Count of Pinhal Mansion (Portuguese: Palacete Conde do Pinhal) is a historic building located in the city of São Carlos, Brazil. Listed by the Council for the Defense of Historical, Archaeological, Artistic and Tourist Heritage (CONDEPHAAT), it is currently home to departments of the Municipal Secretary of Education of São Carlos.
The land was acquired in 1867, according to the year engraved on the property's iron gate. On December 27, 1890, the hired engineer Pietro David Cassinelli, who began construction of the building in 1893, and it was inaugurated in 1895.
When the count died in 1901, the family stopped living there and the mansion was used by the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, who ran the Colégio São Carlos from 1906 to 1913. In 1918, the municipality took possession of the property. Between 1921 and 1952, the building was home to the town hall and the city council. From 1952 to 2008, it housed only the town hall. From 2008 to 2016, the building was home to the Secretary of Education â which then moved to Bento Carlos Mansion (2016-17), and Casa da Cultura (2017). The Count of Pinhal Mansion is currently closed and has no active use.
The building has an eclectic, neo-Renaissance style on its two floors, a request from the count himself, who wanted a residence similar to the Marquis of Três Rios mansion. The building has seven balconies on the main façade and two on the façade facing the garden, where a âÂÂguest chaletâ is located, designed to accommodate visitors separately from the family's daily activities. The rest of the land still preserved a large wooded area, which was surrounded by rammed earth walls; and access to the grounds for the carriages and other maintenance services was via what is now Major José Inácio Street.
Eclecticism arrived in the city of São Carlos due to the wealth of the coffee-growing period and the construction of the railroad in 1884. It was a period of urban expansion for the municipality. In addition, many immigrant workers brought with them knowledge of European construction methods, which were incorporated into local building practices. Eclectic-style buildings were a symbol of social status.
Pietro David Cassinelli (Genoa, 1854 - São Carlos, 1898), noted for his involvement in the construction of the mansion, came to Brazil at the age of 28, arriving in São Carlos in 1882. He owned a furniture factory, and an ice factory and was one of the founders of the Societá Ginástica Educativa Cristóforo Colombo. He died of yellow fever at the age of 43. Cassinelli contributed to the construction of several notable buildings, including:
Between 2002 and 2003, the (FPMSC), an agency of the city government, carried out an initial (unpublished) survey of the âÂÂproperties of historical interestâ (imóveis de interesse histórico - IDIH) in the city of São Carlos, covering around 160 blocks and analyzing more than 3,000 properties. Of these, 1,410 had original architecture from the late 19th century. Of these, 150 retained their original features, 479 had undergone significant alterations, and 817 were quite uncharacteristic. The names of the categories of buildings on the list have changed over the years.
The building covered by this entry is listed as a âÂÂListed Buildingâ (category 1) in the inventory of heritage assets of the municipality of São Carlos, published in 2021 by the FPMSC, the municipal public body responsible for âÂÂpreserving and disseminating the historical and cultural heritage of the Municipality of São Carlos". This heritage designation was published in the Official Gazette of the Municipality of São Carlos No. 1722, on March 9, 2021, on pages 10 and 11. It is included in the historical polygon delimited by the Foundation, which âÂÂcomprises the urban fabric of São Carlos from the 1940s.â The polygon is shown on a map published on the Foundation's website, which indicates properties in the process of being listed or already listed by CONDEPHAAT (a state body), properties listed at a municipal level, and properties protected by the municipality (FPMSC).
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