place

San Pier Damiani ai Monti di San Paolo

20th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in ItalyLocation maps with marks outside map and outside parameter not setRoman Catholic churches completed in 1970Titular churches

San Pier Damiani ai Monti di San Paolo is a 20th-century parochial church and titular church in the southwest suburbs of Rome, dedicated to the 11th-century saint Peter Damian.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article San Pier Damiani ai Monti di San Paolo (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

San Pier Damiani ai Monti di San Paolo
Via Guido Biagi, Rome Acilia Sud

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: San Pier Damiani ai Monti di San PaoloContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.7879 ° E 12.3798 °
placeShow on map

Address

Chiesa di San Pier Damiani

Via Guido Biagi
00125 Rome, Acilia Sud
Lazio, Italy
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q3671586)
linkOpenStreetMap (215091252)

Share experience

Nearby Places

Sacro Cuore di Gesù agonizzante a Vitinia
Sacro Cuore di Gesù agonizzante a Vitinia

Sacro Cuore di Gesù Agonizzante is a modern parish and titular church located at Via Sant’Arcangelo di Romagna 70 in Vitinia, a suburb of Rome. The Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Agony in Vitinia (Italian: Sacro Cuore di Gesù agonizzante a Vitinia, Latin: Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu in agoniam facti) is a Roman Catholic titular church in Rome, built as a parish church by decree of Cardinal Clemente Micara. On 30 April 1969 Pope Paul VI granted it a titular church as a seat for Cardinals.The actual suburb is called Vitinia, the first one westwards on the Via del Mare after the Circonvallazione Meridionale. The cardinalate title, created in 1969, is Sacro Cuore di Gesù Agonizzante a Vitinia, and the most recent titular is Telesphore Placidus Toppo. The dedication is to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Agony. It was designed by Ildo Avetta, and opened in 1955. The floor plan is basically rectangular with a shallowly curved apse, but the shape of the building is complex. The entrance façade is dominated by a white parabola, decorated with four rows of unusually shaped windows resembling stretched animal skins arranged vertically (the four curves making up each shape are also parabolic). These windows increase in overall size and proportional length from top row to bottom, and the rows number two, three, four and five. The parabola is bounded by two pink brick walls which slope backwards from the two corners of the overall façade, creating voids either side of the parabola, and it also has a floating canopy either side of its apex covering these voids. The side walls of the church are strongly zig-zag, with six triangular projections running from ground to roof on each side in the same pink brick, with small square windows inserted into the otherwise blank wall in an array shaped like a parallelogram on each of the overall twenty-four faces of this arrangement. The roof has a shallow downward curve on either side of the major axis, over these projections, and over the nave is shaped as a result like a row of six and a half lozenges (the half is the canopy over the entrance parabola). At the altar end, the roof forms an irregular hexagon stretched transversely and with the angle behind the altar smoothed away by the apse curve. The walls here are all blank brick, but the roof forms three shallow parabolas, a large one over the apse and two smaller ones on the shorter side faces of the hexagon. These three voids are filled by stained glass. There is a detached campanile to the right of the altar end. It is an octagonal brick tower, with small square windows inserted in one vertical row on each face. The bellchamber is of concrete, formed of eight parabolic arches.

Magliana
Magliana

The Magliana (Italian pronunciation: [maʎˈʎaːna]) is an urban zone of Rome, known as 15E of Municipio XI of Rome. It also the name of a neighborhood or ward of the city. Geographically, it is located on the southwest periphery of Rome, Italy along the Tiber River. The neighborhood dates back to the mid-1900s and is home to a diverse group of people of all ages and ethnicities. About 40,000 people reside in Magliana; housing is made up of mostly owner-occupied apartments in 7–8 story apartment buildings. The space is home to a good deal of economic activity that stretches from the main street, Via Della Magliana in the northwest of the neighborhood, to the southeast towards the Tiber River. However, businesses, activity, and buildings taper off as the neighborhood nears the river bank. Finally, between the built neighborhood and the river is a running trail along an area of farmland. The neighborhood is confined by the Tiber on the east and Railroad tracks on the west edge. In the center of Magliana there are two main areas of congregation: Piazza Fabrizio De Andre and the Mercato Magliana (Magliana Market). The Piazza Fabrizio De Andre is consistently filled with people; in the morning the older generation can be seen sitting on the many benches or strolling through. In the afternoon through early evening it is usually filled with more than 60 children playing on the playground equipment. The Mercato Magliana is open in the morning and early afternoon and offers a wide variety of goods at discount prices.