Starting in the mid-17th century at the edge of the old village by the will of Count Bartolomeo III Arese, the building is now located in a suburban context, developed in the era of industrial development.
Those who visit Palazzo Arese Borromeo will be able to admire a monument of great value, a place where culture, beauty and wealth come together.
The sober and austere facade hides a sumptuous riot of beautiful frescoes that decorate all the rooms of the palace; the airy loggia between whose slender columns opens the view of the magnificent gardens on one side and the noble courtyard on the other. The historic park is harmonized by perspective avenues that define the Italian garden with statues and fountains.
The path leads to the discovery of the ground floor characterized by vaulted ceilings, with stucco cornices and rooms frescoed by painters of the Milanese seventeenth century such as Montalto, with "The Apparition of the Sun Chariot of Aurora," G.Nuvolone, Giovanni Ghisolfi.
The visit then continues inside the piano nobile, where the richness of the iconography and the skill of the artists involve visitors in a unique and colorful experience, discovering the message hidden by the owners: power, wisdom and ingenuity of the household.
A path of discovery never to be taken for granted.