All Casa Howard Accommodation Reviews
» an incomplete list of publications & short movies featuring Casa Howard Guesthouses
Magazine: Ahlani
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Endorsement for this less-is-more school of travel comes from the most surprising places. Elite guidebook Nota Bene, for example, positively raves about Casa Howard's pair of flamboyant five-bedroom guesthouses in Rome, even though some rooms are not ensuite."

Magazine: Architectural Digest (edizione Italiana)
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Per la nostra storia essere a Firenze, in un palazzo antico a ridosso del complesso di Santa Maria Novella, non è cosa indifferente. Non già perché l'interior design di questa Casa Howard, nuova gemma dell'omonima catena di guesthousese di nichia, dopo quella di Roma pubblicata su AD del Gennaio 2004, si riffacia agli stilemi dell'architettura di Leon Battista Alberti, meglio, ai modi della tradizione abitativa fiorentina; piuttosto perché, nella sua ricerca di una rapsodia decorativa colta ed emozionale, rintraccia certe atmosfere patrizie e padronali, certe nostalgie cara alla colonia inglese che, sulle rive dell'Arno e sulle colline circostanti, si insediò tra le fine dell'800 e l'inizio del'900, quel esistenziale anglofiorentino che ebbe Mark twain un acuto chiosatore. [...
read more here ... ] "

Magazine: Architectural Digest (edizione Italiana)
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Tra le più vibranti e poliedriche personalità dell' ultima generazione dei progettisti d' interni in Italia, Tommaso Ziffer, lungo il corso del suo lavoro, ha saputo rimanere fedele a sé stesso e alla sua linea espressiva affrontando sempre il nuovo, sfidandosi su territori inediti e appassionanti, talvolta confrontandosi con linguaggi e textures imprevidibile, le più versatile e diverse, Ironico e affiscinante, l'architetto in un continuo andirivieni tra Roma e Parigi, possiede un grande talento nel sentire e interpretare in anticipo i segni, le traiettorie, le infinite, cangianti suggestioni della creatività. Per Massimiliano e Jenifer Leonardi di Casalino, Tommaso Ziffer ha realizzato il progetto d'interior design de Casa Howard, a Roma, une
guest house aperta di recente, nel cuore antico della città. [...
read more here ... ] "

Magazine: A&W Architektur & Wohnen
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Die Zimmer des Boutique-Hotels CH sistina bei der Spanischen Treppe hat der Interiordesigner Tommaso Ziffer gestaltet, der auch das Roemische Grandhotel de Russie ausgestattet hat. Seine fünf Suiten in der Villa Sistina im Flower-Power-, Zebra- und Indien-Look gehoeren zu den begehrtesten der Stadt."

Magazine: Bazaar -
Escape Weekends – Luxe for less
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouses
Review: "This small pensione has two Rome locations, five rooms in each, all within paces of the best boutiques and the Spanish Steps. Staying at Casa Howard is like staying at a friend’s flat – if your friend happens to be a well-travelled interior designer and charming hostess.
Jennifer Howard Forneris opened the first of the two properties in 2000, determined to recreate the stylish atmosphere of a Roman home.
The rooms are small but perfect, individually decorated with the kind of beautiful fabrics you might expect from the daughter of Luciano Forneris, one of Italy’s most famous textile designers. Not all are en suite, but each has a private bathroom down the hall; you are provided with a kimono and slippers. The housekeeper is always on standby with a hot iron for your shirt or advice about a good place for afternoon tea. The miniature
Turkish Hammam is a treat. Oh, and
breakfast is brought to your room, complete with pastries and honey from Jennifer’s house in Tuscany."

Magazine: Cash (Switzerland)
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Privatlogis für Hotelhasser
Casa Howard Guesthouses - Ambiance: Elegantes Under-statement in zwei historischen StadthaNusern - Lage: Wenige Schritte von der Spanischen Treppe entfernt - Service: persõnlich und individuell - Zimmer: Zweimal fünf komfortable Zimmer mit wohnlichem Flair.
"Es ist einfach wichtig, unterwegs von etwas Persõnlichem umgeben zu sein", meint Massimiliano Leonardi, Schõpfer der beiden "Casa Howard Guesthouses" in Rom. Die stillvollen Mini-Domizile beherbergen je fünf reizende Gästezimmer und liegen nur gerade 100 respektive 120 Meter von der Spanischen Treppe entfernt - genau dort also, wo man in Rom am liebsten sein, mittendrin. Dazu kommen das Ambiente eines privaten Hauses, frische Blumen und gediegene Wohn-Accessoires, antike Mõbel und auf Wunsch ein Computer mit kosten-losem Highspeed-Internetzugang im Zimmer. Ein echter Geheimtipp für alle, die dem Gefühl, welches standardisierte Hotels vermitteln, entkommen mõchten."

Guidebook: Chic Retreats
Year: 2007-2008
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Guesthouses
Review: "
Simply Chic - Casa Howard, Rome. Casa Howard is a hidden gem right in the centre of Rome close to the Spanish steps. Exclusive and fashionable with 5 stylish bedrooms it is neither a hotel or a guesthouse, more like an elegant private residence full of family antiques and paintings. Located in the shopping area (Gucci and Prada only a few minutes away), in a beautiful historic building, Casa Howard provides the charm of a private house with the standard of personal service you would expect from a 5 star hotel. Every room features parquet floors, beamed ceilings, satellite TV, tea making facilities, air-conditioning, Ginori china and complimentary
WIFI access in each guest room.
Casa Howard, Florence. In November 2004 the newest Casa Howard opened in Florence with 11 rooms and 2 suites. The newest guest house (not a hotel) continues the formula of location, privacy, personal service, high comfort, excellent value. Casa Howard Florence is on 3 floors of a magnificent Palazzo, close to the train station and in an elegant area of the city. The famous ‘Officina dei profumi di Santa Maria Novella’ is next door and provides the guest house exclusively with it’s world famous toiletries. Many of the rooms have working fireplaces and it is possible to combine some of the rooms to create a large private suite. A
Turkish bath, a
library bedroom and a winter garden all contribute to ensure a comfortable stay for the most demanding guests. There is a
room for families with climbing wall and a Walt Disney video library. Small dogs are welcome."

Website: Concierge.com
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "If you want to experience what it would be like to stay at the home of an elegant Roman with fantastic taste, you should get a room at Casa Howard. They have two locations, both near the Spanish Steps, and each room has a theme - everything from Chinese to flowers - with the wallpaper and furniture to match. At the
Via Capo le Case, choose the
pink room for its en suite bathroom and larger size, and at
Via Sistina, the mod
Zebra suite (all of Sistina's rooms have WiFi and en suite bathrooms). Most rooms are tiny but we love the breakfasts of fresh cornetti and honey from Tuscany, and the hamman bathrooms. Book early though, the secret's out."

Website: Concierge.com
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Like the idea of a bit of luxury combined with the atmosphere of an elegant private residence? Casa Howard could provide the answer. This discreet home-from-home offers high standards of comfort and service and great rates. The look is stylish and vaguely eccentric; furniture is an eclectic mixture of antiques and custom-made pieces combined with fine fabrics and strong colors. No two bedrooms are alike: The spacious and dramatic
Drawing Room has black walls and white cornicing: The
Hidden Room is a sexy little den with deep red walls hung with erotic Japanese prints and a sunken bath; the
Fireplace Room is just that, apart from an oversized black velvet sofa and honey-colored silk curtains. There is no communal space to speak of (unless you count the
Turkish Bath), so
breakfast is served on a tray in the rooms."

Website: Concierge.com
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "f you don't happen to have stylish Roman friends who can put you up in their apartment, Casa Howard is the next best thing. This tasteful, upmarket B&B has two locations, both near the Spanish Steps, and each room has a theme—everything from Chinese to flowers—with wallpaper and furniture to match. The
Via Capo le Case location is more feminine; go for the Pink Room here, for its en suite bathroom and larger size. The more design-y
Via Sistina branch (opt for the
Zebra suite) was designed by Tommaso Ziffer, the architect behind the far pricier Hotel de Russie. All of Via Sistina's rooms have
Wi-Fi and en suite bathrooms. Most rooms are tiny, but we love the
breakfasts of fresh cornetti and honey from Tuscany, and the hammam bathrooms (there's one for your steaming pleasure at each property). Book early, though: The secret's out (149 Via Sistina)."

