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Wikipedia

Turin

Turin (/tjʊəˈrɪn, ˈtjʊərɪn/ ture-IN, TURE-in,[3] Piedmontese: [tyˈriŋ] (listen); Italian: Torino [toˈriːno] (listen))[4] is a city and an important business and cultural centre in Northern Italy. It is the capital city of Piedmont and of the Metropolitan City of Turin, and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865. The city is mainly on the western bank of the Po River, below its Susa Valley, and is surrounded by the western Alpine arch and Superga Hill. The population of the city proper is 847,287 (31 January 2022)[5] while the population of the urban area is estimated by Eurostat to be 1.7 million inhabitants. The Turin metropolitan area is estimated by the OECD to have a population of 2.2 million.[6]

Turin
Torino (Italian)
Città di Torino
Nickname(s): 
Città sabauda (Savoyard City)
Capitale delle Alpi (Capital of the Alps)
Città Magica (Magic City)
Motto(s): 
Auxilium meum a Domino (Latin)
("My help comes from the Lord")
Location of Turin
Turin
Location of Turin in Piedmont
Turin
Turin (Piedmont)
Coordinates: 45°04′45″N 07°40′34″E / 45.07917°N 7.67611°E / 45.07917; 7.67611
CountryItaly
RegionPiedmont
Metropolitan cityMetropolitan City of Turin (TO)
Government
 • MayorStefano Lo Russo (PD)
Area
 • Total130.17 km2 (50.26 sq mi)
Elevation
239 m (784 ft)
Population
 (31 January 2022)[2]
 • Total847,287
 • Density6,500/km2 (17,000/sq mi)
DemonymTurinese(s)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
10100, 10121-10156
Dialing code0039 011
ISTAT code001272
Patron saintJohn the Baptist
Saint day24 June
WebsiteOfficial website
Official nameResidences of the Royal House of Savoy
Includesseveral locations in Turin
CriteriaCultural: (i)(ii)(iv)(v)
Reference823bis
Inscription1997 (21st Session)
Extensions2010

The city was historically a major European political centre. From 1563, it was the capital of the Duchy of Savoy, then of the Kingdom of Sardinia ruled by the House of Savoy, and the first capital of the Kingdom of Italy from 1861 to 1865.[7][8] Turin is sometimes called "the cradle of Italian liberty" for having been the political and intellectual centre of the Risorgimento[9] as well as the birthplace of notable individuals who contributed to it, such as Cavour.[10] Although much of its political influence had been lost by World War II (having been a center of anti-fascist movements during the Ventennio including the Italian resistance), Turin became a major European crossroad for industry, commerce and trade, and is part of the "industrial triangle" along with Milan and Genoa. It is ranked third in Italy, after Milan and Rome, for economic strength.[11] With a GDP of $58 billion, the city is the world's 78th richest by purchasing power.[12] As of 2018, the city has been ranked by GaWC as a Gamma-level global city.[13] Turin is also home to much of the Italian automotive industry, hosting the headquarters of FIAT, Lancia and Alfa Romeo.[9]

The city has a rich culture and history, and it is known for its numerous art galleries, restaurants, churches, palaces, opera houses, piazzas, parks, gardens, theatres, libraries, museums and other venues. Turin is well known for its Baroque, Rococo, Neo-classical, and Art Nouveau architecture. Many of Turin's public squares, castles, gardens and elegant palazzi, such as the Palazzo Madama, were built between the 16th and 18th centuries. A part of the historical center of Turin was inscribed in the World Heritage List under the name Residences of the Royal House of Savoy. In addition, the city is home to museums such as the Museo Egizio[14] and the Mole Antonelliana, the city's architectonical symbol, which in turn hosts the Museo Nazionale del Cinema. Turin's attractions make it one of the world's top 250 tourist destinations and the tenth most visited city in Italy in 2008. The city also hosts some of Italy's best universities, colleges, academies, lycea and gymnasia, such as the University of Turin, founded in the 15th century, and the Turin Polytechnic.[15] Turin is also worldwide famous for icons like the gianduja, the Holy Shroud, the automobile brand FIAT and the association football club Juventus, which competes with its rival Torino in the Derby della Mole, the city's derby.[16] The city, among other events, was one of the host cities of the 1934 and 1990 FIFA World Cups, along with hosting the 2006 Winter Olympics;[17] Turin hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 and is hosting the tennis ATP Finals from 2021 until 2025.[18]

History

 
The Roman Palatine Towers
Historical affiliations

  Roman Republic 58–27 BC
  Roman Empire 27 BC–285 AD
  Western Roman Empire 285–476
  Kingdom of Odoacer 476–493
  Ostrogothic Kingdom 493–553
  Eastern Roman Empire 553–569
  Lombard Kingdom 569–773
  Carolingian Empire 773–888
  March of Ivrea 888–941
  March of Turin 941–1046
  County of Savoy 1046–1416
  Duchy of Savoy 1416–1720
  Kingdom of Sardinia 1720–1792
  First French Republic 1792–1804
  First French Empire 1804–1814
  Kingdom of Sardinia 1814–1861
  Kingdom of Italy 1861–1943
  Italian Social Republic 1943–1945
  Kingdom of Italy 1945–1946
  Italian Republic 1946–present

Ancient origins

The Taurini were an ancient Celto-Ligurian[19] Alpine people, who occupied the upper valley of the Po River, in the center of modern Piedmont. In 218 BC, they were attacked by Hannibal as he was allied with their long-standing enemies, the Insubres. The Taurini chief town (Taurasia) was captured by Hannibal's forces after a three-day siege.[20] As a people they are rarely mentioned in history. It is believed that a Roman colony was established after 28 BC under the name of Julia Augusta Taurinorum (modern Turin). Both Livy[21] and Strabo[22] mention the Taurini's country as including one of the passes of the Alps, which points to a wider use of the name in earlier times.

Roman era

In the first century BC (probably 28 BC), the Romans founded Augusta Taurinorum. Via Garibaldi traces the exact path of the Roman city's decumanus which began at the Porta Decumani, later incorporated into the Castello or Palazzo Madama. The Porta Palatina, on the north side of the current city centre, is still preserved in a park near the cathedral. Remains of the Roman-period theatre are preserved in the area of the Manica Nuova. Turin reached about 5,000 inhabitants at the time, all living inside the high city walls.

Middle Ages

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the town, along with the rest of the Italian peninsula, was conquered by the Heruli and the Ostrogoths, recaptured by the Romans, but then conquered again by the Lombards whose territory then fell into the hands of the Franks under Charlemagne (773). The Contea di Torino (countship) was founded in the 940s and was held by the Arduinic dynasty until 1050. After the marriage of Adelaide of Susa with Humbert Biancamano's son Otto, the family of the Counts of Savoy gained control. While the title of count was held by the Bishop as count of Turin (1092–1130 and 1136–1191) it was ruled as a prince-bishopric by the Bishops. In 1230–1235 it was a lordship under the Marquess of Montferrat, styled Lord of Turin. At the end of the 13th century, when it was annexed to the Duchy of Savoy, the city already had 20,000 inhabitants. Many of the gardens and palaces were built in the 15th century when the city was redesigned. The University of Turin was also founded during this period.

Early modern

 
Turin in 1701

Emmanuel Philibert, also known under the nickname of Iron Head (Testa 'd Fer), made Turin the capital of the Duchy of Savoy in 1563. Piazza Reale (named Piazza San Carlo today) and Via Nuova (current Via Roma) were added along with the first enlargement of the walls, in the first half of the 17th century; in the same period the Palazzo Reale (Royal Palace of Turin) was also built. In the second half of that century, a second enlargement of the walls was planned and executed, with the building of the arcaded Via Po, connecting Piazza Castello with the bridge on the Po through the regular street grid.

In 1706, during the Battle of Turin, the French besieged the city for 117 days without conquering it. By the Treaty of Utrecht the Duke of Savoy acquired Sicily, soon traded for Sardinia, and part of the former Duchy of Milan, and was elevated to king; thus Turin became the capital of a European kingdom. The architect Filippo Juvarra began a major redesign of the city; Turin had about 90,000 inhabitants at the time.

Late modern and contemporary

 
A view of Turin in the late 19th century. In the background, the Mole Antonelliana under construction
 
Fiat Lingotto factory in 1928
 
Liberation parade in Turin, May 6, 1945

Turin, like the rest of Piedmont, was annexed by the French Empire in 1802. The city thus became the seat of the prefecture of department until the fall of Napoleon in 1814, when the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia was restored with Turin as its capital. In the following decades, the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia led the struggle towards the unification of Italy. In 1861, Turin became the capital of the newly proclaimed united Kingdom of Italy having been the political and intellectual centre of the Risorgimento movement,[9][23] until 1865, when the capital was moved to Florence, and then to Rome after the 1870 conquest of the Papal States. The 1871 opening of the Fréjus Tunnel made Turin an important communication node between Italy and France. The city in that period had 250,000 inhabitants. Some of the most iconic landmarks of the city, like the Mole Antonelliana, the Egyptian Museum, the Gran Madre di Dio church and Piazza Vittorio Veneto were built in this period. The late 19th century was also a period of rapid industrialization, especially in the automotive sector: in 1899 Fiat was established in the city, followed by Lancia in 1906. The Universal Exposition held in Turin in 1902 is often regarded as the pinnacle of Art Nouveau design, and the city hosted the same event in 1911. By this time, Turin had grown to 430,000 inhabitants.

After World War I, harsh conditions brought a wave of strikes and workers' protests. In 1920 the Lingotto Fiat factory was occupied. The Fascist regime put an end to the social unrest, banning trade unions and jailing socialist leaders, notably Antonio Gramsci. On the other hand, Benito Mussolini largely subsidised the automotive industry, to provide vehicles to the army.

