of the sector and can boast many collaborations with the most important Milanese architects of the post-war period, and in particular, with the master Luigi Caccia Dominioni who led the company in its process of complete industrialization.Read more
Designed by
Luigi Caccia Dominioni
"Luigi Caccia Dominioni (1913-2016) was one of the great protagonists of twentieth-century Milanese architecture. A pupil of Piero Portaluppi at the Milan Polytechnic, he held the role of trusted architect of the good Milanese bourgeoisie throughout his very long career. Career that began immediately after his graduation with the founding of a studio together with Livio and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni, with whom he would work until the outbreak of the war. Instead, his encounter with product design dates back to 1947, when Azucena was founded together with Ignazio Gardella and Corrado Corradi Dell'Acqua, which will produce the furniture designed by the three. His architectural language was marked by a sober functionalism and devoid of apodictic formal principles, thus allowing him to adapt his projects to the different needs of the client with a certain degree of eclecticism: excellent examples of this are architectures such as the condominiums in via Nievo or the palazzo in Corso Monforte (1963-64) today the headquarters of the Flos showroom. The same characteristics can also be found in his furnishings, of which the Catilina chair is emblematic, however often enriched by precious and refined details that bring them closer to the forms of furniture from the beginning of the century. After his death, Azucena was taken over by B&B Italia, while some doors designed by him were reissued in series by Lualdi.Read more