COMO casts its SPELL
Signature Travel & Style|Volume 44
In Northern Italy's Lombardy region, Lake Como has a way of casting an intoxicating spell over visitors, and perhaps the greatest seductress of all is the newest villa to grace her shores, Villa Passalacqua, writes Natasha Dragun.
Natasha Dragun
COMO casts its SPELL

There’s a moment as I enter my suite, La Sonnambula lilting from the stereo, when I imagine the clock has been wound back a couple of centuries to a time when musicians composed opera instead of hip-hop, and couples declared love after a flute of prosecco sipped under the spell of a full moon.

My suite’s signature scent is all roses and romance, and it wafts into the balmy night through whitewashed shutters that open to dreamy views of Lake Como, dusted in the reflection of stars. A symphony of dusky pinks, my enormous room is like a shrine to Italian design: think etched Barbini mirrored cabinets, Como silks, original stucco and ceiling carvings. In the bathroom, meanwhile, I discover white-and-rose Dover Aurora marble from the quarries of Louis XIV topping the vanity, hung with etched mirrors beside a luxurious window-side tub and silk taffeta curtains.

You can see how one’s imagination starts to drift soon after checking in to Villa Passalacqua.

History reinvented 

Like so many painters, philosophers, musicians and poets of his time, Count Andrea Lucini Passalacqua found himself seduced by Italy’s prettiest lake back in the late 1700s. With the assistance of Swiss designer Giocondo Albertolli who crafted the interiors, he built the now historic 1787 Passalacqua villa on its banks, and promptly went about entertaining the who’s who in its generous-sized quarters. Among them was composer Vincenzo Bellini, who visited in 1829 and couldn’t bear to leave: he wrote two of his famous operas, Norma and La Sonnambula, in the home’s music room, today Villa Passalacqua’s Bellini Suite.

This story is from the Volume 44 edition of Signature Travel & Style.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the Volume 44 edition of Signature Travel & Style.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM SIGNATURE TRAVEL & STYLEView All
Ultimate CHARTERS
Signature Travel & Style

Ultimate CHARTERS

Mega-yachts are having their moment, and for those who like to set sail in style, now might just be the time, writes Kirstie Bedford.

time-read
2 mins  |
Volume 44
BALLY'S RIDE on the tides OF CHANGE
Signature Travel & Style

BALLY'S RIDE on the tides OF CHANGE

With a provocative new creative director at its helm, Bally has taken a visionary leap forward with its spring/summer 2023 collection, writes Alex Stephen.

time-read
3 mins  |
Volume 44
Southern SAILING
Signature Travel & Style

Southern SAILING

Windstar Cruises' debut Down Under proves one of the best ways to sail Australia's southern seas, writes Kirstie Bedford.

time-read
2 mins  |
Volume 44
CLASS act
Signature Travel & Style

CLASS act

Atelier is enticing Sydney diners with modern French flavours and polished plates, writes Sue Wallace.

time-read
1 min  |
Volume 44
AMID the VINES
Signature Travel & Style

AMID the VINES

Newly under the guard of Baillie Lodges, The Louise unites the spirit of the Barossa Valley in a sleek necklace of accommodation strung through the bucolic South Australian countryside. Natasha Dragun checks in.

time-read
3 mins  |
Volume 44
A NATION in degustation
Signature Travel & Style

A NATION in degustation

Inner Sydney degustation-only restaurant Nel has Singapore in its sights with an ambitious project to put an entire culture's food on your plate, writes Steve Madgwick.

time-read
4 mins  |
Volume 44
There's something ABOUT TELLURIDE
Signature Travel & Style

There's something ABOUT TELLURIDE

For a taste of the (very) high life and skiing that's a cut above, this is a ski town that caters for your every whim, writes Caroline Smith.

time-read
3 mins  |
Volume 44
ALL EYES ON ASPEN
Signature Travel & Style

ALL EYES ON ASPEN

A century ago, silver miners were drawn to Aspen in Colorado seeking the fortunes lying beneath its mountain peaks. Today, wealth and thrills above ground keep visitors coming back, writes Kate Allman.

time-read
3 mins  |
Volume 44
SKI UTOPIA
Signature Travel & Style

SKI UTOPIA

In the Rocky Mountains of Utah, Jeremy Drake discovers a luxurious ski town with a rugged cowboy soul.

time-read
4 mins  |
Volume 44
NORTHERN ESCAPE
Signature Travel & Style

NORTHERN ESCAPE

With some of the most accessible backcountry terrain in Canada and a bounty of ski resorts for on-piste pursuits, British Columbia is the ultimate winter playground for well-heeled travellers, writes Jennifer Ennion.

time-read
3 mins  |
Volume 44