Turin was then a target of Allied strategic bombing during World War II, being heavily damaged by the air raids in its industrial areas as well as in the city centre. Along with Milan, Genoa, and La Spezia, Turin was one of Italy's four cities that experienced area bombing by the RAF; the heaviest raid took place on 13 July 1943, when 295 bombers dropped 763 tons of bombs, killing 792 people.[24] Overall, these raids killed 2,069 inhabitants of Turin, and destroyed or damaged 54% of all buildings in the city.[25][26]

The Allied's campaign in Italy started off from the South and slowly moved northwards in the following two years, leaving the northern regions occupied by Germans and collaborationist forces for several years. Turin was not captured by the Allies until the end of Spring Offensive of 1945. By the time the vanguard of the armoured reconnaissance units of Brazilian Expeditionary Force reached the city, it was already freed by the Italian Partisans, that had begun revolting against the Germans on 25 April 1945. Days later, troops from the US Army's 1st Armored and 92nd Infantry Divisions came to substitute the Brazilians.[27][28]

In the postwar years, Turin was rapidly rebuilt. The city's automotive industry played a pivotal role in the Italian economic miracle of the 1950s and 1960s, attracting hundreds of thousands of immigrants to the city, particularly from the rural southern regions of Italy. The number of immigrants was so big that Turin was said to be "the third southern Italian city after Naples and Palermo". The population soon reached 1 million in 1960 and peaked at almost 1.2 million in 1971. The exceptional growth gains of the city gained it the nickname of Capitale dell'automobile (Automobile Capital), being often compared with Detroit, the major centre of the U.S. automobile industry (both cities has been "twinned" in 1998). In the 1970s and 1980s, the oil and automotive industry crisis severely hit the city, and its population began to sharply decline, losing more than one-fourth of its total in 30 years. The long population decline of the city has begun to reverse itself only in recent years, as the population grew from 865,000 to slightly over 900,000 by the end of the century. In 2006, Turin hosted the Winter Olympic Games.

Geography

 
Turin from space (north is on the left)

Turin is in northwest Italy. It is surrounded on the western and northern front by the Alps and on the eastern front by a high hill that is the natural continuation of the hills of Monferrato. Four major rivers pass through the city: the Po and three of its tributaries, the Dora Riparia (once known as Duria Minor by the Romans, from the Celtic noun duria meaning "water"), the Stura di Lanzo and the Sangone.

Climate

Located in northwestern Italy at the foot of the Alps, Turin features a mid-latitude, four seasons humid subtropical climate (Köppen: Cfa), similar to that of Grenoble, located not far away in the French Alps although Turin's average annual rainfall is lower.

Winters are moderately cold and dry, summers are mild in the hills and quite hot in the plains. Rain falls mostly during spring and autumn; during the hottest months, otherwise, rains are less frequent but heavier (thunderstorms are frequent). During the winter and autumn months banks of fog, which are sometimes very thick, form in the plains[29] but rarely on the city because of its location at the end of the Susa Valley. Snowfalls are not uncommon during the winter months, although substantial accumulation is quite uncommon.

Its position on the east side of the Alps makes the weather drier than on the west side because of the föhn wind effect.

The highest temperature ever recorded was 37.1 °C (98.8 °F), and the lowest was −21.8 °C (−7.2 °F).

Climate data for Torino Caselle Airport, 1971–2000 normals, extremes 1946–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 25.1
(77.2)
26.6
(79.9)
27.4
(81.3)
31.0
(87.8)
32.3
(90.1)
35.6
(96.1)
36.8
(98.2)
37.1
(98.8)
32.2
(90.0)
30.0
(86.0)
22.8
(73.0)
21.4
(70.5)
37.1
(98.8)
Average high °C (°F) 6.6
(43.9)
9.1
(48.4)
13.4
(56.1)
16.6
(61.9)
20.7
(69.3)
24.8
(76.6)
27.9
(82.2)
27.1
(80.8)
23.0
(73.4)
17.3
(63.1)
11.1
(52.0)
7.6
(45.7)
17.1
(62.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 2.0
(35.6)
4.3
(39.7)
8.1
(46.6)
11.1
(52.0)
15.5
(59.9)
19.4
(66.9)
22.4
(72.3)
21.8
(71.2)
17.8
(64.0)
12.4
(54.3)
6.5
(43.7)
3.1
(37.6)
12.0
(53.6)
Average low °C (°F) −2.5
(27.5)
−0.7
(30.7)
2.7
(36.9)
5.7
(42.3)
10.4
(50.7)
14.0
(57.2)
16.9
(62.4)
16.5
(61.7)
12.7
(54.9)
7.4
(45.3)
1.9
(35.4)
−1.6
(29.1)
7.0
(44.6)
Record low °C (°F) −18.5
(−1.3)
−21.8
(−7.2)
−10.5
(13.1)
−3.8
(25.2)
−2.3
(27.9)
4.3
(39.7)
6.6
(43.9)
6.3
(43.3)
1.8
(35.2)
−3.9
(25.0)
−8.2
(17.2)
−13.8
(7.2)
−21.8
(−7.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 47.8
(1.88)
47.1
(1.85)
72.5
(2.85)
113.3
(4.46)
145.3
(5.72)
104.3
(4.11)
70.5
(2.78)
76.1
(3.00)
83.8
(3.30)
106.1
(4.18)
69.1
(2.72)
45.1
(1.78)
981.0
(38.62)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 5.4 4.4 5.8 8.6 11.2 8.6 5.8 7.7 6.4 7.0 5.6 4.4 80.9
Average relative humidity (%) 75 75 67 72 75 74 72 73 75 79 80 80 75
Mean monthly sunshine hours 111.6 118.7 158.1 180.0 195.3 219.0 260.4 223.2 168.0 142.6 105.0 108.5 1,990.4
Source: Italian Air Force Meteorological Service[30][31][32]

Administration

 
Administrative map of Turin

Turin is split up into 8 boroughs, locally called circoscrizioni;[33] these do not necessarily correspond to the historical districts of the city, which are rather called quartieri, rioni, borghi, borgate or zone. The "circoscrizioni" system originally comprised 10 of them, that were reduced to 8 by merging borough 9 into 8, and 10 into 2.

The following list numerates the boroughs and the location of the historical districts inside them:[33]

  • Circoscrizione 1: Centro – Crocetta
  • Circoscrizione 2: Santa Rita – Mirafiori Nord – Mirafiori Sud
  • Circoscrizione 3: San Paolo – Cenisia – Pozzo Strada – Cit Turin – Borgata Lesna
  • Circoscrizione 4: San Donato – Campidoglio – Parella
  • Circoscrizione 5: Borgo Vittoria – Madonna di Campagna – Lucento – Vallette
  • Circoscrizione 6: Barriera di Milano – Regio Parco – Barca – Bertolla – Falchera – Rebaudengo – Villaretto
  • Circoscrizione 7: Aurora – Vanchiglia – Sassi – Madonna del Pilone
  • Circoscrizione 8: San Salvario – Cavoretto – Borgo Po – Nizza Millefonti – Lingotto – Filadelfia

The Mayor of Turin is directly elected every five years. The current mayor of the city is Stefano Lo Russo (PD), elected in 2021.

Cityscape

City centre

 
Via Roma

Turin's historical architecture is predominantly Baroque and was developed under the Kingdom of Savoy. Nonetheless, the main street of the city centre, Via Roma, was built during the Fascist era (from 1931 to 1937) as an example of Italian Rationalism, replacing former buildings already present in this area.

Via Roma runs between Piazza Carlo Felice and Piazza Castello. Buildings on the portion between Piazza Carlo Felice and Piazza San Carlo were designed by rationalist architect Marcello Piacentini. These blocks were built into a reticular system, composed by austere buildings in clear rationalist style, such as the impressive Hotel Principi di Piemonte and the former Hotel Nazionale in Piazza CLN. Porches are built in a continuous entablature and marked with double columns, to be consistent with those of Piazza San Carlo. The section of the street between Piazza San Carlo and Piazza Castello was built in an eclectic style, with arcades characterised by Serliana-type arches. To this day Via Roma is the street featuring the most fashionable boutiques of the city.

 
Piazza San Carlo and the Caval 'd Brons (Bronze Horse in Piedmontese language) equestrian monument to Emmanuel Philibert

Via Roma crosses one of the main squares of the city: the pedestrianized Piazza San Carlo, built by Carlo di Castellamonte in the 17th century. In the middle of the square stands the equestrian monument to Emmanuel Philibert, also known as Caval ëd Brons in the local dialect ("Bronze Horse"); the monument depicts the Duke sheathing his sword after the Battle of St. Quentin. Piazza San Carlo arcades host the most ancient cafés of the city, such as Caffé Torino and Caffé San Carlo.

 
Piazza Castello with Palazzo Reale (Royal Palace) in the background

On the northern edge of Via Roma stands Piazza Castello, regarded as the heart of the city. The half-pedestrianized square hosts some significant buildings such as Palazzo Reale (Former Savoy Royal House), the Palazzo Madama (which previously hosted the Savoy senate and, for few years, the Italian senate after Italian unification), the former Baroque Teatro Regio di Torino (rebuilt in modern style in the 1960s, after being destroyed by fire), the Royal Library of Turin which hosts the Leonardo da Vinci self-portrait, and the baroque Royal Church of San Lorenzo. Moreover, Piazza Castello hosts a Fascist era building, the Torre Littoria, a sort of skyscraper which was supposed to become the headquarters of the Fascist party, although it never served as such. The building's style is quite different from the Baroque style of Piazza Castello. The square regularly hosts the main open space events of the city, live concerts included.

 
Porta Nuova main railway station

As for the southern part of the street, Via Roma ends in Piazza Carlo Felice and in its Giardino Sambuy, a wide fenced garden right in the middle of the square. Across from Piazza Carlo Felice stands the monumental façade of Porta Nuova railway station, the central station of the city built between 1861 and 1868 by the architect Alessandro Mazzucchetti. The passengers building was renovated to host a shopping mall and more efficient passenger service offices. However, it is still an example of monumental architecture, with its stately foyer and some Baroque sights, such as the Sala Reale (the former Royal waiting room).

