The museum network that brings together the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum, Casa
Museo Boschi Di Stefano, Villa Necchi Campiglio and the Poldi Pezzoli Museum
offers visitors the opportunity of a single card. The four House Museums, all
located in the centre of Milan, are places of great charm, providing an insight
into personal stories and tastes that also reflect the evolution of the city’s society.

CASE MUSEO CARD

Full ticket: 25 euro (instead of 40 euro) – Reduced ticket: 15 euro
The card includes 1 ticket entrance for each of the following House Museums:
Museo Bagatti Valsecchi
Museo Poldi Pezzoli
Villa Necchi Campiglio
Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano
• valid for 1 year • purchase it online • the rate cannot be combined with other discounts.
For more info, visit the official website.

A DOMESTIC RENAISSANCE OF THE BAGATTI HOME
The Bagatti Valsecchi Museum, born of an extraordinary art collecting adventure at the end of the 19th century, was shaped by two brothers, the Barons Fausto and Giuseppe Bagatti Valsecchi, who restructured their family home in the heart of downtown Milan in the Neo-Renaissance style, and furnished it with their rich 15th – 16thcentury Italian art and decorative arts collections. Open to the public since 1994, Fausto’s and Giuseppe’s home, preserved just as it was, is a fascinating historic house museum.

A COLLECTORS’ HISTORICAL RESIDENCE
The Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano, once inhabited by the couple made by Antonio Boschi (1896-1988) and Marieda Di Stefano (1901-1968), hosts approximately 300 works of art, which represent a selection of the couple’s extensive collection, that includes more than 2,000 pieces. The collection stands for an extraordinary example of the history of Italian art in the 20th century. The collection was donated to the Municipality of Milan in 1974 and in 1988. The House Museum opened to the public in 2003.

HISTORIC MILANESE HOME OF A MIDDLE CLASS FAMILY
Immersed in an ample private garden with a swimming pool and a tennis court and set in the center of Milan, the Villa Necchi Campiglio was completed by the architect Piero Portaluppi in 1935. Commissioning the structure was the Necchi Campiglio family, part of the rich and elegant industrial middle class of Milan in the 1930s.
The Necchi Campiglio family wanted above all to distance themselves from the traditions of their day, and planned ample areas dedicated to the reception of guests and to the social whirl: the dining room, the smoking room, the library and the grand salon.

A PRICELESS COLLECTION IN THE HEART OF MILAN
Created thanks to the passion for artcollecting of the noble Milanese Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli (1822-1879), the Poldi Pezzoli Museum is one of the most important and famous house museums in the world, beloved by the Milanese and international public. It fascinates not only for the charm of the rooms evoking the past, but also for the variety and richness of its collections of over 6,000 extraordinary pieces, from Antiquity to the 19th century, suspended in a magical atmosphere.