Guidebook: Conde Nast Johansens
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guest House
Review: "The homely Casa Howard is an intimate and elegant mansion within walking distance of the Uffizi, the Duomo and Via Tornabuoni. The themed guest rooms, uncluding two suites, and 1 small apartment, creatively mix antique furnishings with modern style and are adorned with special touches such as fresh flowers and family portraits. Breakfast includes homemade jams and honey, whilst dinner reservations can be arranged by the helpful housekeepers. The house has a large Turkish hammam."
Magazine: Conde Nast Traveller
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Regulars love Casa Howard's two Roman branches for their charming decor and proximity to the
Spanish Steps. Its just-opened Florentine sister continues the trend, with themed rooms (
Playroom is for families,
Camel for smokers) and a convenient
location near the train station... "

Magazine: Conde Nast Traveller
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "The Hotel Hot List 2005 - 60 best new hotels
Following the success of two Casa Howards in
Rome, owners Count Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino and his English wife have set their sights on Florence as part of a long-term plan to open similar guest houses in other European 'art cities'. Designed to be a discreet pied-a`-terre offering the sort of choice location, high standards of service and accessible prices that will appeal to business and leisure travellers alike, Casa Howard Florence is in an elegant town house a few minutes' walk from both the train station and the city's Renaissance glories. The look is classy, cosy and vaguely eccentric; the emphasis in the 12 highly individual bedrooms is on quality and fine fabrics (several of which have private terraces). The dramatic
drawing room has a black ceiling and walls, white mouldings, leopard-print headboards and dusty mauve, shot-silk window treatments. The intimate
Hidden Room has a sunken bath, a shower in a glass box, erotic Japanese prints on deep red walls and a chintzy little sitting room. There is a
room for kids with a climbing frame against one wall and another for
dog owners, complete with dog beds and a large terrace. Bathrooms, stocked with delicious Santa Maria Novella toiletries, are quirky and fun, and the hammam will restore museum-weary bones. You can order
breakfast (hot croissants and honey from the owners' farm) in your room at any time (within reason), and fridges on each floor are stocked with Champagne, wine and soft drinks. "

Website: Daily Candy
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "[...]The best-kept hotel secret is Casa Howard (Via Sistina, 149 and Via Capo Le Case, 18; +39-06-69-924-555) for price, location, and design (book the zebra room).[...]"

Magazine: D'Ex
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Guesthouses
Review: "Il nome Casa Howard rievoca grandi magioni inglesi, immagini uscite dalla penna di Edward M. Foster e magistralmente interpretate sullo schermo da Anthony Hopkins. Invece è solo un caso di omonimia. Di madre inglese e padre toscano, Jennifer Howard Forneris, con il marito Massimiliano Leopardi di Casalino dà vita a una eclatante avventura nel mondo dell’accueil internazionale. Viaggiatrice incallita, Jennifer ha diviso la sua vita tra Londra, Roma, Tokio e la Cina. Donna dal gusto squisito e dall’allure internazionale, lavora nel mondo della moda capitolina, scoprendo fashion designer emergenti che in seguito diverranno guru della moda, come Kenzo e Joshi Yamamoto. Massimiliano, dopo una lunga esperienza nelle banche d’affari ginevrine, ha deciso di dedicarsi anima e corpo alla ristrutturazione di palazzi storici.
Nel 1990 si libera una casa di famiglia a Roma, vicino a Piazza di Spagna. Stanchi di scendere in alberghi anonimi ed impersonali, iniziano la trasformazione del palazzo avito in una guest house: piccoli appartamenti e suite per visitatori attenti e raffinati.
Il punto focale della loro filosofia è creare ambienti curati nei minimi dettagli, che danno la sensazione di sentirsi a casa propria o, meglio ancora, ospiti di un amico del cuore, che ti invita in un’altra città. Il successo immediato spinge la poliedrica coppia al restauro di un secondo palazzo, sempre nella capitale, fino a giungere all’ultima nata in Casa Howard, quella di Firenze.
“ Ho molti amici e decine di cugini sparsi nel mondo – spiega Leonardi – mi sono innamorato di questo palazzo tardo settecentesco nel centro storico fiorentino, a pochi passi da Santa Maria Novella. Con Jennifer e l’architetto torinese Fabrizio Cuniberto abbiamo tentato un approccio simile a quello romano, ma al tempo stesso più legato alla filologia storica del luogo, in modo da mantenere intatta la connotazione vincente da casa di famiglia”.
Anche il visitatore più smaliziato resta affascinato appena varcato l’ingresso dell’austero palazzo. Profusioni di righe colorate intercalate a dicotomie cromatiche bianche e nere. Mobili e dipinti di famiglia accostati a lampade, tavoli e scrivanie disegnate da questo pool di esteti e prodotti da artigiani toscani. I colori sono forti, i contrasti squillanti per un mondo incantato dove il confort regna sovrano. Nicchie abitative appartate che si schiudono su disimpegni separati l’uno dall’altro. L’assetto architettonico del palazzo si prestava a numerose variazioni su tema e, grazie all’abilità di Fabrizio Cuniberto, senza abbattere nessuna parete, si creano volumi dentro volumi come in un perenne gioco di scatole cinesi.
A Casa Howard gli ospiti sono felici di essere in vacanza, di sicuro i più piccoli, ai quali è dedicata l’intera parete di una suite per l’arrampicata libera, grazie a pietre in plastica colorata. Atmosfera di moderna decadenza per la drawing room tutta giocata sui contrasti tra bianco e nero, testiere in plexiglass trasparente, bagno con specchi e lacche nere, foto di papier peints francesi. Accanto al candido letto una poltrona zebrata in stile Luigi XVI, che si sposa con gli ottocenteschi mosaici dei pavimenti e con i soffitti affrescati. Dalle finestre scendono tende in croccante taffettas mischiati a tocchi di puro design come il divano in seta nera. La camera degli amanti è giocata sui toni del rosso vivido, con alle pareti stampe erotiche giapponesi. Di fronte al letto, nascosta da una grata in legno wengè naturale, si schiude la vasca grigio scura per abluzioni notturne. Accessibile dopo aver attraversato un dedalo di disimpegni arricchiti da frammenti di tessuto antico, si giunge al grande bagno turco, che richiama i fasti degli hammam magrebini. Jennifer Leonardi dedica una stanza di memorie orientali alla madre, nobildonna inglese nata a Tien Tsin allorché il padre era di stanza in Cina in qualità di governatore della zona. Compaiono arazzi del secolo scorso, lumi verde giada prodotti nelle Filippine, profusione di lacche e di mobili in giunco e midollino. Per gli amici a quattro zampe la dog room, con terrazzino con vista sul retro di Santa Maria Novella, guaches e ritratti di cani, ciotole e cucce imbottite secondo la migliore tradizione anglosassone.
Casa Howard è un capriccio decorativo che non ha uguali poiché mischia con grande abilità il retroterra culturale di una Firenze dal sapore pratoliniano al top del design e della creatività.
Fonti di ispirazione?
Strano, ma la risposta non c’è. Il decor è nato dal cuore e dall’amore della proprietaria, figlia di un famoso disegnatore di tessuti, per i colori, la brillantezza e la tattilità delle stoffe. Vagando per le strade di Parigi ne compra a profusione senza calcoli di metraggi solo perché la ispirano. Da qui parte il grande viaggio nel mondo della creatività decorativa e, da un’altra tastiera in pesante lino color corda, o da un divano millerighe che ricorda una tela contemporanea, inizia un percorso che ha un inizio ma mai una fine.
Nuovi progetti firmati Casa Howard sono sul punto di nascere in Spagna e Inghilterra."

Magazine: Dove Case
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome & Florence
Review: "[...]Anche a Firenze e a Roma sono nate iniziative analoghe. Nella città Toscana Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino ha inaugurato da poco un elegante guest apartment in
via della Scala 18, sistemato con la collaborazione degli architetti Fabrizio Cuniberto e Patrizio Ruffo e arredato dalla moglie Jenifer Howard. Spiega il titolare: "Provengo da una famiglia napoletana numerosa, e con il passare degli anni ho ereditato alcune case in Europa. All'inizio mi sembravano poco gestibili, poi ho trovato la formula della guest house per le proprietà piu grandi e del guest apartment per quelle piu piccole e ho trasformato tutto in una fonte di redddito". Il progetto sembra proprio riuscito, visto che Leonardi di Casalino inaugurerà a breve un altro appartamento a Barcellona. Senza dimenticare i due guest house che già gestice a Roma, rispettivamente in Via Capo le Case 18 e in Via Sistina 149. [...]"

Magazine: Dove
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: Review on the Guide Book "Ospitalità di charme" by Guide Accoglienza and feature of a picture of Casa Howard Guesthouse

Magazine: Dove
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Nel cuore del centro storico, a solo 100 metri da piazza di Spagna, è appena stata inaugurata une guesthouse all'interno di un palazzo storico: è casa Howard, dal nome della proprietaria, Jenifer Howard, naturalmente di origine britannica. Cinque camere in tutto, con parquet, soffitto a cassettoni, aria condizionata, ventilatore a pale, tv satellitare. Ognuna ha pareti e tessuti in colori diversi, verde, bianco, rosa, blu, e da questi prende il nome. La quinta camera è chiamata stanza cinese, per via della tappezzeria in seta rossa proveniente da hong kong. Tutte sono arredtae con letti a baldacchino, soprammobili in porcellana Richard Ginori e bouquet di fiori freschi del giardino curato dalla padrona di casa. A chi dorme nelle stanze verde o rosa, è fornito un autentico chimono giapponese per raggiungere il bagno en-suite. Al mattino, colazione in camera a base di cornetti caldi, marmellate fatte in casa e ottimo miele prodotto in Toscana nella tenuta dei proprietari, e il quotidiano preferito. Oltre al servizio di parrucchiere, di stiratura degli abiti e all'autista che accompagna gli ospiti dall'aeroporto, è a dispozione anche un rilassante bagno turco, decorato con mattonelle di mosaico fatte a mano."