 
Piazza Vittorio Veneto square

In Piazza Castello converge some of the main streets of the city centre. Among them, one of the most significant is the arcaded Via Po, built by Amedeo di Castellamonte in 1868 and featuring some interesting buildings, such as the first and original building of the University of Turin and the historical Caffè Fiorio, which was the favourite café of the 19th-century politicians. Via Po ends in Piazza Vittorio Veneto (simply called Piazza Vittorio locally), the largest Baroque square in Europe and today heart of Turin nightlife. Piazza Vittorio features the most fashionable bars and not far from here, along the Po riverfront, the Murazzi quays used to host several bars and nightclubs open until the morning until a few years ago.

Parallel to Via Roma, the other two popular pedestrian streets, namely Via Lagrange and Via Carlo Alberto, cross the old town from Via Po to Corso Vittorio Emanuele II. Their recent pedestrianisation has improved their original commercial vocation. In particular, Via Lagrange has recently increased the presence of luxury boutiques. This street also hosts the Egyptian Museum of Turin, home to what is regarded as one of the largest collections of Egyptian antiquities outside of Egypt.

Via Lagrange and Via Carlo Alberto cross two significant squares of the city, respectively. The former crosses Piazza Carignano, well known mainly for the undulating “concave – convex-concave” Baroque façade of Palazzo Carignano. This building used to host the Parlamento Subalpino (the “Subalpine Parliament”, Parliament of the Kingdom of Sardinia which also became the Italian Parliament for a few years, after the Italian unification) and today houses the Museum of the Risorgimento. The square also features the Teatro Carignano, a well-conserved Baroque theatre. Via Carlo Alberto crosses Piazza Carlo Alberto, a big square hosting the rear façade of Palazzo Carignano, in eclectic style. On the other side stands the monumental Biblioteca Nazionale (National Library).

 
Mole Antonelliana some years ago

Not far from Via Po stands the symbol of Turin, namely the Mole Antonelliana, so named after the architect who built it, Alessandro Antonelli. Construction began in 1863 as a Jewish synagogue. Nowadays it houses the National Museum of Cinema and it is believed to be the tallest museum in the world at 167 metres (548 feet). The building is depicted on the Italian 2-cent coin.

 

Just behind Piazza Castello stands the Turin Cathedral, dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, which is the major church of the city. It was built during 1491–1498 and is adjacent to an earlier bell tower (1470). Annexed to the cathedral is the Chapel of the Holy Shroud, the current resting place of the Shroud of Turin. The chapel was added to the structure in 1668–1694, designed by Guarini. The Basilica of Corpus Domini was built to celebrate an alleged miracle which took place during the sack of the city in 1453, when a soldier was carrying off a monstrance containing the Blessed Sacrament; the monstrance fell to the ground, while the host remained suspended in air. The present church, erected in 1610 to replace the original chapel which stood on the spot, is the work of Ascanio Vitozzi.

Next to the Turin Cathedral stand the Palatine Towers, an ancient Roman-medieval structure that served as one of four Roman city gates along the city walls of Turin. This gate allowed access from north to the cardo maximus, the typical second main street of a Roman town. The Palatine Towers are among the best preserved Roman remains in Northern Italy. Close to this site, the 51,300-square-metre (552,189-square-foot) Piazza della Repubblica plays host to the biggest open market in Europe, locally known as mercato di Porta Palazzo (Porta Palazzo or Porta Pila are the historical and local names of this area).

West of the Porte Palatine stands the Quadrilatero Romano (Roman Quadrilateral), the old medieval district recently renewed. The current neighbourhood is characterised by its tiny streets and its several medieval buildings and today it is popular for its aperitivo bars and its small shops run by local artisans. The hub of the Quadrilatero is Piazza Emanuele Filiberto.

South of the Quadrilatero Romano stands Via Garibaldi, another popular street of the city. It is a 1 km (0.6 mi) pedestrian street between Piazza Castello and Piazza Statuto which features some of the old shops of the city. Large Piazza Statuto is another example of Baroque square with arcades.

Another main street of downtown is Via Pietro Micca, which starts in Piazza Castello and ends in the large Piazza Solferino. The street continues in Via Cernaia up to Piazza XXV Dicembre, which features the former Porta Susa passengers building, relocated in 2012 a little more southward. The new and larger passengers building is situated between Corso Bolzano and Corso Inghilterra and is an example of contemporary architecture, being a 300-metre-long (980-foot) and 19-metre-high (62-foot) glass and steel structure. Porta Susa is currently the international central station of the city (high speed trains to Paris) and it is becoming the central hub of railway transportation of the city, being the station in which local trains (so-called Ferrovie Metropolitane), national trains and high-speed national and international trains converge.

Close to Via Cernaia stands the Cittadella (Citadel), in the Andrea Guglielminetti garden. What remains of the old medieval and modern fortress of the city, it is a starting point for a tour into the old tunnels below the city.

San Salvario

Southeast of the city centre stands San Salvario district, which extends from Corso Vittorio Emanuele II to Corso Bramante and is delimited by the Turin-Genoa railway on the west side and by the Po river on the east side. Home to an increasing immigrants' community, the district is an example of integration among different cultures; it also features an incremented nightlife after the opening of several low-cost bars and restaurants.

San Salvario is crossed by two main roads, Via Nizza and Via Madama Cristina, and just as the city centre it is characterised by the grid plan typical of Turin's old neighbourhoods. The hub of the district is Piazza Madama Cristina which hosts a big open market, while several commercial activities flourish around it.

The celebrated Parco del Valentino is situated in the east side of San Salvario and, albeit not in downtown, it represents kind of central park of Turin. Thanks to the vicinity to the city centre, the park is very popular among the local people, during the day but also at night, because of the several bars and nightclubs placed here. From the terraces of Parco del Valentino, many sights of the hills on the other side of the river can be appreciated.

In the centre of the park stands the Castello del Valentino, built in the 17th century. This castle has a horseshoe shape, with four rectangular towers, one at each angle, and a wide inner court with a marble pavement. The ceilings of the false upper floors are in transalpino (i.e. French) style. The façade sports the huge coat of arms of the House of Savoy. Today, Castello del Valentino serves as the faculty of Architecture of the Polytechnic University of Turin.

Another cluster of buildings in the park is the Borgo Medioevale (Medieval village), a replica of medieval mountain castles of Piedmont and Aosta Valley, built for the 1884 International Exhibition.

Other buildings in Corso Massimo d'Azeglio include the Torino Esposizioni complex (Turin's exhibition hall built in the 1930s) featuring a monumental entrance with a large full height porch, a main hall designed by Pier Luigi Nervi in reinforced concrete, and the Teatro Nuovo, a theatre mostly focused on ballet exhibitions. Another building is the largest synagogue of the city, in Piazzetta Primo Levi, a square. Its architecture stands in the main sight of the city, as characterised by four large towers – 27 metres (89 feet) high – topped by four onion-shaped domes.

Crocetta

 
Monumento a Vittorio Emanuele II
 
The Spina Centrale is a new under-construction boulevard built over the undergrounded railway. It is already completed in Crocetta.

South of Centro stands the Crocetta district, considered one of the most exclusive districts of the city, because of highly rated residential buildings. At the heart of the district is the partially pedestrianised area crossed by Corso Trieste, Corso Trento and Corso Duca D'Aosta, plenty of some notable residential buildings in eclectic, neo-Gothic and Art Nouveau style. The area was built between 1903 and 1937 replacing the old parade ground, which was moved in the Southern part of the city.

North of this area stands the GAM (Galleria d'Arte Moderna), one of the two Museum of Modern Arts of the Turin Metro area (the second and largest one is hosted in Castello di Rivoli, a former Savoy Royal castle in the suburbs). The Museum stands in front a huge monument situated in the centre of the roundabout between Corso Vittorio Emanuele II and Corso Galileo Ferraris: the Monument to Vittorio Emanuele II, a King of Savoy statue situated on a 39-meters high column. Next to the Museum, another significant residential building previously hosted the head office of Juventus, one of the two main Turin football clubs.

West of this area, the main building of Polytechnic University of Turin stands along Corso Duca Degli Abruzzi. The 1958 building, a 122,000-square-metre (1,313,197-square-foot) complex, hosts approximately 30,000 students and is considered one of the major Institutes of Technology of the country – mainly due to the vocation of the city for the industrialisation, pushed by the automotive sector. This institute recently expanded in the western district of Cenisia with additional modern buildings.

Crocetta is crossed by large and modern avenues, such as Corso Duca degli Abruzzi, Corso Galileo Ferraris, and Corso Einaudi. These avenues feature long rows of trees, symbolic of Turin's typical urbanity. However, the most popular avenue is Corso De Gasperi, which, albeit smaller than other avenues of the district, hosts one of the most fashionable open markets of the city, the so-called Mercato della Crocetta, in which it is possible to find some discounted branded clothing among the more popular ones.

The Western border of Crocetta is instead an example of contemporary architecture. The huge avenue, made up of Corso Mediterraneo and Corso Castelfidardo, is part of Spina Centrale boulevard and was recently built over the old railway (now undergrounded): as a result, the avenue is very large (up to 60 metres (200 feet)) and modern, having been rebuilt with valuable materials, including a characteristic lighting system supported by white high poles. This avenue hosts some examples of contemporary art, such as Mario Merz's Igloo fountain or the Per Kirkeby's Opera per Torino monument in Largo Orbassano.

The East side of the district is also known as Borgo San Secondo named after the church of the same name standing in Via San Secondo, a major street in the neighbourhood. This is near Porta Nuova railway station and is older than the rest of the district, featuring several apartment buildings from the late 19th century, to include the birthplace and home of author Primo Levi on Corso Re Umberto.[34] A local open market is held in Piazza San Secondo and along Via Legnano. The market square also hosts the former washhouse and public baths of the neighbourhood, among the oldest examples of their kind in Turin (1905).

One of the main thoroughfares crossing Borgo San Secondo is Via Sacchi, which serves as an ideal gate to the city centre: its Serlian arcades on the west side of the street (the east side is enclosed by Porta Nuova railway station service buildings) host some significant boutiques and hotels, such as the historic Pfatisch pastry shop and the Turin Palace Hotel (totally refurbished and reopened in 2015). South of Via Sacchi, Ospedale Mauriziano is one of the ancient and major hospitals of the city. Going further southwards, it is possible to appreciate an interesting residential cluster of old public housing gravitating around Via Arquata.

