Millennials inherited a dusty old apartment in Italy.
Maria Noyen
Rome: A millennial couple spent 17,000 euros, or about $18,400, remodeling an old apartment in Rome.
When they shared the renovation on social media, they were shocked to hear from many critics.
Some people said they “destroyed” the home’s vintage vibe, but the couple defended their choices.
Flavio Fabiani knew he had his work cut out for him when he stepped into the apartment in Rome’s colorful, bar-lined neighborhood of Pigneto.
The fully furnished home had been abandoned for 12 years with the windows flung open, so leaves and dust coated the floors, walls, chairs, cabinets, and sofas, said Fabiani, a 27-year-old architect.
He’d inherited the 785-square-foot, one-bedroom home from his late aunt, who had struggled with dementia in her final years. Wardrobes housed bags within bags, and near-life-size dolls lay propped up on a chaise lounge, evidence of her tendency to hoard.
The worst was the only bathroom. There, Fabiani was greeted by a sea of cockroaches that had crawled up through pipes that hadn’t been flushed out in over a decade.
Renovating the apartment on the third floor of a 14-unit building without a functioning elevator was going to be no easy feat — especially as his first solo project as an architect.
Fabiani inherited the apartment, which was originally built in the 1950s, from his late aunt after it had been abandoned for 12 years. Courtesy of Victoria Craparotta and Flavio Fabiani
From May to August, he worked alongside contractors to turn it into a home fit for him and his longtime girlfriend, Victoria Craparotta, whom he met in 2019 on a study abroad program in Malaga, Spain. The project cost him roughly 17,000 euros, or around $18,400.
Nearly a year later, Craparotta decided to share the renovation in a lighthearted TikTok video with before-and-after footage.
Neither Craparotta, a 26-year-old e-commerce lead originally from Canada, nor Fabiani expected to get what they called “death threats” from TikTok commenters critical of their decision to modernize the home.
Comments on the clip, which has racked up over 7.4 million views, ranged from people who claimed they “destroyed the house” to users who told them they’d turned it into an “Airbnb” devoid of personality.
“We were shocked by the reaction,” Fabiani said.
Major changes included knocking down two walls separating the tiny kitchen and the living space to create an open-plan layout, digging up the floors to install a new heating system, and installing double-paned windows to increase energy efficiency.
Less cumbersome tasks included removing green kitchen tiles and painting some of the beige walls shades of plum purple and sage green.
They also replaced some of the old furniture, like carpets and mirrors, that some members of Fabiani’s family wanted to keep for themselves.
“I am still quite surprised at how dramatic people can be over a renovation,” Craparotta said.
Craparotta and Fabiani’s most outspoken critics seem to believe they didn’t think twice about saving the home’s old-timey aesthetic.