Gustavo R. VincentiGustavo Romeo Vincenti (26 August 1888 – 25 April 1974)[1][2] was a Maltese architect and developer. Born into a wealthy and business oriented family in Valletta and Floriana, he was able to purchase land and design and build buildings which he would then sell to clients.[3] He was interested in architecture from a young age, and he graduated as an architect from the University of Malta in 1911, at the age of 23.[1] His early works show inspiration from Art Nouveau, Art Deco and eclecticism, interpreted in an economic but elegant way.[3] His facades include horizontal and vertical elements which create a geometric and rigid feel to the buildings, while maintaining an element of flow.[3] His early works include some terraced houses in Sliema, many of which still exist.[3] Other buildings include the Italian embassy, an apartment block and some houses in the vicinity of the King George V Gardens in Floriana.[3] His most significant project was the Vincenti Buildings in Valletta, a large block of apartments constructed in the 1930s occupying an entire city block on the site of the former Forni della Signoria.[3] Some of his buildings are more Modernist, showing influences from Le Corbusier.[3] These include a complex of four houses in Ta' Xbiex built in 1936,[1] collectively also known as Vincenti Buildings, with each of the houses being named after one of the Four Evangelists.[3] Modernism is also evident in his personal villa, Palazzina Vincenti, in St Julian's,[3] which was inhabited by his son Hilaire Vincenti, who died in 2019 at 92. According to Edward Said, Vincenti
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