Cenisia

 
The Piazza Carlo Alberto
 
A heating power plant

Bordered by Corso Castelfidardo, Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, Corso Trapani and Corso Peschiera, this small district is mainly significant for hosting the recent expansion of Turinese Institute of Technology Politecnico. The expansion was possible after under-grounding the railway under Corso Castelfidardo and the subsequent disposal of the old buildings dedicated to the train maintenance present in this area (so-called Officine Grandi Riparazioni or OGR). Politecnico expanded its facilities through two huge overpass buildings over the avenue, linked to new buildings on the west side. This cluster of buildings forms an evocative square with a unique architectural style. The main building on the west side hosts a General Motors research centre, the General Motors Global Propulsion Systems (formerly known as General Motors Powertrain Europe). Politecnico area extends until Via Boggio with further facilities hosted in the former OGR facilities. The Institute plans to further build new facilities in the current parking area.

North of Politecnico facilities, the main building of the OGR former cluster, which consists in three 180-meters long joint parallel buildings, became recently a big open space which hosts temporary exhibitions and during the hot seasons, its external spaces became a fashionable site to have a typical Italian aperitivo.

North of OGR, a former prison complex called Le Nuove is a significant example of old European prison building. The complex was built between 1857 and 1869 during the reign of Victor Emmanuel II. After being disposed of during the 1990s, the complex was changed into a museum and it is possible to visit its facilities.

An example of contemporary art is the heating plant in Corso Ferrucci, which has been covered with aluminium panels. Another building (19th century), now abandoned, is the former Westinghouse factory of train brakes situated in Via Borsellino.

The residential and business zone of the district sprawls westward, beyond the former - now demolished - customs wall (cinta daziaria), which previously separated the city from the mainly rural landscape that marked the outskirts of Turin until the late 19th century. Urban planning outside the local city gate (so-called barriera di San Paolo) led to the construction of an industrial and working class neighborhood in the early 20th century, although factories have long been discontinued, torn down or converted to other uses nowadays. Together with San Paolo district, Cenisia hosts an extensive street market along Corso Racconigi, which is locally known as the longest street market in Europe.

Cit Turin

 
Casa della Vittoria (1918–1920) is an example of Turin's neo-gothic architecture.

The smallest district of the city is Cit Turin ("Little Turin" in Piedmontese language). This small triangle surrounded by Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, Corso Francia and Corso Inghilterra hosts some high rated residential buildings and is regarded as a prestigious residential neighbourhood by local people.

 
Intesa Sanpaolo banking group headquarters

The district features many buildings in Art Nouveau, Art Deco and Neo-Gothic style. Among them, one of the most impressive and well known is the Casa della Vittoria (architect Gottardo Gussoni). Another notable example is Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur. Both buildings face Corso Francia.

The district is well known for its commercial vocation mainly in its two main streets, Via Duchessa Jolanda and Via Principi d'Acaja, ideally crossing each other among the gardens Giardino Luigi Martini, locally called Piazza Benefica, which hosts a popular open market.

The district is also characterised by two massive recent buildings: the Palazzo di Giustizia, Turin's new courthouse built in the 1990s (in a 350-metre long facility), and the first real skyscraper of Turin, the Torre Intesa Sanpaolo,[35] which house the headquarters of one of the major Italian private banks.

San Donato

 
Chiesa di Nostra Signora del Suffragio e Santa Zita

San Donato district is between Corso Francia, Corso Lecce, Corso Potenza, Via Nole, the Parco Dora and Corso Principe Oddone. It was populated since the medieval era, but becomes bigger during the 19th century, prospering around the canal Canale di San Donato, which does not exist any more, currently replaced by the central street of the district, Via San Donato. Buildings in the district are relatively recent (around 1820), except for the oldest group of small houses in the Brusachœr neighbourhood (Palazzo Forneris building) along Via Pacinotti near the small Piazza Paravia. The conservation of the street and of this old building influences the straightness of Via San Donato, which makes a slight curve to result in parallel with Via Pacinotti before ending in central Piazza Statuto square.

Main church of the district is the Chiesa di Nostra Signora del Suffragio e Santa Zita, which with its 83 metres (272 feet) height of its bell tower, is well known to be the fifth tallest structure in the city of Turin, after the Mole Antonelliana, the Intesa-Sanpaolo skyscraper, the Torre Littoria and the two pennons of the Juventus Stadium. The church is hosting the Istituto Suore Minime di Nostra Signora del Suffragio and it was promoted and designed by Francesco Faà di Bruno. The legend says, that he wanted to build the tallest bell tower of the town and put a clock on the top, to all the poor people to know the time for free. The small building near the church is what remains of Casa Tartaglino, a small residential building which was also extended and modified by Faa di Bruno.

Villino Cibrario in Via Saccarelli is another significant building designed by Barnaba Panizza in 1842. The building was equipped with a large garden which was eliminated to host the street. The neighbourhood has a high concentration of historic buildings in Art Nouveau style designed by architect Pietro Fenoglio (among the others, the prestigious Villino Raby in Corso Francia 8). Other significant buildings are the Villa Boringhieri in Via San Donato, and other Art Nouveau and Neo-Gothic buildings are situated in Via Piffetti and Via Durandi.

Among the modern buildings of the district, the most significant one is, of course, the Torre BBPR Tower (which took the name from the architecture office who designed it). The building is representing the post-rationalism Italian architecture (same style of the better known Torre Velasca tower in the city of Milan). The tower is facing the central Piazza Statuto square. The district is crossed by some significant avenues: on Corso Svizzera, which crosses the district from North To South, faces the Business Centre Piero Della Francesca, where the offices of Tuttosport, one of the three national sports daily newspapers has its head offices. Also on Corso Svizzera, stands one of the oldest hospitals of the city, the Ospedale Amedeo di Savoia, specialised in infectious diseases. Other major avenues are Corso Umbria and Corso Tassoni.

Another big avenue, which borders the district on its East, is Corso Principe Oddone, which in the past was along the railway to Milan. Currently the railway has been under-grounded: the avenue will be enlarged and have same architecture style of southern Corso Inghilterra in downtown, becoming one of the major avenue of Turin. The northern part of the district was part of the former industrial district of Turin, recently reconverted to a park called Parco Dora. Mainly, in San Donato the portion reconverted was the one occupied by the plant of Michelin (west of Via Livorno) and FIAT ironwork plants (on the East). Differently for other portions of Parco Dora, this part has been totally reconverted to park without letting any evidence of the industrial area except for the cooling tower which stands along Corso Umbria and became a symbol of the park. Works are completed in the western area, where Corso Mortara has been closed to traffic and moved just a bit northern and covered by an artificial tunnel. It is possible to access the southern shore of the Dora river. South of the Park, an interesting architecture of different levels is hosting a new shopping mall called Centro Commerciale Parco Dora. East of Via Livorno, works are still partially in progress, with the Dora river still to be uncovered by a big slab, on which the FIAT plants used to stand). West of Via Livorno, the Environment Park is a research centre for renewable energy.

Aurora

 
Tiny streets of Borgo Dora

Aurora is one of the most ancient districts which developed out of the medieval city walls, north of the historical city centre. It stretches from downtown northern boundaries in Corso Regina Margherita (an extended and important thoroughfare of Turin) up to Corso Vigevano and Corso Novara in the North Side (namely the old excise boundary until the early 20th century); the western boundary is Corso Principe Oddone (now part of the Spina Centrale boulevard) and the eastern border is the Dora river.

The district was named Aurora after the so-called Cascina Aurora, an old farmstead lying north of the Dora river, right at the intersection between Corso Giulio Cesare and Corso Emilia. The farmstead has long been demolished and the area has been converted to office buildings, hosting the Turinese textile company Gruppo Finanziario Tessile (GFT) headquarters until the early 21st century.

The historical hub of the district is Borgo Dora (The "Dora Borough"), a small neighbourhood next to Porta Palazzo and enclosed by Corso Regina Margherita, Via Cigna, the Dora river and Corso Giulio Cesare. Once known as Borgo del Pallone (literally "Ball Borough") or Balon in Piedmontese dialect (locally [baˈlun]), this neighbourhood is famous for its mercatino del Balon or simply Balon, the Turinese flea market that opens every Saturday in its tiny and twisted streets. Borgo Dora hosts several remarkable places, such as: Piccola Casa della Divina Provvidenza ("Little House of the Divine Providence"), also known as Cottolengo, a well-known charitable organization which has been operating for almost 200 years in the city; Arsenale della Pace ("Arsenal of Peace"), a former weapons factory that currently hosts the headquarters of SERMIG (Servizio Missionario Giovani), a nonprofit association which assists poor and homeless people; Caserma Cavalli ("Cavalli Barracks"), one of the most representative buildings of the district, a former barracks topped by a clock tower which now hosts Scuola Holden, a storytelling and performing arts school; the evocative Cortile del Maglio ("Mallet Courtyard"), a covered pedestrian area featuring bars and clubs. Across from Cortile del Maglio and Arsenale della Pace stands a wide pedestrian area which features a hot air balloon, a clear allusion to the neighbourhood's old name Balon: recently installed, the balloon is open to public which can now take an interesting view of the city from this new high observation point.

Right at the borders of Borgo Dora stands part of Porta Palazzo open market which hosts the New Exhibition Hall, designed by the Italian architect Massimiliano Fuksas. The building has replaced the Clothes Market, one of the four covered pavilions of Porta Palazzo market, but unfortunately, this glass green-shaded building has been highly criticized because of its lack of usability for commercial activities, albeit an example of contemporary architecture.

