Who is it? | Architect |
Birth Day | April 29, 1865 |
Birth Place | Kobdilj, Italian |
Age | 154 YEARS OLD |
Died On | 12 August 1962(1962-08-12) (aged 97)\nGorizia |
Birth Sign | Taurus |
Alma mater | Vienna College of Technology |
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings | Urania palace Palace Portois & Fix |
Projects | urban development plan for Ljubljana Sacro Cuore metropolitan church, Gorizia |
Max Fabiani, the acclaimed Italian architect, is estimated to have a net worth ranging from $100,000 to $1 million by the year 2024. Renowned for his pioneering architectural designs, Fabiani has left an indelible mark on the world of architecture. With a career spanning several decades, his innovative and visionary approach has earned him international recognition. Known for blending modern and classical elements in his designs, Fabiani's work reflects his deep passion for art and aesthetics. As an esteemed architect, his net worth is a testament to his successful career and the value placed on his exceptional contributions to the field of architecture.
He came from a wealthy family that could afford to provide a good education for its 14 children. He attended elementary school in Kobdilj, and the German- and Slovene-language Realschule in Ljubljana, where he was the best student in the class after seven years. He later moved to Vienna, where he attended architecture courses at the Vienna University of Technology. After earning his degree in 1889, a scholarship enabled him to travel for three years (1892–1894) to Asia Minor and through most of Europe. He was married and had two children; his son Lorenzo Fabiani (1907–1973) was an agronomist and Journalist.
Fabiani's first large-scale architectural project was the urban plan for the Carniolan capital Ljubljana, which was badly damaged by the April 1895 Ljubljana earthquake. Fabiani won a competition against the historicist Architect Camillo Sitte, and was chosen by the Ljubljana Town Council as the main urban planner. One of the reasons for this choice was Fabiani was considered by the Slovene Liberal Nationalists as a Slovene. Second reason was that he knew Ljubljana better than Sitte and prepared really good and modern plan.
Fabiani also created the urban plan for Bielsko in Poland. In 1902, these two urban plans won him the first honorary doctorate in the field of urban planning by the University of Vienna in Austria-Hungary.
His work in Ljubljana helped him to become well known in the Slovene Lands, convincing Slovene liberal nationalists in the Austrian Littoral to entrust him with the design for the National Halls in Gorizia (1903) and in Trieste (1904).
In 1917, Fabiani was named professor at the University of Vienna, and in 1919 one of his pupils, Ivan Vurnik, offered him a teaching position at the newly established University of Ljubljana, Fabiani however refused the offer, quit the teaching position in Vienna, and decided to settle in Gorizia, which had been annexed to the Kingdom of Italy, thus becoming an Italian citizen.
During the 1920s, he coordinated a large scale reconstruction of villages and some historical monuments in the areas in the Julian March that had been devastated by the Battles of the Isonzo during World War I.
On 15 May 1921—less than a year after the burning of the Slovenian National Hall in Trieste by the Italian fascists, which he had designed—Fabiani became a member of the Italian fascist movement. The reason why he joined the party and his political activity in the following years remain unclear and controversial.
In late 1935, Fabiani accepted the nomination for mayor (podestà) of his native Štanjel by the Fascist regime, for the National Fascist Party. He remained mayor during World War II, using his knowledge of German language and his cultural acquaintances to convince the German troops to spare the village from destruction. Nevertheless, the monumental fortifications part of the village, which he himself had renovated during the 1930s, were eventually destroyed in the fight between the Wehrmacht and the Slovene partisans. His house and archive was also burnt down.
In 1944, Fabiani relocated back to Gorizia, where he lived until his death on August 12, 1962.