Newspaper: Evening Standard
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Near the Spanish Steps and Piazza di Spagna, this small exquisitely decorated hotel has just five rooms, with shining parquet floors. The exotic
Chinese room has red silk curtains and a gold and red brocade bedspread.
Kimonos and slippers are provided, because although bathrooms are private not all are en-suite. There is a
Turkish bath down the hall. Hairdresser and massage service are available. In January
Casa Howard II [
via Sistina ] opened with five more rooms just around the corner."

Guidebook: Elle Décor
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Cinque Stanze con l'atmosfera di une casa privata a pochi metri dalla scalinata di piazza di Spagna, altre cinque non poco lontane, a qualche minuto da via Veneto, sempre in palazzi strorici e arredate con gusto da famosi interior designer. Rappresentano l'evoluzione del B&B, con tanta privacy ma servizi e qualità da alberghi a cinque stelle, come giornali in camera con
la prima colazione, autista all'aeroporto, parrucchiere. Le guest house hanno il
bagno turco, pavimenti in parquet, marmo o resine, porcellane Ginori, TV sat anche LCD, aria condizionata, fiori freschi, colori e tessuti raffinati."

Guidebook: European City Breaks
Year: 2006
Guesthouse: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Accommodation
Accommodation Review: "
Florence – Sleeping - The elegant recipe of the well-known Rome hotel has been repeated in
Florence – a handful of individually designed (and loosely themed) rooms creating an intimate and hotel feel. The owners have a personal and idiosyncratic style, with plenty of quality fabrics and artefacts from around the world.
Rome – Sleeping - The name is the Italian title of EM Forster’s novel, Howard’s End, from the which you might imagine a staid attempt at Englishness – you’d be wrong. This excellent-value designer B&B is now in 2 houses where the design is bright and colourful and the attention to detail commendable, from the slippers and the
fresh breakfast to the carefully sourced
soap."

Newspaper: The Florentine
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "
Casa Howard - If you have enough of impersonal hotel rooms with indifferent service and like the idea of a bit of luxury combined with the atmosphere of an elegant and private residence, 12-room Casa Howard could provide the answer.
Occupying a handsome palazzo on
Via della Scala (a rather scruffy street that is, however, conveniently situated for both the train station and the city centre), this discreet home-from-home is the brainchild of Massimiliano Leonardi and his English interior-designer wife. The idea is to offer a discreet pied-a-terre with high standards of comfort and service plus the sort of accessible prices that will appeal to leisure travellers.
Once inside, the look is stylish and vaguely eccentric with an emphasis on quality; furniture is an eclectic mixture of custom-made pieces and pickings from the family vaults while fine fabrics and strong colours play a major role. No two bedrooms are alike (apart from the tiny "
Twins" which are near mirror images of each other), but they are all done out with style, originality and touches of humor. The large
Drawing Room is the most dramatic; white cornicing stands out against black walls while the bed heads are covered in leopard print. The
Fireplace Room has two of them, one is in the bathroom where you can watch the plasma screen TV while soaking in the clawfoot tub. The
Hidden Room is a sensual little den whose deep red walls are hung with erotic Japanese prints and which shares its floor space with a shower in a glass box and a sunken bath. it has its own chintzy little living room too. Pooch owners will be lease with the dog baskets and large terrace in the
Game Room, smokers can indulge in the
Camel Room and the kids can let off stream on the climbing frame in the
Play Room.
There are electric kettles with supplies of tea and coffee in all rooms plus LCD TVs and everything else you would expect from a top level hotel. Bathrooms (which all have cosy heated floors) are quirky and fun (although some are quite small) and well stocked with delicious
Santa Maria Novella bath goodies. There is no communal space to speak of (unless you count the Turkish bath) so
breakfast is served on a tray in the rooms. The lack of a bar is compensated for by "honesty" fridges filled with champagne, wines and soft drinks on each floor.
Casa Howard Florence only opened a few months ago, but the Leonardi's have been successfully running
two Roman versions for some years now and there are plans to expand into other European art cities such as Barcelona and Prague. Good luck to them... it would seem they are onto a winner and there's nowhere else quite like it in Florence."

Guide Book: Frommer's
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "It's rare to make a new discovery in the tourist-trodden Piazza di Spagna area, which is why Casa Howard comes as a pleasant surprise. The little B&B occupies about two-thirds of the second floor of a historic structure. The welcoming owners maintain beautifully furnished guest rooms, each with its own private bathroom with a tub/shower combination (although some bathrooms lie outside the bedrooms in the hallway). The Pink Room is the most spacious, and has an en suite bathroom. Cristy at reception can "arrange anything" in Rome for you and will also invite you to use the house's private Turkish sauna."

Magazine: Geo Saison Extra
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Die gute alte Pension, im ersten Stock gelegen, ist auferstanden – als hippes Guesthouse und Kontrastangebot zu traditionellen Hotels. Wie zuvor in Rom haben die Britin Jennifer Howard Forneris und ihr Mann Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino mitten in Florenz ihre Vorstellung von gehobener Gastlichkeit in einem Palazzo verwirklicht. Hinter der hochglanzpolierten, mit massiven Messingbeschlägen versehenen Eingangstur entfalten sich ein Haus mit betont privater Atmosphäre, das aktuellem cool design eine deutliche Asbage erteilt.
Eine Innentreppe verbindet drei Stockwerke, uber die sich die opulent möblierten Zimmer verteilen. Zusammen mit dem Turiner Innenarchitekten Fabrizio Cuniberto hat Jennifer Howard Forneris jedes Detail geplant. Das Zimmer „
Fireplace“ verheisst mit Marmorkamin, Parkett und ausladendem, schwarzem Sofa behagliche Stunden. Im „
Hidden Room“ versteckt sich das rote Schlafzimmer hinter einem roten Salon. Im „
Drawing Room“ blieb der antike Boden erhalten; dunkelbrauner Wände, voluminöse Stores, Plüschsofa und ausladender Fauteuil versprühen den dekadenten Charme des 19. Jahrhunderts. Zum „
Play Room“ gehört ein Vorraum mit Kletterwand, und im Schlafzimmer häufen sich Kinderbucher – mit denen der Hausherr aufwuchs. „Nichts ist Fake, alles hier ist eich, Kunstwerke oder Objekte stammen aus Familienbesitz“, sagt Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino.
"

Magazine: GQ Japan
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse

Magazine: Grands Reportages
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouses
Review: "Les 10 chambres de ces deux appartements en étage avec ascenseur non loin de la place d'Espagne sont petites, contrastees.
Petit déjeuner en chambre,
bain turc à l'étage. Comme loger dans une maison particulière, d'après son propriétaire..."

Magazine: Guide de Charme -
Hotel et maison d'hotes de charme en Italie
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouses
Review: "Sonnez sur le timbre en cuivre de cet ancien immeuble bourgeois de la
via Capo le Case, à deux pas de la place d’Espagne, montez au deuxième étage,
Cristy, une jeune femme asiatique, vous accueille et s’occupera de tout. Vous êtes à la Casa Howard, aménagée par l’architecte d’intérieur de l’Hôtel de Russie tout proche. Il n’y a ici que cinq chambres, spacieuses, confortables et silencieuses. Lits à baldaquin, soieries ou toiles de Jouy, mobilier et parquets anciens, kimono, chaussons,
petit déjeuner servi au lit, vous êtes chouchouté de façon personnalisée, stylée, dans un raffinement complet. La Casa Howard qui appartenait au père de Jennifer Forneris-Howard, a été transformée par celle-ci et par son mari, le comte Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino. Ceci explique sans doute cela. Si vous souhaitez davantage de luxe, à des prix légèrement plus élevés, allez à la nouvelle Casa Howard,
via Sistina, à moins de cinq cents mètres. Ici, style plus contemporain, mais toujours un cadre cosy avec des audaces décoratives anglo-saxonnes. Pour les inconditionnels, on annonce une jumelle à
Florence."