Another interesting building at the borders of the neighbourhood is Porta Milano (a.k.a. stazione della Ciriè-Lanzo), a former 19th-century railway station that marked the terminus of Ciriè-Lanzo railway line until the 1980s. To this day, the station is no longer in use as well as the rails up to Piazza Baldissera. The station building was recently renovated and now hosts some old locomotives, even though it is not open to the public. Unfortunately, the old rails crossing the district are totally disused and neglected, adding decay to the whole area.

Borgo Dora, as many other pockets of Aurora, is characterized by the marked multi-ethnicity of its population, being home to a large community of immigrants from emerging countries.

 
Santuario di Maria Ausiliatrice

West of Borgo Dora stands Rione Valdocco ("Valdocco neighbourhood"), enclosed by Via Cigna, Corso Regina Margherita, Corso Principe Oddone and the Dora river. This neighbourhood hosts the significant architecture of Santuario di Maria Ausiliatrice ("Maria Ausiliatrice Sanctuary") in the homonymous square and behind the church stands San Pietro in Vincoli old cemetery.

Overall, the main thoroughfares of the West side of Aurora are Via Cigna, which crosses the district from North to South, Corso Vercelli, a historical avenue starting north of the Dora river, and Corso Principe Oddone, part of the long Spina Centrale boulevard that will be built over the underground Turin-Milan railway. However, the Spina Centrale project is proceeding slowly because of the lack of funds and the boulevard is still occupied by a large worksite along its span. Once completed, Aurora district will be connected to Eastern San Donato, thanks to a better connection among the roads of the two adjacent districts (i.e. Corso Ciriè will continue in Corso Gamba and Strada del Fortino in Corso Rosai).

As for the rest of Aurora, the district is crossed by an important thoroughfare named Corso Giulio Cesare, a long boulevard that extends from Porta Palazzo up to Turin-Trieste motorway entrance in the Northern urban fringe of Turin. Other significant roads are Corso Palermo, Via Bologna and Corso Regio Parco, mostly in the East side of Aurora which is known as Borgo Rossini ("Rossini Borough"). Albeit not a road, the Dora river is also a significant element for the whole district, since it completely crosses it from West to East.

 
Lavazza, famous Turin coffee brand

The area north of the river features a mix of old residential buildings and remains of former factories and facilities from the 20th century. An example are the remains of FIAT Officine Grandi Motori (OGM) in Corso Vigevano, an old factory that produced big industrial and automotive Diesel engines, a sort of symbol of the industrial history of Turin. Another disused facility is Astanteria Martini ("Martini Emergency Department") in Via Cigna, a former emergency department from the 1920s which has been lying vacant since long.

As for the old residential buildings of the area, this part of Aurora hosts the oldest public housing block of the city, built by Istituto Autonomo Case Popolari (IACP) in 1908 in lieu of an old dilapidated small farm once known as Chiabotto delle Merle.

Despite its run-down look, the famous Lavazza coffee company, along with IAAD School of Design, chose this part of the city as the location for their new headquarters, which will be built in a contemporary building dubbed Nuvola ("Cloud") right at the borders of Borgo Rossini. Designed by the architect Gino Zucchi, this project is still a work in progress but excavations in the area revealed the remains of a medieval cemetery and an early Christian basilica; these findings will be preserved and will be shown to the public.

Borgo Rossini hosts a number of businesses, for instance, the Robe di Kappa flagship store (Kappa is a noted Italian sportswear brand founded in Turin) and the Cineporto ("Cineport") a.k.a. La Casa dei Produttori ("The Filmmakers' House", which hosts the Turin Piedmont Film Commission Foundation).

Vanchiglia

 
Piedmont Region Headquarters (209 m), one of the tallest skyscrapers in Italy
 
Fetta Di Polenta, northern side

Vanchiglia is bordered by Corso San Maurizio, Corso Regio Parco and the Po river, crossed also by the Dora Riparia river and by two big avenues, Corso Regina Margherita and Corso Tortona.

Borgo Vanchiglia is the historical district: a little triangle next to downtown, situated between Corso San Maurizio, Corso Regina Margherita and the Po river. The district is quite popular nowadays because being quite closer to the heart of Turin nightlife Piazza Vittorio Veneto, many bars and restaurants opened recently in this area. However, Vanchiglia also includes the area called Vanchiglietta, north of Borgo Vanchiglia.

Notable church in Borgo Vanchiglia is the French neo-Gothic Chiesa di Santa Giulia situated into Piazza Santa Giulia.

A notable and unusual building in the area is the so-called "Fetta di Polenta" (literally: "polenta slice"), formerly known as Casa Scaccabarozzi. This building is where Corso San Maurizio meets Via Giulia di Barolo, and it is one of the most peculiar examples of Turin architecture: a thin trapezoid 27 meters wide on Via Giulia Di Barolo, 5 meters on Corso San Maurizio and just 0.70 meters wide on the opposite end. It was designed in 1840 by Alessandro Antonelli for his wife, Francesca Scaccabarozzi, probably because of a bet.[citation needed] The curious name comes from the shape of the palace, which resembles a "slice of polenta", and also because it is painted with an ocher colour.

In the surroundings, in Via Vanchiglia 8, (although in downtown and not really in Vanchiglia anymore) there is another trapezoid house, albeit with less extreme design: similarly, this building is nicknamed "Fetta di Formaggio" (cheese slice), built in 1832 for the rich Marchese Birago di Vische by the architect Antonio Talentino.

Other notable buildings are the town public baths, eclectic building built in 1905 (Corso Regina Margherita crossing Via Vanchiglia), and theTeatro della Caduta theatre, opened in 2003 in Via Michele Buniva 23, which with its 45 seats is the smallest theatre in Turin and among the smallest theatres in Europe.

In Corso Regina Margherita, another notable building is the former Opera pia Reynero, a charitable organization. The building was built in 1892. Being abandoned for a long time after it closed in 1996, it was then occupied by the Askatasuna Social Center, a non-profit anarchic organization, hosting since then various activities such as concerts, dinners, seminars and homeless solidarity initiatives.

 
Campus Luigi Einaudi

North of Corso Regina Margherita, district is losing the flavour and architecture typical of Turin downtown, cause a significant portion of the district was formerly occupied by factories, nowadays partially abandoned or replaced by modern buildings. A significant example was the area occupied by gas companies between Corso Regina Margherita and the Dora river, which were partially demolished to make place to the new modern Faculty of Law building (Campus "Luigi Einaudi"), designed by the architect Norman Foster. This building was classified by the American television company CNN among the 10 most spectacular university buildings in the world.[36] In the campus courtyard, a large wood statue representing a bull (symbol of Turin) has been erected by Mario Ceroli. The area hosts also a student campus.

Next to the campus, a new cycling and pedestrian bridge on the Dora river was opened on 16 April 2010, linking the campus area to Corso Verona. Parco Colletta is a big park area touched by the two rivers of the district, which also hosts some sport facilities, mainly football fields and a swimming pool.

The district is completed by the Cimitero Monumentale cemetery. This huge complex (formerly known as Cimitero Generale) is the largest cemetery in Turin, and among the first in Italy for the number of buried people (over 400,000). It is close to the Colletta park. The ancient part of the cemetery rises from the main entrance of Corso Novara with his octagonal shape. It contains numerous historical tombs and 12  km of arcades, enriched by artistic sculptures (that's why it is called a "monumental cemetery"). Over the years there have been subsequent extensions of the central historical body in the direction of the Colletta park. In the cemetery, there is a crematory temple built in 1882, one of the largest in Italy.

Main churches

The Santuario della Consolata, a sanctuary much frequented by pilgrims, stands on the site of the tenth-century Monastery of St. Andrew, and is a work by Guarini. It was sumptuously restored in 1903. Outside the city are: the Basilica of Our Lady, Help of Christians built by St. John Bosco, the Gran Madre built in 1818 on occasion of the return of King Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia and Santa Maria del Monte (1583) on Monte dei Cappuccini.

In the hills overlooking the city, the Basilica of Superga provides a view of Turin against a backdrop of the snow-capped Alps. The basilica holds the tombs of many of the dukes of Savoy, as well as many of the kings of Sardinia. Superga can be reached by means of the Superga Rack Railway from Sassi suburb. The Basilica of Superga was built by Amadeus II of Savoy as an ex-voto for the liberation of Turin (1706), and served as a royal mausoleum since 1772.[37]

Villas, parks and gardens

 
The medieval village in Valentino Park

The most popular park in the city is Parco del Valentino. In 1961, during the celebrations of Italia61 (Italian unification centenary), an important international exhibition (FLOR61: Flowers of the world in Turin) took place in the park with 800 exhibitors from 19 countries. For the occasion the plan for the new lighting of the park, along with its fountains and paths, was assigned to Guido Chiarelli, the head engineer at the city hall.

Other large parks are Parco della Pellerina, Parco Colletta, Parco Rignon, Parco Colonnetti and the University botanical gardens. Around the city are several other parks such as La Mandria Regional Park and the Parco della Palazzina di Caccia di Stupinigi, once hunting grounds of the Savoy, and those on the hills of Turin. Many parks are smaller, in the various districts: there is also a total of 240 playgrounds in these parks. In the early 1960s, mayor Amedeo Peyron had the first garden in Italy with games for children inaugurated. According to a Legambiente report from 2007, Turin is the first Italian city as far as structures and policies on childcare are concerned.[38] One of the most famous parks featuring a children's playground is Parco della Tesoriera, which is also home to Andrea della Corte Municipal Music Library; this facility is housed in Villa Tesoriera, built in 1715 and once the Royal Treasurer's residence. The park is in the Parella suburb (Turin's West Side) and hosts many concerts in summer.

