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Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury

Alex Reyto

In the sun-drenched heart of Italy’s Salento region, Valari Studio has masterfully reawakened a forgotten 300-year-old structure into Palazzo San Vito—a holiday home that distills the Greek philosophy of Eudemonia into architectural form. Located in Lequile, just outside Baroque-rich Lecce, this historic building renovation transcends typical hospitality projects, embodying what owner Fabio Moro describes as “a state of grace: well-being both physical and mental.”

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury
Original star-vaulted ceilings frame the dining room, where Valari Studio’s custom steel-oak table dialogues with 300-year-old stone walls.

Originally discovered in near-ruin—its facade modest, courtyards overgrown, and interiors shrouded in grime—the palazzo revealed hidden treasures beneath layers of neglect: original terrazzo floors with intricate flora-and-fauna motifs, two astonishing mosaic medallions, and soaring star-vaulted ceilings. Valari co-founders Nicolò Lewanski and Federica Russo approached the 300m² interior and 700m² gardens with surgical sensitivity, preserving these relics while injecting contemporary fluidity. The result? Four ensuite bedrooms woven into a tapestry of communal spaces that champion indoor-outdoor living—a hallmark of Italian architecture in Puglia.

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury
The subterranean Garden Room – carved beneath historic arches – merges gravel, ancient stone, and lush ferns for meditative summer retreats.

The studio’s gentle rehabilitation strategy honored the building’s DNA—like the enfilade of rooms overlooking citrus groves—while reimagining functions. In the former family chapel, the Garden Roomemerges as a subterranean oasis: gravel beds, lush ferns, and cushions nestle beneath historic stone arches.

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury
Indoor-outdoor living redefined: the master suite’s open-air brass shower and terracotta tub nestle within courtyard foliage.

Nearby, the dining hall pulses as the social heart, centered around a bespoke steel-and-oak table dialoguing with ancient stone walls. Bespoke furniture recurs throughout, from sculptural steel kitchen elements to monolithic travertine sinks, all crafted by Salento artisans using traditional techniques.

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury
Bespoke furniture meets heritage: monolithic travertine sinks and sculptural steel elements contrast original cementine tiles.

Materiality orchestrates the narrative. Original cementine tiles, terrazzo, and carved friezes converse with contemporary brass fixtures, blackened steel, and linen textiles. The master suite dissolves boundaries entirely: an open-air shower and floor-carved terracotta tub nestle amid foliage, turning ritual into immersion. Outside, courtyard gardens unfold—minimalist terraces with stucco benches gaze toward Palazzo San Vito’s dome, while a pool shimmers under century-old eucalyptus and orange trees.

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury
The sustainable design pool, shaded by century-old eucalyptus and orange trees, embodies quiet luxury in Lequile.

This project epitomizes quiet luxury—no gilded excess, but reverence for craft, history, and wellbeing. Valari’s sustainable design ethos shines through conservation-first tactics and local material sourcing. As Lewanski notes, the palazzo’s magic lies in its “atmosphere between luxury and domesticity,” where star vaults whisper past lives while contemporary interventions frame slow-living rituals.

Palazzo San Vito: Valari Studio Transforms Crumbling Puglian Heritage into Sanctuary of Quiet Luxury
Umbrian terracotta floors guide guests through courtyard gardens, linking minimalist terraces with Lecce’s Baroque skyline.

For travelers and design aficionados, Palazzo San Vito offers more than a stay: it’s a meditation on Eudemonia, proving that the most profound luxury is harmony—between eras, materials, and one’s inner peace.

Image courtesy of Alex Reyto

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