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{{torna a|Brugherio}}
The old farmhouses of Brugherio were agricultural structures typical of Po-Valley in Lombardy, which gave its name also to the surrounding areas, roughly corresponding to fractional towns. The union of the various rural and small municipalities in which the territory was fragmented gave birth in 1866 to the municipality of Brugherio. In the twenty-first century are still visible the following: Bindellera, Casecca, Cattoni, Comolli, Dorderio, Guzzina, Increa, Modesta (called also Del Bosco), Moia, Occhiate (with Occhiate's mill), Pareana, San Cristoforo, Sant'Ambrogio, San Paolo and Torazza<ref name="sitocomune">{{cite web|url = http://www.comune.brugherio.mb.it/territorio/la-citt/le-cascine-brugheresi/|title = Comune di Brugherio. La città. Cascine brugheresi|language= Italian|accessdate = 10 April 2015}}</ref><ref>*{{cite web|url = http://www.lombardiabeniculturali.it/architetture/ricerca/?provincia=&comune=brugherio&intestazione=&tipologia=&autore=&annop=&annoa=&what=ib|title = Lombardia Beni Culturali. Architetture. Brugherio|language= Italian|accessdate = 14 April 2015}}</ref>.
 
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=== Sant'Ambrogio ===
{{Vedi anche|Cascina Sant'Ambrogio}}
[[File:08BrugherioSAmbrogio.JPG|thumb|800×600pix|Cascina Sant'Ambrogio]]
''Cascina Sant'Ambrogio'' is the oldest farm in Brugherio. It is next to the church Saint Ambrose, with which it shared the various owners. It is located in Via Dei Mille, which once was in open countryside in the town of Cassina Baraggia, but located sull'Itinerarium burdigalense<ref name="mancini" /><ref>{{cite book | author=Luigi Ghezzi | author2=Raffaele Bagnoli | title=La cascina Sant'Ambrogio di Brugherio |language= Italian| publisher=Tipografia delle Missioni | ___location=Milano }}</ref>. Commissioned by the bishop of Milan Ambrose as a summer residence, at his death it was ceded to the monastery of Saint Ambrose with usufruct to his sister Marcellina, who retired to the cloistered life. Villa, monastery, then mansion and finally farmhouse, it was restored (along oratory annex) in 1953, for will of the family Cavajoni, that bought the complex after the religious orders' Napoleonic suppression. The last renovation was done in 1995 by a special purpose company by four local businessmen, who used the apartment buildings preserving and recovering as much as possible of the original architectural elements<ref name="mancini" />.