Rosa Vercellana, commonly known as Rosina and, in Piedmontese as La Bela Rosin ("the beautiful Rosin"), was the mistress and later wife of King Victor Emmanuel II. She was made Countess of Mirafiori and Fontanafredda, but never Queen of Italy. As the Savoy family refused to allow her to be buried next to her husband in the Pantheon, her children had a mausoleum built for her in a similar form and on a smaller scale in Turin, next to the road to the Castello di Mirafiori. The circular copper-domed neoclassical monument, surmounted by a Latin cross and surrounded by a large park, was designed by Angelo Dimezzi and completed in 1888.[39][40]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1901 329,691—    
1911 415,667+26.1%
1921 499,823+20.2%
1931 590,753+18.2%
1936 629,115+6.5%
1951 719,300+14.3%
1961 1,025,822+42.6%
1971 1,167,968+13.9%
1981 1,117,154−4.4%
1991 962,507−13.8%
2001 865,263−10.1%
2011 872,367+0.8%
2015 897,265+2.9%
Source: ISTAT 2001

In 2009, the city proper had a population of about 910,000, which is a significant increase on the 2001 census figure. This result is due to a growing immigration from Southern Italy and abroad. Approximately 13.5 per cent (122.946) of the population is composed of foreigners, the largest numbers coming from Romania (51,017), Morocco (22,511), Albania (9,165), China (5,483), and Moldova (3,417).[41] Like many Northern Italian cities, there is a large proportion of pensioners in comparison to youth. Around 18 per cent of the population is under 20 years of age, while 22 per cent is over 65.[42] The population of the Turin urban area totals 1.7 million inhabitants, ranking fourth in Italy, while the Turin metropolitan area has a population of 2.2 million inhabitants. The median age is 43.7.[6]

Largest groups of foreign residents[43]
Nationality Population (2020)
  Romania 49,644 (−1,590 units)
  Morocco 16,808 (+212 units)
  China 7,511 (+3 units)
  Peru 7,195 (−76 units)
  Nigeria 5,489 (+72 units)
  Egypt 5,450 (+390 units)
  Albania 5,360 (+15 units)
  Philippines 3,778 (−23 units)
  Moldova 3,331 (−244 units)
  Bangladesh 1,949 (+213 units)
  Senegal 1,901 (+84 units)
  Brazil 1,698 (+6 unit)
  Tunisia 1,258 (+45 units)
  Iran 1,204 (+197 units)
  Pakistan 1,198 (+62 units)
  Algeria 1,173 (+16 units)
  Ecuador 1,118 (−70 units)
other countries each <1000

Economy

 
The Lingotto building in Via Nizza, the world headquarters of Fiat

Turin developed as a Fordist city in the early twentieth century, which meant a shift from a service-based economy to an industry-based one.[44] In the vein of many Fordist economies Turin's economy relies heavily upon its automotive and aerospace industries.[45][46] Despite the general decline of the automotive industry since the oil crisis of 1973, the city still relies heavily upon its automotive industry. Since before the second world war, the automotive industry has been the largest employer in the city, and almost all exports from Turin are manufactured goods.[45][47] The city serves as the headquarters to Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino; Turin Italian Automobiles Factory), which has since been absorbed by its parent company, the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles group (now Stellantis) headquartered in Amsterdam, the eighth largest automotive company in the world.[48] Turin is still home to a sizeable Fiat factory.[49]

From the 1980s Turin diversified its economy and is shifting back towards a service economy. Tech and innovation industries are booming in Turin, which was ranked third in number of innovative startups and firms in the information-tech sector, and has some of the most patent applications to the European Patent Office of any city.[45][50] In 2008 the city generated a GDP of $68 billion, ranking as the world's 78th richest city by purchasing power,[51] and 16th in Europe, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers.[52] Turin accounts for 8 percent of Italy's GDP.[53] The city has been ranked in 2010 by Globalization and World Cities Research Network as a Gamma-level city.

Other companies operating in Turin are Maserati, Lancia, Alfa Romeo, Iveco, Pininfarina, Bertone, Sparco, Italdesign Giugiaro, New Holland, Comau, Magneti Marelli, Graziano Oerlikon, Ghia, Fioravanti (automotive), Rai (national broadcasting company), Banca Investis, FCA Bank, Intesa Sanpaolo, Reale Mutua (finance), Invicta, Kappa, Superga (fashion), Ferrero, Lavazza, Martini & Rossi (food & beverage), Alpitour (hospitality and tourism), TILab (ex-CSELT), and Aurora (pen manufacturer).

The city is also well known for its aerospace industry Alenia Aeronautica, Thales Alenia Space and Avio. The International Space Station modules Harmony, Columbus, Tranquility, as well as the Cupola and all MPLMs were produced in Turin. The future European launcher projects beyond Ariane 5 will also be managed from Turin by the new NGL company, a subsidiary of EADS (70%) and Aircraft Division of Leonardo (30%).

Culture

Visual art and museums

 
The royal hunting lodge of Stupinigi.
 
The inside of the Egyptian Museum of Turin. It is the world's second largest after the Museum of Cairo.

Turin, as the former capital of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the Kingdom of Italy, is home of the Savoy Residences. In addition to the 17th-century Royal Palace, built for Madama Reale Christine Marie of France (the official residence of the Savoys until 1865) there are many palaces, residences and castles in the city centre and in the surrounding towns. Turin is home to Palazzo Chiablese, the Royal Armoury, the Royal Library, Palazzo Madama, Palazzo Carignano, Villa della Regina, and the Valentino Castle. The complex of the Residences of the Royal House of Savoy in Turin and in the nearby cities of Rivoli, Moncalieri, Venaria Reale, Agliè, Racconigi, Stupinigi, Pollenzo and Govone was declared a World Heritage Sites by UNESCO in 1997. In recent years, Turin has become an increasingly popular tourist destination, ranking 203rd in the world and tenth in Italy in 2008, with about 240,000 tourist arrivals.[15]

The Egyptian Museum of Turin specialises in archaeology and anthropology, in particular the Art of Ancient Egypt. It is home to what is regarded as one of the largest collections of Egyptian antiquities outside of Egypt. In 2006 it received more than 500,000 visitors.[54] The Museum of Oriental Art houses one of the most important Asian art collections in Italy.[55][56]

Other museums include the National Museum of Cinema, the Museo Nazionale dell'Automobile, the J-Museum, the Museum of Human Anatomy Luigi Rolando, the Museo delle Marionette (puppet museum) and the Museo Nazionale della Montagna (National Museum of the Mountains). Art museums include the Sabauda Gallery, the Museo Civico d'Arte Antica, Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli, the Accademia Albertina, and the Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art.

After it had been little more than a town for a long time, in 1559 the Duke Emmanuel Philibert of Savoy made Turin the capital of his domains. The Duke had the ambition to transform the city into a major artistic and cultural capital, and in the following centuries numerous artists were to work at the Savoy court, especially architects and planners like Carlo di Castellamonte and his son Amedeo, Guarino Guarini and, in the 18th century, Filippo Juvarra and Benedetto Alfieri.

As for the painting and the visual arts, Turin became a point of reference, especially in the 20th century. In the 1920s, the painter Felice Casorati inspired a number of students called The group of six of Turin and these included Carlo Levi, Henry Paolucci, Gigi Chessa, Francis Menzio, Nicola Galante and Jessie Boswell. Artists born in Turin include the sculptor Umberto Mastroianni and the architect Carlo Mollino. Between the 1960s and the 1970s, the international centre of Turin (Arte Povera), the presence in the city of artists like Alighiero Boetti, Mario Merz, Giuseppe Penone, Piero Gilardi and Michelangelo Pistoletto. In those years there was a strong artistic influence of designer Armando Testa. Artists currently operating in the city include Ugo Nespolo and Carol Rama.

Music

 
Teatro Regio opera house.

The city's main opera house is Teatro Regio di Torino, where Puccini premiered his La Bohème in 1896. It was burned down in 1936 and was rebuilt after World War II.

 
Street posters promoting the Eurovision Song Contest 2022.

On 8 October 2021, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and RAI announced that the city would host the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, following Italy's victory at the 2021 contest in Rotterdam, Netherlands with the song “Zitti e buoni”, performed by Måneskin. The contest took place at the Pala Alpitour, with both semi-finals of the contest took place on 10 and 12 May, and the grand final on 14 May. It was the first time that Turin has hosted the contest and the third time that Italy has hosted the contest overall, with the last being in Rome in 1991.[57]

Literature

 
National Library.

A literary centre for many centuries, Turin began to attract writers only after the establishment of the court of the Dukes of Savoy. One of the most famous writers of the 17th century was Giambattista Marino, which in 1608 moved to the court of Charles Emmanuel I. Marino suffered an assassination attempt by a rival, Gaspare Murtola, and was later imprisoned for a year because of gossip that he had said and written against the duke. Perhaps, because of this, in 1615 Marino left Turin and moved to France.

The main literary figures during the Baroque age in Turin were Emanuele Tesauro and Alessandro Tassoni. In the next century Torino hosted the poet Vittorio Alfieri from Asti for a while. The situation was very different in the 19th century, especially since the city became a point of reference for Italian unification and, subsequently, the capital of the Kingdom of Italy. Indeed, in those years Tommaseo, Settembrini and John Meadows resided in the city. A major literary and cultural woman of that time was Olimpia Savio. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Turin was home to writers such as Guido Gozzano, Edmondo De Amicis, Emilio Salgari and Dino Segre, the latter known by the pseudonym of Pitigrilli.

Turin had a very important role in Italian literature after World War II. A major publishing house, Giulio Einaudi, published works by authors such as Cesare Pavese, Italo Calvino, Vitaliano Brancati, Primo Levi, Natalia Ginzburg, Fernanda Pivano, Beppe Fenoglio, Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini. In more recent years, writers active in the city are Giovanni Arpino, Nico Orengo, Giuseppe Culicchia, Margherita Oggero, Laura Mancinelli, Alessandra Montrucchio, Alessandro Perissinotto, Guido Quartz, Piero Soria and Alessandro Baricco. Baricco was also among the founders of the Scuola Holden, dedicated to writing techniques teaching.

In the local Piedmontese language has a literary tradition, with names such as Nicoletto da Torino, Ignas Isler, author of epic poems, and Eduard Calv.

Religion

The city is home to the well-known Shroud of Turin: a linen cloth bearing the image of a man who appears to have suffered physical trauma in a manner consistent with crucifixion. It is kept in the royal chapel of the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist in the city centre. The shroud is one of the city's main symbols and tourist attractions, it is a symbol of religious devotion.