Magazine: Hotel
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Personalizzata nel dettaglio -- Un'ospitalita esclusiva quella della guesthouse. Piccoli paradisi del comfort e del lusso, questo tipo di strutture garantiscono all'ospite un ambiente raccolto in cui soggiornare circondati da ogni comfort. Non fa eccezione Casa Howard, guesthouse realizzata nel cuore antico di Roma da Tommaso Ziffer. La struttura si articola in cinque stanze con sala da bagno turco. Per Casa Howard il progettista ha voluto giocare liberamente con il colore dotando ogni ambiente di una propria, unica, personalita. Unico elemento di connessione il pavimento in resina rossa. Ispirazioni forti arrivano dagli anni 50 e 70. Cosi la Zebra Room ripropone le atmosfere psichedeliche di quel periodo, con tessuti animalier, lacca nera lucida, acciaio e specchi. La Flower room, invece, e` quasi un omaggio a Ken Scott e ai suoi riconoscibilissimi motivi floreali che animano le cinque diverse tappezzerie utilizzate. Nell' American Cousin's Room, il motivo capitonneL della testiera del letto e` stato disegnato a computer e stampato su stoffa. Molti, ma inseriti in modo discreto, gli oggetti di design utilizzati, lampade, oggettistica, sedute. Non mancano poi i pezzi d'arte, come le numeri fotografie di Robert Maplethorpe appese alle pareti. Molti gli spazi comuni, come la cucina, in legno laccato opaco con piano di lavoro in acciaio inox, disegnata dallo Studio Ziffer. E come frigo-bar collettivo un frigorifero dalle classiche linee bombate degli anni 50. "

Magazine: Hôtel & Lodge
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Quels que soient les chemins qui mènent à Rome, l'important est de pouvoir y loger. Palaces hors de prix, hôtels excentrès ou affichant complets: la Ville èternelle rend souvent la vie dure aux visiteurs. Il existe pourtant d'autres possibilités. Désormais, de nombreuses maisons privées s'offrent à louer, en partie ou en totalité. Et derrière des façades austères, on déniche parfois de véritables trésors: cours intérieures décorées de sculptures et de bas-reliefs, villas donnant sur de foisonnants jardins, escaliers grandioses." [...]
"Pour ceux qui rêvent de dolce vita le temps d'un week-end, la Casa Howard, avec son atmosphère de bonheur insouciant est le pied-à-terre idéal. Les cinq chambres, dans un superbe palais situé àcent mètres de la piazza di Spagna, sont toutes différentes. Certaines affichent un style frais et clair, d'autres des tissus de soie rouges importés de Chine. Ici, tous les objets sont beaux, depui sles meubles et antiquités jusqu'à la vaiselle - porcelaine de Ginori pour le thé, verres indiens soufflés. Autre point fort: le hammam, pour se délasser après une longue journée. Des kimonos sont à la disposition des hôtes. Service cinq étoiles, bouquets de fleurs fraîches partout, petit-dejeuner servi au lit, avec des croissants chauds et de la confiture fabriquée dans la ferme toscane de la propriétaire, Jenifer, et de son mari, le comte Massimiliano Leonardi di casalino. Il est vrai que la noblesse romaine sait choyer ses invités..."

Magazine: Hôtel & Lodge
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: L'esprit couture. Proche de la place Santa Maria Novella, Casa Howard, une délicieuse demeure historique, abrite quelques chambres d'hôtes confidentielles. Elle n'a pas pignon sur rue et se cache dans les étages d'un bâtiment imposant. Son adresse se chuchote encore de bouche à oreille puisque son propriétaire vient tout juste d'ouvrir ses portes. Après deux cases romaines, il semble naturel de renouveler l'expérience à Florence, et reste convaincu par la justesse d'une formule, rappelant une résidence privée : pas d'espaces communs, sinon un petit salon chaleureux aux murs teintés de grenat, une terrasse silencieuse... L'absence de restaurant est aussi un choix, mais la cuisine est ouverte a tous vents, et de petits réfrigérateurs jalonnent chaque étage :
chacun y pioche librement, il suffit de le signaler sur la fiche prévue à cet effet. Suivant la tradition des ancêtres de la maîtresse de maison, Jenifer Howard Forneris, qui créaient des tissus pour la haute couture italienne des années 50, la décoration privilégie les couleurs éclatantes. L'architecte Frabrizio Cuniberto s'est naturellement concentré sur la sélection des matières et sur une palette chamarrée qui donnet à ce lieu une allure plus anglaise qu'italienne. Que ce soit la
Camel room, vêtue de vert amande, l'
Oriental room aux murs orangés ponctué de chinoiseries, la
Drawing alternant noir de jais et boiseries blanches avec ses canapés irisés de taffetas, chaque chambre affirme sa personnalité. Le choix est tel qu'on rêve aussitôt y retourner.

Magazine: Hôtel & Lodge /
Hors-Série, 200 voyages de noces et d’amour / le guide des hôtel de lune de miel
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouses
Review: Idéalement situées, près de la place d’Espagne, les deux « case » Howard ont plus d’un atout caché derrière leurs portes cochères. La première, réalisée par la propriétaire, Jennifer Leonardi Howard, offre des chambres classique et cosy. La deuxième, celle de
via Sistina, a été entièrement pensée par l’architecte décorateur romain, Tommaso Ziffer. Couleurs, papiers peints scintillants, solutions architecturales novatrice…il s’en est ici donné à cœur joie. Il en découle des chambres gaies et ludiques d’un goût presque anglais. Petit plus : la chambre chinoise est doublée d’un
hammam, pour ceux qui ont besoin de se détendre après les promenades dans les rues de Rome. Un vrai bonheur pour descendre dans la capitale.

Magazine: International Herald Tribune Guide
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "In the heart of the city, only 100 yards from the piazza di Spagna. This is an English style guesthouse inside a historic building.
Casa Howard, named after its British owner, Jennifer Howard, has five rooms with wooden floors and coffered ceilings.
Breakfast is fresh from a Tuscan farm owned by Ms Howard. Excellent
service. It's a home more than a hotel, and guests are usually introduced by other guests."

Newspaper: Il Giornale Roma
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Guesthouses
Review: "Poche Stanze, clienti trattati da amici. Cosi si visita la Capitale tra coccole e attenzioni. "La tua Casa e il tuo corpo piu grande", sosteneva il profeta Gibran. Aveva ragione. La nostra casa e il luogo deputato aa ospitare tutto il necessario e il superfluo alla nostra soppravvivenza. Difficile ritrovare gli stessi odori e sapori proustiani nelle camere asettiche di un grande albergo. Quando ci mettiamo in viaggio, subiamo una sorta di malessere, quasi ci venisse reciso di nuovo il nostro cordone ombilicale. E forse questo il motivo che ha spinto quattro signore romane (non per nascita ma per scelat) a inventare une nuovo formula di ospitalita che risolva in se i servizi e i confort di un grande albergo in un ambiente in cui gli ospiti si sentano a casa. La prima, "capostipite" delle felice intuizione, nel 2000 inaugura il suo Casa Howard in via Capo le Case: cinque stanze decorate con gusto in un appartamento di un antico palazzo, una diversa dall'altra, tutte di grande prestigio. La differenza sta nella piccole cose che solo la sensibilita e l'arguzia femminili consoscono. Gli ospiti sono amici in visita, il loro soggiorno deve esssere impeccabile. Questo il senso di Casa Howard che nel 2002 allarga i suoi spazi con altre cinque stanze in via Sistina, questa volta affidandosi al genio di Tommaso Ziffer, l'architetto dell'Hotel de Russie. Ciliegine sulla torta: un hammam strepitoso, colazione in camera con croissant cladi, servita da una femme-de-chambre che ricorda la bonne lasciata a casa, kimono giapponese e pantofole per ogni ospiti, sappone dell'Officina Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella, fiori freschi del giardino di Frascati dei proprietari. Solo che Casa Howard non e un albergo ma "una casa privata aperta solo a persone introdotte da amici", spiega Jenifer. [...] "

NewsMag: Il Mondo
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "A Firenze si va in famiglia.
Guest house nel palazzo nobiliare. Con i proprietari al terzo piano. A due passi dlla stazione e dalla chiesa di Santa Maria Novella e a pochi minuti del Duomo di Firenze, Casa Howardnon e un hotel, bensi un elegante guest house. E stata inaugurata nel 2005, dopo due anni di restauri che hanno lasciato intatti gran parte dei pavimenti originali e dei soffitti. Adottando la stessa formula sperimentata in due case di Roma, Massimiliano Leonardi di Casilino e la moglie Jenifer Howard hanno allestito 12 camere (di cui sette minisuite, con divano transformabile in letto) nello storico palazzo di famiglia, di cui occupano l'ultimo dei tre piani. Le camere sono piccole ma accoglienti e dotate di aria condizionata. La piu grande e la Drawing room, circa 50 metri quadrati: ha pavimento in marmo, decorato con un mosaico, e tre ampie finestre che si affaciano su
via della Scala; come le altre camere, la tv satellitare e a schermo piatto ed e possibile navigare in
internet in modalita wi-fi. In alternativa, la Fireplace room ha due camini (uno nel bagno), la Camel e dedicata ai fumatori e la Game ha une cuccia per piccoli cani e ampio terrazzo. Agli ospiti Casa Howard offre la colazione e il bagno turco, che puo ospitare fino a cinque persone ed e disponibile quando i proprietari non sono in citta."

