Brenno Del Giudice (Venice, November 23, 1888 - Venice, December 6, 1957) was an Italian architect.

He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Venice and became professor of architectural design in 1908. Since 1919 he collaborated in the study of Giuseppe Torres. From 1927 to 1936 he joined the profession of freelance professor at the Istituto Superiore di Architettura di Venezia, where he was a professor of minor architecture.

In 1925 he produced Vidor (TV) the Monument to the Fallen Church.

At the end of the 1920s, his project won the competition for the construction of the new Cathedral of Spezia; but his design was never realized and the Cathedral was later built in the 1950's by Adalberto Libera.

He constructed several buildings in Venice, among which some of the pavilions of the Venice Biennale (the Venice Pavilion in 1932, the Pavilion Greece in 1934, the pavilions of Yugoslavia, Romania and Poland in 1938) and the current Villa Mirandolina (then Villa Rossi) and the Casa del Farmacista at the Lido of Venice in 1923-1924. In 1956 he made the Hotel Cipriani in Giudecca, always in Venice. Links externalize the wikitesto

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