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Monteverdi Tuscany: A Medieval Village Reinvented in the Val d'Orcia

In the medieval hamlet of Castiglioncello del Trinoro, American founder Michael L. Cioffi and Rome-based interior designer Ilaria Miani spent over a decade restoring a cluster of stone buildings in the Val d'Orcia into Monteverdi Tuscany — one of the most singular and quietly radical hotel design projects in Italy. Part hotel, part art residency, part living museum of Tuscan materiality, it holds a rare distinction: the longer you look, the more intentional everything becomes.

Monteverdi Tuscany sits perched on a steep hilltop overlooking the Val d'Orcia, in what was once the mostly abandoned medieval village of Castiglioncello del Trinoro — and the question of how to bring a place like this back to life without flattening it into something prettier but lesser is the central design problem that Ilaria Miani, the Rome-based interior designer enlisted by founder Michael L. Cioffi, spent over a decade solving.


Local stonemasons laid stone and brick using traditional techniques, while indigenous wood, Tuscan flagstone and granite, and Carrara marble were incorporated throughout the reconstruction of the medieval structures. The result is a property that reads less like a restored hotel and more like a village that simply never stopped evolving.

Miani's approach fuses the ancient allure of the Tuscan landscape with a contemporary edge, wrapping rooms in blues, reds, greens, and earth tones inspired by the hues of the Val d'Orcia and the Renaissance masters — bespoke furnishings and original artworks making each of the 18 rooms and suites entirely distinct from one another.


Some rooms are painted in vivid shades of green, purple or blue, while others lean minimal, with a focus on floaty fabrics and raw wood; textured plaster walls and exposed wooden beams sit alongside smooth terracotta-toned concrete floors and warm pinks and burnt oranges. The art is not decorative but genuinely curatorial: a large-scale painting by South African artist Ansel Krut anchors the restaurant, a sculpture by Laure Prouvost is positioned in the indoor piazza, and each bedroom holds its own small collection that plays into the distinct character of the space.

What distinguishes Monteverdi from the many Tuscan properties that traffic in rustic chic is precisely this refusal to resolve the tension between old and new into something comfortable and neutral. The hotel is an evolving and collaborative project, with artists, writers, and musicians regularly invited to take up residency — largely unguided, with the aim of simply providing space for reflection and experimentation.

A 700-year-old church serves as the performing arts venue; an award-winning farm-to-table restaurant, culinary academy, enoteca, and library bar complete the picture of a place that has grown into its ambitions over time. Monteverdi holds 2 Michelin Keys, but the more apt designation might simply be this: a place that understands, more lucidly than almost anywhere else in Italy, that the highest form of design is knowing when to leave something alone.

Monteverdi Tuscany
Via di Mezzo, 53047 Castiglioncello del Trinoro
Sarteano (SI), Italy


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