Magazine: In Style
Year: 2002
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "If tired of too much grandeur, check into the intimate
Casa Howard, where you feel like you 're staying a very stylish friend. The five rooms are individually decorated and you'll be pampered by housekeeper
Cristy (once a customer had her purse stolen and she lent her money for the rest of her stay)."
Magazine: In Viaggio - Roma
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Offrire tutti i comfort di hotel di lusso e, al contempo, far sentiri i propri ospiti accolti nell' atmosfera di une casa privata. È la carrateristica di questa Guest House apochi metri da Piazza di Spagna. A realizzare il progetto d'interior designer è stato l'eclettico architteto Tommaso Ziffer. Che per i coniugi Leonardi, i proprietari, ha studiato cinque camere in stili differenti che spaziano dall' optical all floreale e richiamano agli anni Cinquanta e Settanta. "

Guide Book: Italia Gastronomica
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "This Florence guesthouse is a combination of charm, location anbd decoration, offering various amenities and beautiful furnishings. It has kept all the original floors and ceilings to fully achieve the private houe concept: to provide guests with a beautiful house or apartment with a personal touch, whilst not forsaking the convenience of hotel service. Situated within walking distance of the railway station, the Uffizi, the Duomo and Via Tornabuoni, it is a wonderful base from which to enjoy one of the most delightful cities in the world, expect an intimate and elegant mansion, warm rooms - as well as personal service... "

Guide Book: Italia Gastronomica
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "This Rome guesthouse is a hidden gem right in the center of Rome, close to the Spanish Steps. Walk up the marble steps and enter a heaven of peace and quiet after the hustle and bustle of the Spanish Steps area. A cosy, charming Rome accommodation, resembling the private house of a stylish friend, with high-wooden beam ceilings and laque or parquet floors, and 8 exclusive and fashionable rooms decorated with taste and comfortably furnished... "
Magazine: KLM In-Flight Magazine
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Where to Stay: the ten rooms at the exquisite Casa Howard (five at
Via Capo le Case 18, another five at
via Sistina 149)."
Magazine: Living Abroad
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Guesthouses
Review: "[...] The guesthouses are called Casa Howard. All the rooms are individually designed on different themes: from the exotic Zebra room to the classic Flower room, there is something for every taste. And each house has a limited number of bedrooms (10 in all in Rome and 11 in Florence) to make guests feel at home. [...] "

Guidebook: Lonely Planet Rome
Year: 2001
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "
Places to stay – TOP END. Several of Rome’s best hotels are located near Piazza di Spagna. One of the newer ones, and a complete delight, is Casa Howard (Via Capo le Case, 18). More guesthouse than hotel, the five rooms are individually decorated with gorgeous fabrics and paintings. Four of them are named after the colour upon which the décor is based –
Azzurra, Rosa, Bianca, Verde – and one is known as the
Chinese Room. Two rooms have en suite bathrooms, the others have their own private bathroom in a separate room next door."

Guidebook: Lonely Planet - Best of Rome
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "
Places to stay – TOP END. Casa Howard – Someone with exquisite taste and a keen eye for style created this stunning Spanish Steps guesthouse, which has five distinctly decorated rooms with gorgeous fabrics. Only two have en suite bathrooms although the others do have detached bathrooms (there’s even a
Turkish bath) and slippers are provided for those short corridor walks. The same people have another guesthouse nearby, with similar standards and prices. "

Guidebook: Lonely Planet Florence
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Casa Howard, Boutique Hotel. With six rooms, this is a delicious retreat near the train station. Building on a successful business started in Rome, the owners have created a set of unique and different rooms. Starting with the paintwork, ranging from lime green to russet red, each room boasts an unpredictable mix of styles and furnishings. You might have an old-style bath, a fireplace and antique furniture."
Website: Lonely Planet
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Casa Howard (Howard's House) is a gem. Fine fabrics abound and the paintings perfectly suit the individual colour schemes in the 10 striking rooms (five at Via Capo le Case and five at Via Sistina 149). The location is great in both cases, there's a
Turkish bath and
breakfast is delicious. [...] "
Website: Luxe City Guide - Rome
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "With 10 uniquely designed, cosy rooms in two locations, it’s like staying in a very relaxed, stylish friend’s home.
Take the saucy zebra room with little balcony if you can.
And yes, pets are allowed, so Fido can live la dolce vita too. Woof! "

Website: Mapa-Mundi.com
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Situados a poucos metros da Escada de Espanha e das lojas Gucci, Prada e Armani na Via Condotti, as hospedarias de luxo Casa Howard são segredos guardados a sete chaves pelos chiques e descolados que frequentam a Cidade Eterna. Isso porque, os dois pequenos hotéis tëm apenas cinco apartamentos cada. Elegantíssimos e super confortáveis, com diárias a partir de meros 140 Euros, eles são raras opções de hospedagem chique e barata encontradas na Roma de hoje.
Equipados com TV a cabo, ar condicionado, sinal de internet banda larga wi-fi e mimos que vão desde lindos arranjos de flores frescas até sabonetes caseiros da Officina Profumo di Santa Maria Novella, de Florença, nos banheiros, cada quarto é decorado com um tema diferente. O Tommy Room – 150 Euros para uma pessoa e 180 Euros, para dupla ocupação – foi decorado por Tommaso Ziffer, o mesmo designer responsável pelos interiores do vizinho e muito mais caro, Hotel de Russie. Meu favorito tem paredes e acessórios vermelhos, sobrepostos a tecidos listrados de preto e branco nas cortinas, colcha e almofadas. Custando 230 Euros para duas pessoas, a diária no Zebra Room pode não parecer exactamente uma bagatela. Mas é. Em Roma, hotéis dessa categoria custam facilmente duas vezes mais. Se você pretende aproveitar essa dica, não perca tempo: reserve com antecedência. As duas Casa Howard Guest Houses estão sempre lotadas.
"

Magazine: Marie Claire (Italia)
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence
Accommodation Review: "[...] Un viaggio tra le suite piu lussuose: da le residenze di citta del Capo alle 13 stanze a tema (ce n'e una per i cani e una per arrampicate al chiuso) della fiorentina Casa Howard [...] "
Magazine: Myself
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome
Accommodation Review: "Wer wie in “La dolce vita” nachts in den Trevi-Brunnen steigen möchte (Vorsicht, verboten!), sollte ein Zimmer im zauberhaften Bed & Breakfast „
Casa Howard Via Sistina“ buchen. Es liegt nicht weit entfernt, bietet fünf extravagant gestylte Zimmer und das
Frühstück wird auf Silbertabletts ans Bett gebracht. Yes!
"

Magazine: NB Rome Issue
Year: 2002
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "A mere 100 meters from the Spanish Steps this quirky guesthouse provides welcome despite the stiff, stuffy attitudes that prevail in so many of Rome's better-known hotels. Owned by a Briton, Jennifer Howard, and her Italian husband count Masimiliano Leonardi di Casalino, it's very small (just five rooms, though a further five were due to open in another building on
via Sistina at the end of 2002) and intimate. The interiors are attractive: parquet floors, beamed ceilings, antiques and custom-made furniture (the better to fit the space available). Some are a little chintzy, but the crimson Shanghai Tang silk that swathes the
Chinese Room is authentically glamourous and exotic, and the toile de Jouy in the
White Room (each is called after its decorative scheme) is pretty and fresh. the down side is that only two rooms (
Green and
Pink) have en-suite bathrooms. The others have private bathrooms, but you'll need to use the
kimono and slippers provided to reach them. Both properties incidentally, also feature communal hamman
Turkish baths. And every guestroom in the new property has a computer with
ADSL line. [...] "

Magazine: New York Times Travel Supplement - Interview of Grant Tatcher
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Among the jet set, Luxe City Guides have achieved a near cult status for their exacting, opinonated and deliciously bitchy takes on cities including Hanoi, Roma, and, next month, New York. The Hong Kong-based founder and editor Grant Tatcher took the T Travel Questionnaire.
What was your first passport stamp?
Spain, age 14.
Is there a tourist stamp that you actually love?
Catuchak market in Bangkok. You can get everything from secondhand underpants to squirrels.
Favourite hotel?
Private house-hotels like the Portrait Suites and Casa Howard in Rome.
Restaurant?
Naughty Nuri’s in Ubud, Bali. A simple roadside shack with monumentally good martinis and ribs.
Carry-on or check?
Check. I loathe packing, so I tend to take everything and decide later.
City or country?
I was born in the UK West Country, so I need regular doses of countryside to keep a smile on the dial.[...]"

