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Villa Bardini is Florence in “belvedere mode” - a mid-17th-century leisure villa first built as Villa Manadora (1641), attributed to Gherardo Silvani, and later redefined by the antiquarian Stefano Bardini after his 1913 purchase. It is not the Bardini museum downtown, but a separate hilltop house that has been repeatedly adapted: enlarged over time, with Bardini even adding an extra floor, and then comprehensively restored in the 2000s. Returned to public use in 2007, it works today as a programme-led exhibition venue rather than a fixed collection shrine. For a decade it housed a Roberto Capucci fashion museum (2007–2017), and it also inaugurated a permanent Pietro Annigoni space in 2008. The result is a villa that behaves like a cultural instrument: domestic scale, institutional ambition, and rooms made to change.