The Palazzo Turchi di Bagno is a historical palace in Ferrara at Corso Ercole I d'Este 32.
It was designed around 1492 by the architect Biagio Rossetti as part of the grandiose urban planning work known as the Addizione Erculea to create the Quadrivio degli Angeli.
[2] The palace was ceded to the military in 1933 and heavily damaged by bombing during World War II.
The architectural structure does not enjoy any particular decoration and follows a rather linear perspective, built with bricks and characterised by the only notable element, the parastas angular white stone with a double order of Corinthian capitals.
[3] Media related to Palazzo Turchi di Bagno (Ferrara) at Wikimedia Commons