Magazine: New Woman
Year: 2005
Magazine: New Woman
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Bookyourself into the super-stylish Casa Howard hotel in Rome, then pretend you're Posh and hit the shops. It's right near the famous Spanish Steps- in other words slap-bang in the middle of the exclusive shopping area - and flanked by Prada, Gucci and Missoni. It feels like a private house so it won't be weird to pop in and out on your own, and when you are exhausted your feet and your credit card, you can sink into the reviving
Turkish bath before dinner. Then swap your Jimmy Choos for trainers and check out the beautiful city by night, especially its beautiful people (read: men!)."

Magazine: l'Officiel
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Les heureux élus, qui ont eu l'occasion de séjourner dans cette étonnante pension, la conseillent à leurs proches. Ceux-ci auraient d'ailleurs peu de chance de la denicher par le biais d'une agence. A l'origine de ce projet, on trouve une jeune comtesse au caractère bien trempé, qui a sue créer de toutes pièces un nouveau concept d'accueil, en s'appuyant sur son expérience des voyages haut de gammes. "[...]
"Dans cet appartement, elle crée cinq chambres dotées du plus grand confort, avec salle de bains privée, attenante ou séparée. Les visiteurs ont droit à des kimonos japonais pour déambuler dans les couloirs. Toute l'originalité de ces espaces tient dans la personnalisation de l'acceuil et la décoration. "Pour chaque chambre, j'ai choisi les tissus, dénichés à Paris ou dans les archives familiales. J'ai trouvé des meubles anciens ou moderned, tous différents, et aussi des lavabos chinois un peu décalés". La bouche à oreille aidant, l'appartement-hôtel rencontre un succès fulgurant. En décembre 2002, Jennifer Leonardi di Casalino récidive et ouvre, via Sistina, un autre appartement Casa Howard, un peu plus grand. Elle en confie la décoration à l'architecte Tommaso Ziffer, qui a pour consigne de personnaliser chaque pièce. " [... read more here ... ]

Magazine: Olive
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Two exquisite, five-roomed deisnger b&bs, both very close to the Spanish Steps. At Via Capo le Case the rooms are all decorated with heavy raw silks and rare wallpapers. Two of the bathrooms are ensuite, the other three are located just accross the hall, but, thanks to intimate, homely atmosphere of the hotel, their location doesn't feel like a nuisance. At the brand new Via Sistina address all are ensuite and the Zebra room also has a balcony. Best of all, both Casa Howards have their own hammam. "

Magazine: Pool - Life & Culture
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse & Florence
Review: "Die Casa Howard Gästehäuser von Jenifer Howard Forneris une Conte Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino in
Rom und
Florenz dürfen mit fug und recht für sich Anspruch nehmen, eine neue Dimension der Hotellerie erõffnet zu haben, mit eine, einzigartigen detailreichtum und phantasiereicher innenarchitektur verwõhnen sie ihre Gäste..." »
Read the whole article Magazine: Redhot (Virgin Inflight Magazine)
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "From a hotel more likle a private house in the heart of the city, where every room has a different decoration and luxury coincides with style, try Casa Howard. "
Magazine: Res Florence Guide
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Ett guesthouse efter anglosaxiskt koncept helt inrett av arkitekten Tommaso Ziffer. Inget rum är det andra likt. Gä igenom rummen pä hemsidan och se vilket du gillar bäst. Bokning via hemsidan eller kontoret i Rom.
"

Magazine: Res Rome Guide
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Trött pa anonyma och standardinredda hotell? Da skall du prova detta guesthouse, där varje rum har sin egen speciella inredning och färg. Förebilden är utan tvekan brittisk, där bara namnet leder tankarna till nagon av E.M. Forsters romaner. Detta ambitiösa projekt startades av Massimiliano Leonardi, som hade tröttnat pa att arbeta med den internationella storfinansen. Tillsammans med hustrun Jennifer (född Howard) öppnade han för fyra ar sedan ett första guesthouse i Rom. Detta är alltsa inget hotell, utan snarast som att bo i ett möblerat hem, där man far egen nyckel och där tva perfekta
house-keepers Christy och Edgar tar hand om all tänkbar service. Tva olika adresser i centrum intill Spanska trappan. Alla rum finns detaljerat beskrivna pa hemsidan."

Guide Book: Rome For Romance
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "B&B is far too pedestrain a term to describe this 12-room extravaganza in an old palazzo just yards from Piazza Santa Maria Novella. As the latest creation of owners Count Leonardi and Jenifer Howard forneris it joins their original Rome success story. That means burying blandness and uniformity in favour of orifginal and imaginatively themed rooms. Twin this with all the warmth of a private home plus can't-do-enough service and you're in clover. Ancient features are axiomatic in Florence and there's no cheating here; parquet and stone floors, heavy wood doors, marble chimney pieces and numerous fine artworks. However its the stunning decor and host of luxurious little extras that turn a stay into a treat. We were hard pushed to decide between the extravagant drawing room in soigné black; the lavish Oriental room with its emperor-sized bed and erotic prints or the impressively tome-lined Library. There is even a Turkish bath - exclusively yours when staying in the Garden room. Housekeepers, aka "House genies" are also trained to add to Casa Howard's spells."

Website: Secret Places
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "A delightful city house right in the centre of Florence
The Casa Howard in Florence shares many of the characteristic its of its namesake in
Rome. The same title, the same urbane owners, the same elegant decoration and fabulous location. In fact, they both have a common concept, which is to provide guests with a beautiful house or apartment to stay in, keeping a personal touch to proceedings whilst not forsaking the convenience of hotel like service. Hence, it's just "like staying at a friends house" as a guest once said. A very good friend we may add and this is not any ordinary old house either, as the Casa Howard is located right next to the
Santa Maria Novella Piazza - a wonderful base from which to enjoy one of the most delightful cities in the world. That personal touch we mentioned beforehand is in fact everywhere. From Chinese dumpling holders used as soap boxes to a porcelain monkey hanging from the ceiling light and the use of top notch fabrics from Paris, London and other renowned fashion centres. As for the rooms, many have a common theme to them and appropriate names attached. The
Camel room is, well, for smokers. The
Playroom - for families. There is also a Turkish Hamman Bath for guests to enjoy. Guests who visit the Casa Howard tend to come back (they are even given priority in booking, as to the Casa Howard way of doing things, they are seen as old friends) and given its combination of charm,
location, decoration and
service, we can see why."

Website: StyleCity Rom
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouses
Review: "Nur einen Steinwurf vom Shoppingdorado der Piazza di Spagna entfernt, liegt diese originelle Pension, die eigentlich aus zwei getrennten Palazzi besteht. Hier residieren Sie sehr privat in luxuriösen Räumen mit einer aufmerksamen Hausdame. Besitzer des schmucker Ensembles sind die aus Großbritannien stammende Jennifer Howard und ihr Ehemann Graf Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino. Abgesehen von der Parallele zum Namen der Dame des Hauses ließe sich auch ein Bezug zu E.M. Forsters Roman „Howard’s End“, dessen Verfilmung in Italien als „Casa Howard“ in den Kinos lief, herstellen.
Der Palazzo in der
Via Capo le Case offeriert nur fünf Gästezimmer, jedes davon mit Parkett, Kassettendecken, Ölgemälden der Familie und Antiquitäten ausgestattet. Benannt wurden sie nach dem jeweiligen Motto der Einrichtung wie das „
Chinesische Zimmer“, dessen Stoffe aus dem Haus Shanghai-Tang in Hongkong kamen. Das „
Weiße Zimmer“ prägen schwarz-weiße Toile-de-Jouy-Stoffe mit roten Verzierungen. Nicht jedes Zimmer verfügt über ein eigenes Bad. Wer über den Flur wandeln muss, wird dafür mit
Slippern und Kimono ausgestattet. Ein kleiner türkischer Hammam sorgt für wundervolle Entspannung nach einem anstrengenden Tag der Besichtigungen.Das zweite Haus eröffnete das Ehepaar 2002 in der
Via Sistina. Dort ging der durch das nahe gelegene Hotel de la Russie bekannte römische Designer Tommaso Ziffer ans Werk. Seine Handschrift verrät der unverhohlen maximalistische Stil der Zimmer, die dennoch so behaglich wirken wie alles in der Casa Howard. Das Zimmer „
American Cousin“ trifft den Geschmack etablierter Junggesellen: große Flachbildschirm, Internetanschluss und modernes, glänzend schwarzes Mobiliar, während „
Zebra“ mit den schwarz-weiße Mustern vor rotem Grund (Wände, Teppichboden) eine Überdosis sinnlicher Reize verspricht. Das
Frühstück wird Ihnen aufs Zimmer serviert: warme Croissants mit selbst gemachter Marmelade vom Gut der Leonardis in der Toskana. Am gut gefüllten Kühlschrank in der Halle dürfen sich alle Gäste bedienen."

