SAN LORENZO, Old Sacristy

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The entrance to the Old Sacristy built in the first decades of the 15th century is on the left side of the church in the back. Keep in mind that the great Filippo Brunelleschi was a different type of architect than those who preceded him: he was no longer a foreman facing practical problems, but an intellectual who designed and constructed buildings that were entirely thought out beforehand, and were designed in a serene and grandiose fashion that was both rational and poetic. For the first time, a religious building was not forced to have the "divine" proportions of the Gothic cathedrals, and has a more human dimension here.

The sacristy is a square-shaped room covered by an umbrella dome. And considering how the height is equal to the width, you are standing in a perfect cube covered by the equally harmonious geometry of the sphere-shaped dome. As you can see, a square compartment opens up on one of the sides; if you look closely you'll realize that it's an exact reproduction of the sacristy itself on a smaller scale: it exactly corresponds to a ninth of the rest of the structure, and is also a cube covered by a dome.

You'll be struck by the simplicity and grandeur of its whole, which is the result of Brunelleschi's collaboration with Donatello, who saw to the interior decorations....

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