Andriolli was known for his generosity. He took part in many actions responding to the needs of the moment. He provided support for his friends in need, education of young people and publishing houses. He significantly supported summer camps for children. He responded sensitively to every misfortune. For example in 1884 he made a sketch Child in the cradle, raised by the waves of flood, intending it to help flood victims. He did the same in the following year, when funds were raised for victim of a fire in Grodno. Here, as the press reported, while preparing the drawing about the fire, he himself fell victim to this element. Fortunately, he managed to extinguish the fire.
Above all, however, he aimed to create institutions supporting the development of society, providing assistance and support to those in need. He wanted to offer half of his property in Brzegi for summer camps for poor children. But it turned out to be too complicated. He was also thinking about setting up a sanatorium, which he even bequeathed in his last will. This idea became fulfilled indirectly, as later several sanatoriums were established in Otwock.
A rather unusual attempt to create an institution that could be useful was the mulberry plantation established by him in 1885. It was supposed to support silkworm breeding and a training centre for women who could run such a breeding project. Even though Andriolli failed, the project was successfully implemented forty years later by siblings Henryk and Stanisława Witaczek in nearby Milanówek, where the famous Milanów silk is still produced.
Andriolli also took care of the commemoration of his distinguished compatriots. He planted willows on the graves of Polish poets Mickiewicz and Słowacki buried in the Montmartre cemetery in Paris.