Journal: Sunday Times
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Near the Spanish Steps the exquisite
Casa Howard (
via Capo le Case) has just five rooms."
Magazine: Tages Anzeige
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Fünf detailverliebte Gästezimmer, hundert Meter von der Spanischen Treppe entfernt. Fünf weitere, etwas luxuriösere, ein wenig näher an der Via Veneto. Mitten in Rom. Dazu das Ambiente eines privaten Hauses,
frische Blumen, schöne Accessoires, antike Möbel, auf Wunsch Computer mit
Highspeed-Verbindung. Ein Geheimtipp für alle, die dem üblichen Hotelgefühl entkommen möchten."

Magazine: Tatler
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Five bedrooms, fresh flowers,
Turkish Baths. This is Rome secret pied-à-terre, located where you want to be on a quiet side street off the Spanish Steps. Spend the money you'll save on a swell hotel in the via Condotti, which is virtually eyeballing your comfortable, cheery room, with its antique furniture and traditional oil paintings. Go for the
Green or
Pink rooms, unless you don't mind a bathroom down the hall (shades of corridor - creeping in old-fashioned house parties). The
Chinese room is decked out in red silks from Shanghai Tang - more Castle Howard than
Casa Howard.
Breakfast is hot croissants and home-made jam from the owners Tuscan farm. For a traditional supper, walk down the street to Dal Bolognese in the Piazza del Popolo."

Newspaper Online: Telegraph
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "This upmarket guesthouse has been created from two apartments in nearby streets. The bedrooms are special, with imaginative designs and luxury fabrics. The cheapest are not en suite but have a private bathroom down the corridor. Many of the bedrooms are small, however; both annexes are on busy streets; and there are no public rooms (
breakfast is served in the bedrooms). Still, accommodation of this quality in a more traditional Roman hotel could be twice as expensive."

Newspaper: The Peak - Singapore
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Do you like dogs"? asks Count Massimiliano Leonardi, as I startled slightly at a barking commotion that has suddenly errupted in the background. I nod smilingly, understanding my room key's silver tag that is in the perfect shape of a dog bone. A financier who spent most of his time jet-setting between Geneva and London, Count Leonardi is today a happily retired man. Together with his English wife Jenifer, they devote time between managing their growing Casa Howard Empire and family life, which includes a troupe of lively dachshunds. "I feel uncomfortable in hotels, they are for corporate lodgers," states Leonardi candidly. "Casa Howard is about leisure and plesure. It is not a hotel but each a beautiful, intimate establishment giving personal service, where some typically hotel ideas, methods and services have been borrowed." [...
read more p169,
read more p170 ... ]

Guidebook: TimeOut Florence
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "
Where to Stay – Santa Maria Novella - Expensive. Casa Howard. The owner of this stylish pied-à-terre sets out to offer comfortable, upmarket accommodation at reasonable rates in the discrete atmosphere of a handsome mansion. The 12 rooms are classy and vaguely eccentric, decorated with strong colours and a mix of antique and custom-made furniture. Check online to choose the one you like best: the big, dramatic
Drawing Room, perhaps, or maybe the
Black and White Room, in which a blown-up reproduction of Monet’s Olympia covers one wall. Bathrooms are similarly quirky but well equipped, and come with Santa Maria Novella’s smellies. There’s even a Turkish bath on site, should you have overdone in on the sightseeing. Bookings are made through the original Rome branch.
When is a Hotel not a Hotel? You may find yourself confused about the names given to the various categories of accommodation in Florence and Tuscany. Rules about this are established on a regional level, so they vary to some degree throughout Italy. In Florence, to be officially classed as a hotel (and therefore subject to a star classification), you must have seven or more rooms. To qualify as an
affittacamere (literally “rooms to rent”), you can have no more than six rooms. Some are basically private houses with a couple of rooms for rent (unlike in the UK, most owners don’t live on site), while others are, to all intents and purposes, small hotels. Some more upmarket affittacamere are now allowed to class themselves as bed and breakfasts.
Residenza d’epoca is the term used for a listed building with no more than 12 rooms, while to call yourself a residence you must have a minimum of self-catering units. To add to the confusion, a number of establishments adopt certain names because they sound nice, but they may officially be classified as something else. There are ‘B&Bs’ in Florence, for example, that don’t actually serve breakfast.
In practice, though, these rules and regulations don’t really affect the average traveller – all you need to know is that you don’t have to stick to regular hotels if you want something with a bit more character.Our favourite include
Casa Howard Residenza d’Epoca, Le Stanze di Santa Croce, Residenza Santo Spirito, Villa Poggio San Felice, B&B Borgo Pinti and Johlea Uno & Johlea Due. In addition to these there are dozens of other listed in the tourist board’s annual accommodation booklet."

Guidebook: TimeOut Rome
Year: 2006
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "The bad news is that, in Rome, space and comfort don't come cheap, but the good news is that many hotels in the high- and mid-range brackets have been given a much-needed makeover. [..] the ten rooms at the exquisite Casa Howard (five at via Capo le Case 18, another five at via Sistina 149) "

Magazine: Shelter Interiors Chicago
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "Falling in love with a place means going beyond tourist clichés and absorbing the texture and flavour of its daily life. It is to dream of living there, making local friends, spending time in private homes. Visitors to Florence are especially prone to this sort of lovesick behaviour. After just one visit, many of her guests find it impossible to abandon this jewel and return to normal life just as if nothing had never happened.
A sojourn at Casa Howard Guesthouse – where travellers live as residents and get a taste of true Italian life – if only for a few days – is likely what did them in. Bed & Breakfast is too reductive a term to describe this boutique, 12-room secret address in an old Florentine palazzo, just a few yards from Piazza Santa Maria Novella and its magnificent church.
Opened in 2005, the residence is the latest creation of Count Massimiliano Leonardi and his English wife Jennifer Howard Forneris, who in 2000 launched the designer guesthouse wave in Rome.
Casa Howard Florence is not unlike its two Roman sisters. They share the same name, elegant decoration and authentic Italian charm.
“Staying with us is like living at a friend’s home,” Leonardi says, while explaining how he came to the idea of starting the Casa Howard concept.
“My grandmother gave birth to 21 children. So I have relatives scattered around the world: Rome, Naples, Florence, Milano, Barcelona, London, Hong Kong”, he adds. “Most of the original family houses are empty and derelict. Why not bring them back to life and give hospitality to people who value beauty above all else in life?”
Leonardi’s reference to his guests as “friends” is not by accident. Visitors who stay in Casa Howard tend to come back, so they are considered part of an enlarged family. They are given the keys to the house during their stay and are granted priority in booking a second or third vacation.
Several unexpected treasures are tucked away in
Via della Scala, where Casa Howard is located. In the back streets along with art galleries, tiny arts and crafts shops, and cosy cafés is the famous Officina dei Profumi di Santa Maria Novella, one of the oldest pharmacies in the world with stunning original furnishing.
“We profited from the presence of the pharmacy just a few steps from our door. We are the only guesthouse in the world to which the Officina provides herbal liquid soaps,” boasts the owner, who also teases his guests with fresh-baked croissants and homemade jams from his Tuscan farms for breakfast, which is served in guests’ rooms (the house has no lobby or common spaces).
Respectful of stringent preservation rules, Casa Howard was restored in accordance with Florence’s historic heritage. Originally built in a humble neighborhood, the building now stands out for its discrete elegance.
“The exterior lacked nothing. It was a 15th century house with sober façade details, such as slatted window shutters and a stately panel door,” recalls Fabrizio Cuniberto, the architect who was commissioned to make over the whole property along with Patrizia Ruffa. “But the interiors wherein a deplorable state: dark, cluttered and with claustrophobic rooms that flowed awkwardly from one to another.”
The designers recuperated ancient features such as the parquet and stone floors, heavy wood doors and marble chimney pieces. Beamed ceilings were also restored to either original glory.
The daughter of a famous manufacturer who used to design textiles for the best Italian couturiers in the 1960s, Jennifer was the beautiful mind behind the interior decoration. She decided that fabric and colour would transform the interiors. She was right. The textiles add a casual comfort to the rooms and enliven simple objects such as an ordinary chair or an upright, uptight sofa, while colour is used to add energy. Into this scheme, original period furniture and family heirlooms are mixed, along with carefully selected new items.
“To me, decoration means coupling things I really like and making them work together. As a result a feeling of well-being and relaxation pervades the house,” a proud Jennifer says. Living well can be found in small pleasures. A stay at Casa Howard can be counted among them.

