A GARDEN IN LUCCA
Villa Massei
Massa Macinaia
55060 Lucca
Villa Massei in Massa Macinaia, fifteen minutes outside the walls of the ancient Tuscan city of Lucca, has been home to Americans, Gil Cohen and Paul Gervais since 1982. Its newly restored guest house, Al Pastore, is now available for rent to discerning travellers who seek the highest quality accommodations in an atmosphere of exceptional beauty. The villa's famous gardens are visited by horticultural enthusiasts from around the world, and the wine and oil produced on the sixty-acre estate are held in high esteem throughout the region for their excellence. |

The
guest house is available throughout the year as it is winterized and heated. January is a
particularly beautiful time here, sunny days and temperatures in the 50s. Spring begins in
February when the bulbs begin to bloom and the camellias are in flower. Easter, Christmas
and the New Year are also great times to come. There is a DSL line and maid service twice
per week, plus on Saturday. A chef is available upon request for an additional fee.
Although there are two suites, they are rented as one unit, and can not be seperated.
**NOTE: Maximum number of people is four**
From Architectural Digest, March 2000
by Paul Gervais
I live in someone else's fulfilled dream.
The things you want the most in life you rarely get; when you don't want something, when
it's never even occurred to you to want it, then it falls right in your lap. That's the
way it is with houses. Sometimes.
I grew up longing for a white clapboard New England colonial with shifting plank floors,
wainscotting, and a row of crown glass windowpanes over the door. If I never wanted a
sixteenth-century, rose-colored Italian hunting lodge in the hills of Lucca, it's only
because I'd never known they existed--we don't have such things in North Tewksbury,
Massachusetts where I grew up.
I'd never imagined that I would one day make my home in the lush countryside of Tuscany,
and that this home of mine would include sixty acres of land, half of it pinewood, half
farmed, and that this home would be three houses, in fact, nestled together in a cluster
like a little village onto itself.
But the most unlikely thing I've ever come to possess in my life of longing for that which
never came my way is the garden I keep. I have a garden? Now I never ever wanted that! It
was 1981 when my companion, Gil Cohen, and I first laid eyes on Villa Massei (mah-SAY-ee),
Count Sinebaldi's Renaissance country house, ten minutes away from the ancient walled city
of Lucca. The property was then in British hands, but its recently widowed owner had
decided to sell. What new and sudden fantasies the whole prospect of buying such a place
evoked! I saw myself living off the fruits of the land: the berries, the apples, the
peaches, the cherries, the persimmons, the figs, the grapes--I could go on. I saw myself
wandering the grandiose halls and rooms of this house like Byron in his Pisan palace, my
head full of metaphor, my library growing, my manuscripts turning inevitably into
published books, my tomatoes into conserve.
Gil and I bought the place in the cool, reckless blink of an eye, few questions asked.
Soon, it was too late for mature second thoughts and a sensible change of mind. The
journey had begun, and the train had no scheduled stops until our life here was in place.
Enter the present. Here's my library, here are my books, here are the tomato preserves,
red and luscious and vacuum-packed in clear glass jars.
It has always seemed to me that this house and its garden are one. Lucca has hundreds of
villas, far more princely than mine might seem to the untraveled eye; this city is famous
for them, in fact. But I know of very few such houses that have the kind of relationship
to their sites that mine does; rather than sitting pompously on a pedestal in cold remove
from its grounds, my house is in the garden, of the garden.
I think of my entry hall as a kind of garden portal, in fact, something you pass through
quickly en route from gardens freshly remembered to gardens not yet seen. It's an all
white room with stone fruit-filled vases on plinths; it stands on its neutrality, a quiet
passage. I often say to guests at the front door, "Come in ... and then out!"
Moments later they're in the loggia: a garden with a roof, really, five high arches, four
"Tuscan order" columns of pietra serena, the local gray stone used to embellish
the more important buildings here. There are plants in terracotta pots positioned about
the wicker furniture which sets this stage for open air summer life: living, eating,
entertaining, cats in the black bamboo, and swallows in the eaves.
When we first took up residence here, this loggia, the only notable architectural feature
of an otherwise plain, even somewhat austere house, was walled in. In the early part of
the last century (the 20th) the then padrone, a gynecologist, annexed the space for his
clinic. But Gil and I had no need of this additional interior square-footage; the house
already had seventeen rooms without it. The outlines of the arches and a bit of the
supporting columns were clearly visible on the facade and so we knew what we were getting
into when we knocked out the walls, restoring the loggia to its antique, rustic grandeur.
It's the most important bit of restoration we've done here, well worth all the dust and
pneumatic headaches.
At its threshold is a shaded garden under a mantel of wisteria worrying it way up a
leaning wrought iron pergola. Beyond, stands the grotto: a temple of pagan memories, a
garden folly of frightening, ironic beauty. Its five stone masks, spewing spring water,
are enshrined in niches of lava rock. Its pink facade, rigid with solid geometry (columns
in relief and Ionic capitals), shimmers in its temporal perfection--I never could have had
this dream in New England.
