The palazzo (as Bargilli Sarchi) appears in the list drawn up in 1901 by the General Directorate of Antiquities and Fine Arts as a monumental building to be considered (national artistic heritage).
[1] The Bargilli Sarchi family purchased it from them, and in 1735 they promoted the extension and renovation works that distinguish the palazzo today, attributed to the architect Bernardino Ciurini.
[1] The palace has an essentially 18th-century façade, organised on six axes for three floors (plus a basement), marked by an insistent decorativism (see the ornaments of the balcony and of the windows with geometric motifs and fantastic animals) and, a rare example for Florence, by a double door flanked by semicolumns and surmounted by an elegant little terrace, with masks on the balustrade alluding to the four seasons and, in the centre, a flag bearer.
[4] Already Stable Theatre with an important programme, featuring directors of the calibre of Tatiana Pavlova and actors such as Paola Borboni, Ottavia Piccolo, Ave Ninchi, the brothers Aldo and Carlo Giuffré, Giustino Durano, Arnoldo Foà, etc.
After being damaged by fire and the Florence Flood of 1966, from 1968 the theatre became a reference point for the staging of prose shows in vernacular 'noble', as well as the seat of an appreciated acting school, under the direction of Gino Susini.