Edoardo Collamarini (1863–1928) was an Italian architect, active mainly in Bologna, region of Emilia Romagna, Italy.
Among his main works is the Neo-Byzantine-style church of Sacro Cuore di Gesù (1912).
[1] This style is also reflected in his Santuario della Madonna del Sangue at Re, completed only by 1928.
He also designed the Palace of the Banca Popolare di Pesaro, the facade of the Sanctuary of Monticino at Brisighella, the Pavilion of Emiliano-Romagnolo for the 1911 Artistic Exposition of Rome.
In 1928, the journal Comune di Bologna in a posthumous elogy said of Collamarini that he was a:[2] follower of the theories of Viollet-le-Duc, but who has the merit in that he avoids in his creations the influence of the gothic architecture from Northern Europe, which maladapted and poorly applied by other architects and engineers of the 19th century, the most hybrid and dead structures... during the decadent Umbertine style ...