Science and Technology

Turin had an Astronomical observatory where was active Giovanni Plana. The scientist Amedeo Avogadro worked as a professor in Turin. The professor of Turin University Galileo Ferraris discovered the principle under electric motor during the 19 century.

In modern times, Turin hosted the CSELT telco laboratory.

Media

After Alexandria, Madrid, New Delhi, Antwerp and Montreal, Turin was chosen by UNESCO as World Book Capital for the year 2006. The International Book Fair is one of the most important fairs of its kind in Europe. Turin is home to one of Italy's principal national newspapers, La Stampa, and the sports daily newspaper Tuttosport. The city is also served by other publications such as the Turin editions of La Repubblica, il Giornale, Leggo, City, Metro and E Polis. RAI has had a production centre in Turin since 1954.

Sports

The city has a rich sporting heritage as the home to two historically significant football teams: Juventus F.C. (founded in 1897) and Torino F.C. (founded in 1906). Juventus has the larger fan base, especially all over Italy and worldwide, while Torino enjoys a greater support in the city itself. The two clubs contest the oldest derby in Italy, the Derby della Mole or the Turin derby.[58]

Juventus is Italy's most successful football club and one of the most winning in the world.[59] It ranks joint twelfth in the list of the world's clubs with the most official international titles (sixth between European clubs).[60] and was the first in association football history — remaining the only one in the world (as of 2022, after the first UEFA Europa Conference League Final) — to have won all possible official continental competitions and the world title.[61] Juventus' owned ground, the Juventus Stadium, was inaugurated in 2011. The Juventus Stadium hosted the 2014 UEFA Europa League Final. This was the first time the city hosted a seasonal UEFA club competition's single-match final.

Torino F.C. was founded by the union of one of the oldest football teams in Turin, Football Club Torinese (founded in 1894), with breakaways from Juventus and was the most successful team, called "Grande Torino", in the Serie A during the 1940s. In 1949, in the Superga air disaster, a plane carrying almost the whole team crashed into the Basilica of Superga in the Turin hills. Torino currently plays its home games at the Stadio Olimpico "Grande Torino", named after the team of the 1940s, which was the host stadiums for the 1934 FIFA World Cup and the venue of the XX Winter Olympics; moreover the team recently rebuilt the historic Stadio Filadelfia, used for games of the youth teams and trainings of the first squad, and seat of the team museum.

The city hosted the final stages of the EuroBasket 1979. The most important basketball club team is the Auxilium Torino, refounded in 2009, playing in the Italian LBA. In 2018 Auxilium Torino went to win its first Italian Basketball Cup ever.[62]

Turin hosted the 2006 Winter Olympics in February 2006. Turin is the largest city to have ever hosted a Winter Olympics, and was the largest metropolitan area to host them at the time.[63][64][65]

The city was awarded with the title of European Capital of Sport 2015.[66] The candidature sees the city strongly committed to increasing sports activities.[67][68]

The city hosts the ATP Finals tennis event, from 2021 to 2025.[69]

Cinema

Turin is the Italian city where film chromatography was first established. As such, it forms the birthplace of Italian cinema. Because of its historic, geographical and cultural proximity to France, Italian filmmakers were naturally influenced by French cinema and the Lumière brothers. The first Italian cinema screening occurred in Turin in March 1896. In November 1896, Italian filmmakers performed the first cinema screening of a film before a fee-paying audience.[70]

By the start of the 20th century (especially after 1907), a number of the first Italian films were aired in Turin. Examples include Giovanni Pastrone Cabiria, in 1914, one of the first blockbusters in history.

The Turin-based company Ambrosio Film, established in 1906 by Arturo Ambrosio, was one of the leading forces in Italian cinema and boosted the importance of the city as a filmmaking destination. The company, noted in particular for its historical epics, produced a large number of films until it was dissolved in 1924.

During the 1920s and 30s, Turin hosted a number of film productions and major film studios (film houses), such as the Itala film, Aquila and Fert Studios. Today their heritage is in the modern Lumiq Studios[71] and Virtual Reality Multi Media Spa.[72][73] Turin's prominence in Italian film continued until 1937, the year Cinecittà was inaugurated in Rome.

After World War II, the cinematic scene in Turin continued to thrive. 1956 saw the opening of the National Museum of Cinema, first housed in the Palazzo Chiablese and then, from 2000, in the imposing headquarters of the Mole Antonelliana. In 1982 the film critic Gianni Rondolino created Festival Internazionale Cinema Giovani,[74] which later became the Torino Film Festival.

Today Turin is one of the main cinematographic and television centres in Italy, thanks to the role of the Turin Film Commission that reports the production of many feature films, soap operas and commercials.

Turin streets were the locations where Audrey Hepburn played War and Peace, Michael Caine drove a Mini Cooper in The Italian Job, Claudio Bisio becomes the president of the Italian Republic, Carlo Verdone set his version of Cinderella, Marco Tullio Giordana shot Piazza Fontana: The Italian Conspiracy, Woody Allen shot Hannah and Her Sisters, Cate Blanchett played Heaven, Giovanna Mezzogiorno Vincere, Marcello Mastroianni and Jacqueline Bisset The Sunday Woman, and Harvey Keitel The Stone Merchant. Turin also became the capital of the tsar for The Demons of St. Petersberg.

Cuisine

 
The iconic gianduiotto chocolate
 
Bicerin chocolate drink served in its trademark rounded glass

Turin is well known for its chocolate production, especially for its traditional, ingot-shaped chocolate called gianduiotto, named after Gianduja, a local commedia dell'arte mask. Moreover, the city is also known for the so-called bicerin, a traditional hot drink made of espresso, drinking chocolate and whole milk served layered in a small rounded glass. Every year Turin organizes CioccolaTÒ, a two-week chocolate festival run with the main Piedmontese chocolate producers, such as Caffarel, Streglio, Venchi and others, as well as some big international companies, such as Lindt & Sprüngli.

 
A typical Italian Aperitivo

As for snack food, the now popular tramezzini were first served in a historic café of downtown Turin, namely Caffè Mulassano, where they were devised in 1925 as an alternative to English tea sandwiches.[75][76] In recent years, another trademark drink of the city is MoleCola, an Italian Coca-Cola that entered production in 2012 and quickly spread both in Italy and outside its native country.[77]

Local cuisine also features a particular type of pizza, so-called pizza al padellino or pizza al tegamino, which is basically a small-sized, thick-crust and deep-dish pizza typically served in several Turin pizza places.[78][79][80]

Since the mid-1980s, Piedmont has also benefited from the start of the Slow Food movement and Terra Madre, events that have highlighted the rich agricultural and vinicultural value of the Po Valley and Northern Italy.

Education

 
Hall of the Rectorate Palace of the University of Turin

Turin is home to one of Italy's oldest universities, the University of Turin, including its affiliated Collegio Carlo Alberto, which ranks among the best universities in the country. Another established university in the city is the Polytechnic University of Turin, ranking among Top 50 universities in the world and #1 in Italy in the fields of engineering, technology and computer science ("Academic Ranking of World Universities" published by Shanghai Jiao Tong University). Turin also hosts the United Nations System Staff College, the European Training Foundation, and a campus of the ESCP business school, ranked among the 10 best business schools in Europe. Moreover, the city hosts three small English language post-secondary institutions: St. John International University, International University College of Turin, and the Turin School of Development.

Transport

 
Porta Susa railway station

The city currently has a large number of rail and road work sites. Although this activity has increased as a result of the 2006 Winter Olympics, parts of it had long been planned. Some of the work sites deal with general roadworks to improve traffic flow, such as underpasses and flyovers, but two projects are of major importance and will radically change the shape of the city.

One is the Spina Centrale ("Central Spine") project which includes the doubling of a major railway crossing the city, the Turin-Milan railway locally known as Passante Ferroviario di Torino ("Turin Railway Bypass"). The railroad previously ran in a trench, which will now be covered by a major boulevard running from North to South of Turin, in a central position along the city. Porta Susa, on this section, will become Turin's main station to substitute the terminus of Porta Nuova with a through station. Other important stations are Stura, Rebaudengo, Lingotto and Madonna di Campagna railway stations, though not all of them belong to the layout of the Spina Centrale.

 
Turin Massaua metro station

The other major project is the construction of a subway line based on the VAL system, known as Metrotorino. This project is expected to continue for years and to cover a larger part of the city, but its first phase was finished in time for the 2006 Olympic Games, inaugurated on 4 February 2006 and opened to the public the day after. The first leg of the subway system linked the nearby town of Collegno with Porta Susa in Turin's city centre. On 4 October 2007, the line was extended to Porta Nuova and then, in March 2011, to Lingotto. A new extension of the so-called Linea 1 ("Line 1") is expected in the near future, reaching both Rivoli (up to Cascine Vica hamlet) in the Western belt of Turin and Piazza Bengasi in the Southeast side of the city. Furthermore, a Linea 2 is in the pipeline that will connect the south-western district of Mirafiori with Barriera di Milano in the north end. In June 2018, the project entered the public consultation phase with the proposed list of 23 stations published on the city's website.[81]

The main street in the city centre, Via Roma, runs atop a tunnel built during the fascist era (when Via Roma itself was totally refurbished and took on its present-day aspect). The tunnel was supposed to host the underground line but it is now used as an underground car park. A project to build an underground system was ready in the 1970s, with government funding for it and for similar projects in Milan and Rome. Whilst the other two cities went ahead with the projects, Turin's local government led by mayor Diego Novelli shelved the proposal as it believed it to be too costly and unnecessary.

The city has an international airport known as Caselle International Airport Sandro Pertini (airport code: TRN), in Caselle Torinese, about 13 km (8 mi) from Turin's centre – connected to the city by rail (from Dora Station) and bus (from Porta Nuova and Porta Susa railway stations).

As of 2010 a bicycle sharing system, the ToBike, is operational.

The metropolitan area is served by Turin metropolitan railway service.

Central districts are served by tram, lines 3,4,9 are light-rail.