Off to the right there's a century-old camphor tree, rare in these parts. On the other
side is my orange garden: a cruciform-based parterre of dwarf box is the setting for eight
mop heads of Citrus mitis, the Panama orange, standing tall in festooned, hand made
terracotta pots. There's a flood of white "Sea Foam" roses cascading off a low
ledge, and there are pink and yellow honeysuckles, mauve "Marie Viaud" roses,
and a sky-blue California lilac trained up on a southern, framing wall.
But the garden, like an "enfilade" of rooms, beckons with its narrow, framed
views of distant, further gardens, a few new themes, some variations on those already
heard. The rose garden is the next transition space, but this one invites you to tarry.
The delicate pink "New Dawn" climbs a fifteen-foot high stone retaining wall
built by one of the Counts Sinebaldi in the eighteenth century. At it feet are the antique
roses "Cuisse de Nymphe Emue," with its expensive perfume, the deep mauve
"Cardinal Richelieu," face-powder pink "Souvenir de Malmaison," and
the purple-petaled "Charles de Milles." There are a few modern, David Austin
roses as well: the deep yellow "Graham Thomas" and the bold pink "Gertrude
Jeckyl."
In a broad, fully enclosed green room beyond, "The Italian Garden" broods like
the image of a poet frozen in stone. I built it myself just six years ago, but it's
beginning to look as if it's always been there. Sixteen planting beds are walled in
knee-high with clipped box hedges, a pair of terracotta oil jars, their rounded shoulders
shrugging in the midst of all those angles, creating focal points. In September, the eight
central hexagonal beds become eight leavened cushion of Caryopteris x clandonesis
"Heavenly Blue," their dusty blooms born at terminal panicles over a blur of
toothy gray leaves.
A few steps and you're out of there through an arch of sweet bay. The semi-formal orchard,
a viale of thirty-six "Rennes du Marché" cherries, suggests a pastoral stroll
through your earliest pastoral memories. In spring, fugacious white blooms that seem
almost born on the wind form a gothic arch, a gallery promenade whose destination is an
urn on a plinth in a bed of blue Germanica irises. In late winter, the young, bare-limbed
cherries wade in deep floods of yellow and white narcissuses, and in March, the stone
retaining wall on the uphill side is lined with a thousand white bearded irises.
A brief descent along an old stone road brings you to a huge rectangular meadow, a single,
simple path mown precisely down its center. Wild flowers are the show here in spring,
offering a reprise in September, but the views to the Apauan Alps in the distance
sometimes succeed in stealing it.
So now that you've made the loop, you've seen almost everything. Almost. You've missed the
Mediterranean garden at the swimming pool, the woodland garden beyond, and the new garden
at the guest house, a terrace of rosemary in diamond shaped beds, a pair of bitter orange
trees, a bench in a sunny border and its collection of sun-loving plants.
You're at the edge of the front garden now instead, a broad sweep of lawn lined with box
hedges behind which loom, beneath cypresses, a wild plum, and a Judas tree, silver leaved
phlomises and salvias and verbascums. The plantsman finds much diversion here in a
three-hundred year old Zizyphus tree, all wretched and thorny, like something a
not-terribly-wicked witch would grow.
If my secret garden is Italian in concept, then this front garden is English, as the
Italians have never collected plants in clean bordering beds as I do here.
But a French friend recently said that "it all looks very Connecticut"; I didn't
quite know how to take that, though I'm sure there are lots of lovely gardens in New
England. This ponderous remark of his reminded me of the fact that we bring our own
cultures with us when we move great distances. An Italian friend once said that my salone,
the nineteenth century style room I'd always thought of as quite Lucchese in style, looks
"classically American." Was he thinking of the White House? Or was he thinking
of those chalky white colonial rooms in Portsmouth, New Hampshire or Ipswich,
Massachusetts, rooms full of Chippendale and Queen Anne highboys, the rooms I'd once so
admired as a child dreaming about the house I'd one day have when I grew up.
In the eyes of certain observers, apparently, I have that house after all.
The Gardens welcome organized horticultural group visits only. The fee is 20,000 Lira
per person. Individuals, by special arrangement, can sometimes join visiting groups, but
are otherwise not admitted. All visits are by appointment.
2008 RATES
Low (November 1st-April 1st) From $2,800 per week.
High (April 2nd-October 31) From $3,300 per week.
*NOTE: Maximum number of people is four*
*There is a DSL line for computer connection*
To go to the photo page of A Garden In Lucca please click here.
To see directions to A Garden In Lucca please click here.
For more information or to schedule your stay
please contact:
Small & Elegant Hotels, International
9425 Whispering Sands
West Olive, MI 49460
TEL: (616) 844-6000 / FAX: (616) 844-6042
E-Mail: res@smallandeleganthotels.com
Return to Cinque Terre main page.