Italy did not become the world capital of design by accident, and the Triennale is where that story is told. Housed in the Palazzo dell'Arte on the edge of Parco Sempione, it has been shaping Italian design since 1933. From Taylor's Love Solferino B&B it is a fifteen-minute walk through the park.
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Triennale Milano. Photo: Arianna Panarella, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.
On foot: approximately 1.4 km, about 17 minutes from Via Solferino 56, through Brera and across Parco Sempione.
By metro: from Moscova (M2 green line), 300 metres away, one stop to Cadorna, then a five-minute walk through the park.
The Palazzo dell'Arte was built in 1933 by Giovanni Muzio specifically to host the Triennale exhibitions, which had moved to Milan from Monza. The idea was radical for its time: that the design of ordinary things – chairs, lamps, kitchens, coffee pots – deserved the same serious attention as painting and sculpture.
Those exhibitions became the stage on which Italian design defined itself. Ponti, Castiglioni, Magistretti, Sottsass, Mari – the names that made Italian design a global language nearly all showed here first.
Today the building holds the Museo del Design Italiano, a permanent collection that runs chronologically from the post-war years, alongside a busy programme of temporary exhibitions.
The Torre Branca is a hundred metres away and the Castello Sforzesco closes the other end of the park. A natural day: Castello in the morning, Triennale after lunch, Torre Branca at sunset, then walk back into Brera for dinner.
Taylor's Love Solferino B&B is at Via Solferino 56 in Zone 1, the historic centre, between Brera, Moscova and Corso Garibaldi. Brera and Parco Sempione are the two halves of the same neighbourhood – staying here puts both on your doorstep.
For travellers who prefer a short stay apartment in Milan centre to a hotel, the B&B offers free self check-in with a smart lock. Porta Garibaldi FS, 700 metres away, connects directly to Malpensa Airport with the Malpensa Express.