[2] Triachini's work followed local tradition, and in some ways was similar to that Domenico Tibaldi (1541-1583).
[3] His buildings combined classical simplicity and grandeur in their lines, as exemplified by the facade of the Palazzo Sanguinetti.
He was often mentioned in documents about San Michele in Bosco and the monastery of the Trinity, since destroyed.
[7] The Palazzo Nuovo, beside the complex of Rocca Isolani in the commune of Minerbio to the northeast of Bologna, was designed by Triachini with a faςade that features the motif of a loggia.
[3] He was apparently given the commission for the Palazzo Poggi by the Bishop Giovanni Poggio shortly before he was elevated to Cardinal.