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San Martino a Gangalandi

12th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in ItalyArt museums and galleries in TuscanyChurches in the Metropolitan City of Florence
Chiesa di gangalandi2
Chiesa di gangalandi2

San Martino a Gangalandi is a Roman Catholic parish (pieve) church in the Gangalandi neighborhood of Lastra a Signa in the region of Tuscany, Italy. It is located via Leon Battista Alberti. Adjacent to the church is a small Museo Vicariale (Vicarial Museum) displaying some works of art.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article San Martino a Gangalandi (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

San Martino a Gangalandi
Via Leon Battista Alberti,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.769491666667 ° E 11.098361111111 °
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Address

Pieve di San Martino a Gangalandi

Via Leon Battista Alberti
50055
Tuscany, Italy
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Chiesa di gangalandi2
Chiesa di gangalandi2
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Nearby Places

San Giovanni Battista, Highway A11
San Giovanni Battista, Highway A11

San Giovanni Battista or dell'Autostrada del Sole is a church in Campi Bisenzio, near Florence, Italy, within a large motorway rest area shared between two autostrada roads. It can also be reached on foot from a local road outside the autostrada system. The church is formally named after John the Baptist but has also earned the name Church of the Freeway of the Sun for its location between autostrada del Sole (Freeway of the Sun) and the A11 Firenze-Mare highway. The design of the church is meant to reflect both modern and traditional church design. The "cross" floor plan and stone facing are meant to evoke a traditional feel, while the tent-like vertical elements and copper roofing reflect modern design tastes. The church stands 27.5 meters (90 feet) high. It was built between 1960 and 1963, based on plans by Giovanni Michelucci. The materials used for the building are stone and concrete for the walls; copper for the roof, oxidized to green on the outside; and burnished blond on the inside. Marble, glass, and bronze are used for the interior elements. The floorplan of the building is asymmetrical and follows sinuous curves creating a feeling of fluid space. The church is decorated with works of Marcello Avenali, Jorio Vivarelli, Dilvo Lotti, and Luigi Venturini. The intention of the church builders was to honor the workers who had died during construction of the freeway and to provide a "parish for the tourists" so those who are travelling can have a place to worship. The Autostrada del Sole is a reflection of two great societal changes of the 1960s, a society moving toward a more mobile and itinerant culture and the new religious ideas brought forward in the Second Vatican Council pronouncements. I have visited Giovanni Michelucci's Church of the Autostrada (...), and I now realize it is an extremely beautiful and effective building.