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Ca' d'Zan

Ca' d'Zan
Cà d'Zan bayside façade.jpg
Cà d'Zan - the bay front façade of the living room on the western elevation and marble terrace
Ca' d'Zan is located in Florida
Ca' d'Zan
Ca' d'Zan is located in the US
Ca' d'Zan
Location Sarasota, Florida
Coordinates 27°22′58.5″N 82°33′52.5″W / 27.382917°N 82.564583°W / 27.382917; -82.564583Coordinates: 27°22′58.5″N 82°33′52.5″W / 27.382917°N 82.564583°W / 27.382917; -82.564583
Architectural style Venetian Gothic revival
Part of Caples'-Ringlings' Estates Historic District (#82001039)
Designated CP December 15, 1982

Ca' d'Zan, a Mediterranean Revival residence in Sarasota, Florida, was the winter home of the American circus owner, developer and art collector John Ringling and his wife Mable. Lovers of the Venetian aesthetic, the Ringlings chose the site overlooking Sarasota Bay for its vista, which reminded them of the lagoon of their favorite city. The name of the residence is Venetian for House of John. The Ringlings had been renting the residence of Mary Louise and Charles N. Thompson on their extensive Shell Beach parcel, and decided to purchase some of the land to build a permanent winter headquarters that would include a residence on the bay and a museum for their extensive art and artifact collection. An art school was planned to abut the museum, but it never was built. Mable's rose garden was the first completed portion of the complex. On April 18, 2012, the AIA's Florida Chapter placed Ca' d'Zan, the Residence of John and Mable Ringling on its list, Florida Architecture: 100 Years. 100 Places.

Architectural details of the house reflect influences ranging from the Venetian Doge's Palace to the tower of the first Madison Square Garden in Manhattan. Items collected by the couple during their international travels were featured in the residence.

The design of the residence was commissioned from New York architect Dwight James Baum in 1924 and it was built by the Sarasota developer Owen Burns. The work was completed in 1926, as the Florida boom collapsed and the bank failures that would lead to the crash of 1929 began. The original cost to build the home was $1.6 million. Adjusting for inflation, that converts to approximately $21 million in 2013 dollars.

In 1982 the residence was listed as a contributing property to the Caples'-Ringlings' Estates Historic District, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. Other contributing properties in the district include the Ellen and Ralph Caples residence, the John and Mable Ringling Museum, the Hester Ringling Lancaster Sandford residence and the Edith and Charles Ringling residence.


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