Magazine: Style
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Dove Dormire: Casa Howard Guest House,
Via Capo le Case 18, vicino a Piazza di Spagna."
Journal: Sunday Times -
Rome: Where to stay, eat, what to do
Year: 2003
Guest House: Casa Howard Rome Accommodation
Review: "Near the Spanish Steps the exquisite
Casa Howard (
via Capo le Case) has just five rooms."
Newspaper: Sunday Times Travel
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "What is hot? The elite guidebook Note Bene, for example, positively raves about Casa Howard's pair of flamboyant five-bedroom guesthouses in Rome even though some rooms are not even ensuite."
Newspaper Online: T&L Insider Guide
Year: 2004
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Rome - Design diehards will love the flashy new rooms at Casa Howard (18
Via Capo le Case...)"
Newspaper: Times
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "
Casa Howard Florence - Casa Howard, which opened last month, comes with a good pedigree: it's the sister hotel of the highly popular (and quirky) property of the same name in Rome. Rooms are individually themed, their names telling you about the decor -- one is called
Oriental, another is
Black and White, another "
Library" -- and each has original features such as marble fireplaces, heavy old wooden doors, parquet flooring and antiques. The style is a mixture of old and contemporary, with splashes of colour amid period pieces. There's also a large Turkish bath."

Magazine: Traveller UK
Year: 2005
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "When the first of these two stylish guest houses - collectively known as Casa Howard - opened on
via Capo le Case in 2000, it launched the designer B&B wave in Rome. The formula is simple: take a large centro storico apartment and create five distinctive bedrooms inside, without sacrificing the family feel of the place. The second - also with five rooms - opened in 2003 on
via Sistina. Owners Jenifer Howard Formeris and husband Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino are sticklers for detail: fabrics are sourced from Hong Kong and Paris; breakfast (served in guests' rooms) consists of freshly-baked cornetti (sweet croissants) and home-made jam from the owners' Tuscan estate; soaps come from the historic Santa Maria Novella pharmacy in Florence. In via Capo le Case, the design scheme is ethno-chintzy, and only the Pink and Green rooms have en-suite bathrooms (kimonos and slippers are provided for padding down the corridor). In pricier via Sistina, architect Tommaso Ziffer was brought in to apply his retro-modern touch to the living room and bedrooms (rooms at Ziffer's only other Rome project, the Hotel de Russie, cost about four times as much). Both branches have small hammams, and via Sistina has
broadband Internet connections in every room. Room to book: the boldly decorated Zebra room in via Sistina - but dress accordingly. "

Magazine: Traveller UK -
High Culture, Low Prices
Year: 2007
Guest house: Casa Howard Florence Guesthouse
Review: "
In the cradle of the Renaissance, finding a place to lay your head can be an expensive business. Nicky Swallow tracks down five guesthouses that offer elegant accommodation and great value. The owner of Casa Howard, Massimiliano Leonardi, feels ‘uncomfortable’ in hotels. In fact you get the impression that he positively hates them, so don’t mention the H-word in association with his 12-room guesthouse.
When Leonardi’s Florentine pied-à-terre first appeared in our annual Hot List, in 2005, the Champagne had barely chilled in the honesty bar. It has since settled in and become one of the best places in Florence to find a touch of luxury combined with the discrete atmosphere of a private home. The handsome palazzo is located between the train station and the centre of town. Its décor is stylish and vaguely eccentric, with an eclectic mix of furniture including custom-made pieces and selections from the family vaults. Fine fabrics and strong colors play a major role. The bedrooms, several with private terraces, are all very different, and the bathrooms, stocked with Santa Maria Novella products, are quirky and fun (in the
Fireplace Room, you can watch TV soaking in a claw-footed bath). Unless you count the
Turkish bath, there’s no public space to speak of, so
breakfast (warm croissants and organic jam from Leonardi’s farm) is served in your room.
‘
Honesty Fridges’ on each floor are stocked with Champagne, wine and soft drinks.
ROOM TO BOOK. Very much a question of personal taste, mood and budget. If cost is an issue, go for one of the diminuitive
Twin Rooms. If not, have a look at the website photos and take your pick.
"

Magazine: Traveller UK
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Hotels in Rome usually fall into one of two camps: forty-style grand palaces or dingy guesthouses with faded wallpaper and noisy pets.
Casa Howard is neither. Located in a side street off the Spanish Steps, dangerously close to Gucci and Prada, the hotel resembles a private pied-à-terre. The five rooms all have individual color schemes, with fabrics from Paris (except the red silk in the
Chinese room which was sourced from Shanghai Tang in Hong Kong) and antiques and paintings from the families of the owners Jennifer Howard-Forneris and her husband, Count Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino.
Breakfast is served in the rooms - expect hot
cornetti (croissants) with jam from the owners' Tuscan farm. The hotel private
Turkish Hammam will restore those exhausted from walking round the Eternal City."

Magazine: Traveller UK
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "In 2000 Jennifer Forneris-Howard and Count Massimiliano Leopardi di Casalino turned a Roman flat into an intimate guesthouse,
Casa Howard. Its success prompted the couple to open and a second property, sharing the same name. The interior designer is Tommaso Ziffer, who also worked on Rome's Hotel de Russie, and the five rooms are eccentric in style, from the
Zebra Room (black-and-white prints on red walls) to the frenzied
Flower Room. The hotel also has a
Turkish bath."

Magazine: Traveler US
Year: 2001
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Five minutes from the city's heart, on a side street that leads to the Piazza di Spagna, the
Casa Howard takes up to two-third of the second floor of a historic building. Family owned, it has all the trappings of the apartment of a wealthy Roman. The five guest rooms, named for their color schemes, have hand-picked antiques and comfy linens. The
Pink Room is larger and has a bathroom en-suite (each room has a bath, although some are located down the hall). The hotel has a private
Turkish Hammam and, even better, a resident genie:
Cristy who arranges everything from car-hire to dinner reservations."
Magazine: Traveler US
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Hotel stays are getting steamier by the minute as hammams, or Turkish baths, go global. In Rome, guests at tiny
Casa Howard have long enjoyed
a steam; now the owners opened another hammam hotel, this one on the
via Sistina."
Magazine: Travel & Leisure
Year: 2002
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse
Review: "Design diehards will love the five individually decorated rooms in the new annex at
Casa Howard (
via Sistina), the creation of Hotel de Russie architect Tommaso Ziffer. One is done up in
black-and-white Op Art; another has
clashing floral fabrics on everything including the padded walls. The five rooms in the original building (
via Capo le Case) are more sedate (wood beams; parquet floors and checked fabrics). Despite the occasional drawback - some bathrooms lie accross a corridor, and the owner prefers a recommendation from a previous guest - the place is very popular so book well ahead."
Magazine: Viaggie e Sapori
Year: 2003
Guest house: Casa Howard Rome Guesthouse

Magazine: Viva
Year: 2006
Guest House: Casa Howard Rome Accommodation
Review: "If you love the idea of contemporary grandeur, fab central locations and a private "house" not a hotel, stay at...Casa Howard. Who do you know? If you want to stay at Casa Howard, better mention my name - a word of mouth recommendation is the only way to get a room (and it's a guest house not a hotel dahhling). Owners Jenifer Forneris-Howard and Massimiliano Leonardi di Casalino may seem to have delusions of grandeur, but they get away with it - after all he's an italian count, and she is the daughter of the famous textile designer Luciano Forneris. Social status aside, the 10 rooms, all individually themed are set in two gloriously old buildings, complete with the most wonderful, flamboyant interior designing imaginable. With its parquet flooring and family antiques mixed with modern touches and quirky extras, like a
Turkish Hammam (enjoy it, it’s bigger than your box bathroom), perhaps it’s safest to say the style is a clash of old and new Italy, but my do we love it! When you’re quite finished being impressed by the sheer surface appeal, you’ll happily note that its location is of real significance too. Both houses are close to the Spanish Steps, of whose historical past we should really wax lyrical but all you really need to know is that you’re just minutes away from Prada, Missoni, Dolce & Gabbana et al. Let Jennifer and Massimiliano guide you to the city’s most superior stop-offs…"

Magazine: Vogue
Year: 2007
Guest House: Casa Howard Rome Accommodation
Review: "In Rome, designer Tommas Ziffer is responsible for the beautiful interiors of Casa Howard (casahoward.com), a guesthouse located on the second floor of an old palazzo on the
via Sistina. Each of the five rooms has been individually designed, the overall effect being one of intimacy – of staying in a friend’s apartment, rather than a hotel. Ziffer’s
Zebra Room combines black-and-white print fabrics with red gloss walls and floors – a look that nods to Seventies style while being bang up-to-date."

Members Only Website: & Club
Year: 2007 (Turkey)
Guest House: Casa Howard Rome & Florence Accommodation
Review: "Adeta bir acik hava müzesi olan Roma'yi gezmis olman?n keyfiyle nihayet Ispanyol Merdivenleri'ne oturanlar, bu büyüleyici sehirde daha nice kesfedilmemis yerin oldugunu düsünürler. Oysa Roma'nin en gizli kalm?s adreslerinden biri olan "Casa Howard Konuk Evleri" ne yürüyüs mesafesinde olduklarindan habersizdirler. [...]"