 
City tram, bus can be seen behind

Public transportation statistics

The average amount of time people spend commuting with public transit in Turin (for example, to and from work) on a weekday is 65 min. 14.% of public transit riders, ride for more than 2 hours every day. The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 14 min, while 19% of riders wait for over 20 minutes on average every day. The average distance people usually ride in a single trip with public transit is 5.9 km (3.7 mi), while 9% travel more than 12 km (7.5 mi) in a single direction.[82]

Notable people

International relations

Twin towns – sister cities

Turin is twinned with:[83]

The sixth district of Turin is twinned with:[84]

Cooperation agreements

Turin also cooperates with:[83]

See also

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Bibliography

External links

  Media related to Turin at Wikimedia Commons

  • , tourist informations
  • Weather Turin
  • How to reach Turin?
  • Turin Museums
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Turin". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  •   Turin travel guide from Wikivoyage
Preceded by
Rotterdam (2020/2021)
Eurovision Song Contest host city
2022
Succeeded by
Liverpool (2023)

turin, torino, redirects, here, other, uses, torino, disambiguation, disambiguation, ʊəˈr, ʊər, ture, ture, piedmontese, tyˈriŋ, listen, italian, torino, toˈriːno, listen, city, important, business, cultural, centre, northern, italy, capital, city, piedmont, m. Torino redirects here For other uses see Torino disambiguation and Turin disambiguation Turin tj ʊeˈr ɪ n ˈ tj ʊer ɪ n ture IN TURE in 3 Piedmontese tyˈriŋ listen Italian Torino toˈriːno listen 4 is a city and an important business and cultural centre in Northern Italy It is the capital city of Piedmont and of the Metropolitan City of Turin and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865 The city is mainly on the western bank of the Po River below its Susa Valley and is surrounded by the western Alpine arch and Superga Hill The population of the city proper is 847 287 31 January 2022 5 while the population of the urban area is estimated by Eurostat to be 1 7 million inhabitants The Turin metropolitan area is estimated by the OECD to have a population of 2 2 million 6 Turin Torino Italian ComuneCitta di TorinoClockwise from top Panorama of Turin Borgo Medioevale Palazzo Madama Piazza San Carlo Gran Madre and Monte dei Cappuccini on the river Po Mole Antonelliana Royal Palace FlagCoat of armsNickname s Citta sabauda Savoyard City Capitale delle Alpi Capital of the Alps Citta Magica Magic City Motto s Auxilium meum a Domino Latin My help comes from the Lord Location of TurinTurinLocation of Turin in PiedmontShow map of ItalyTurinTurin Piedmont Show map of PiedmontCoordinates 45 04 45 N 07 40 34 E 45 07917 N 7 67611 E 45 07917 7 67611CountryItalyRegionPiedmontMetropolitan cityMetropolitan City of Turin TO Government MayorStefano Lo Russo PD Area 1 Total130 17 km2 50 26 sq mi Elevation239 m 784 ft Population 31 January 2022 2 Total847 287 Density6 500 km2 17 000 sq mi DemonymTurinese s Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code10100 10121 10156Dialing code0039 011ISTAT code001272Patron saintJohn the BaptistSaint day24 JuneWebsiteOfficial websiteUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameResidences of the Royal House of SavoyIncludesseveral locations in TurinCriteriaCultural i ii iv v Reference823bisInscription1997 21st Session Extensions2010The city was historically a major European political centre From 1563 it was the capital of the Duchy of Savoy then of the Kingdom of Sardinia ruled by the House of Savoy and the first capital of the Kingdom of Italy from 1861 to 1865 7 8 Turin is sometimes called the cradle of Italian liberty for having been the political and intellectual centre of the Risorgimento 9 as well as the birthplace of notable individuals who contributed to it such as Cavour 10 Although much of its political influence had been lost by World War II having been a center of anti fascist movements during the Ventennio including the Italian resistance Turin became a major European crossroad for industry commerce and trade and is part of the industrial triangle along with Milan and Genoa It is ranked third in Italy after Milan and Rome for economic strength 11 With a GDP of 58 billion the city is the world s 78th richest by purchasing power 12 As of 2018 the city has been ranked by GaWC as a Gamma level global city 13 Turin is also home to much of the Italian automotive industry hosting the headquarters of FIAT Lancia and Alfa Romeo 9 The city has a rich culture and history and it is known for its numerous art galleries restaurants churches palaces opera houses piazzas parks gardens theatres libraries museums and other venues Turin is well known for its Baroque Rococo Neo classical and Art Nouveau architecture Many of Turin s public squares castles gardens and elegant palazzi such as the Palazzo Madama were built between the 16th and 18th centuries A part of the historical center of Turin was inscribed in the World Heritage List under the name Residences of the Royal House of Savoy In addition the city is home to museums such as the Museo Egizio 14 and the Mole Antonelliana the city s architectonical symbol which in turn hosts the Museo Nazionale del Cinema Turin s attractions make it one of the world s top 250 tourist destinations and the tenth most visited city in Italy in 2008 The city also hosts some of Italy s best universities colleges academies lycea and gymnasia such as the University of Turin founded in the 15th century and the Turin Polytechnic 15 Turin is also worldwide famous for icons like the gianduja the Holy Shroud the automobile brand FIAT and the association football club Juventus which competes with its rival Torino in the Derby della Mole the city s derby 16 The city among other events was one of the host cities of the 1934 and 1990 FIFA World Cups along with hosting the 2006 Winter Olympics 17 Turin hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 and is hosting the tennis ATP Finals from 2021 until 2025 18 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient origins 1 2 Roman era 1 3 Middle Ages 1 4 Early modern 1 5 Late modern and contemporary 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Administration 4 Cityscape 4 1 City centre 4 2 San Salvario 4 3 Crocetta 4 4 Cenisia 4 5 Cit Turin 4 6 San Donato 4 7 Aurora 4 8 Vanchiglia 4 9 Main churches 4 10 Villas parks and gardens 5 Demographics 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Visual art and museums 7 2 Music 7 3 Literature 7 4 Religion 7 5 Science and Technology 7 6 Media 7 7 Sports 7 8 Cinema 7 9 Cuisine 8 Education 9 Transport 9 1 Public transportation statistics 10 Notable people 11 International relations 11 1 Twin towns sister cities 11 2 Cooperation agreements 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksHistory EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of Turin The Roman Palatine Towers Historical affiliations Roman Republic 58 27 BC Roman Empire 27 BC 285 AD Western Roman Empire 285 476 Kingdom of Odoacer 476 493 Ostrogothic Kingdom 493 553 Eastern Roman Empire 553 569 Lombard Kingdom 569 773 Carolingian Empire 773 888 March of Ivrea 888 941 March of Turin 941 1046 County of Savoy 1046 1416 Duchy of Savoy 1416 1720 Kingdom of Sardinia 1720 1792 First French Republic 1792 1804 First French Empire 1804 1814 Kingdom of Sardinia 1814 1861 Kingdom of Italy 1861 1943 Italian Social Republic 1943 1945 Kingdom of Italy 1945 1946 Italian Republic 1946 present Ancient origins Edit The Taurini were an ancient Celto Ligurian 19 Alpine people who occupied the upper valley of the Po River in the center of modern Piedmont In 218 BC they were attacked by Hannibal as he was allied with their long standing enemies the Insubres The Taurini chief town Taurasia was captured by Hannibal s forces after a three day siege 20 As a people they are rarely mentioned in history It is believed that a Roman colony was established after 28 BC under the name of Julia Augusta Taurinorum modern Turin Both Livy 21 and Strabo 22 mention the Taurini s country as including one of the passes of the Alps which points to a wider use of the name in earlier times Roman era Edit In the first century BC probably 28 BC the Romans founded Augusta Taurinorum Via Garibaldi traces the exact path of the Roman city s decumanus which began at the Porta Decumani later incorporated into the Castello or Palazzo Madama The Porta Palatina on the north side of the current city centre is still preserved in a park near the cathedral Remains of the Roman period theatre are preserved in the area of the Manica Nuova Turin reached about 5 000 inhabitants at the time all living inside the high city walls Middle Ages Edit After the fall of the Western Roman Empire the town along with the rest of the Italian peninsula was conquered by the Heruli and the Ostrogoths recaptured by the Romans but then conquered again by the Lombards whose territory then fell into the hands of the Franks under Charlemagne 773 The Contea di Torino countship was founded in the 940s and was held by the Arduinic dynasty until 1050 After the marriage of Adelaide of Susa with Humbert Biancamano s son Otto the family of the Counts of Savoy gained control While the title of count was held by the Bishop as count of Turin 1092 1130 and 1136 1191 it was ruled as a prince bishopric by the Bishops In 1230 1235 it was a lordship under the Marquess of Montferrat styled Lord of Turin At the end of the 13th century when it was annexed to the Duchy of Savoy the city already had 20 000 inhabitants Many of the gardens and palaces were built in the 15th century when the city was redesigned The University of Turin was also founded during this period Early modern Edit Turin in 1701 Emmanuel Philibert also known under the nickname of Iron Head Testa d Fer made Turin the capital of the Duchy of Savoy in 1563 Piazza Reale named Piazza San Carlo today and Via Nuova current Via Roma were added along with the first enlargement of the walls in the first half of the 17th century in the same period the Palazzo Reale Royal Palace of Turin was also built In the second half of that century a second enlargement of the walls was planned and executed with the building of the arcaded Via Po connecting Piazza Castello with the bridge on the Po through the regular street grid In 1706 during the Battle of Turin the French besieged the city for 117 days without conquering it By the Treaty of Utrecht the Duke of Savoy acquired Sicily soon traded for Sardinia and part of the former Duchy of Milan and was elevated to king thus Turin became the capital of a European kingdom The architect Filippo Juvarra began a major redesign of the city Turin had about 90 000 inhabitants at the time Late modern and contemporary Edit A view of Turin in the late 19th century In the background the Mole Antonelliana under construction Fiat Lingotto factory in 1928 Liberation parade in Turin May 6 1945 Turin like the rest of Piedmont was annexed by the French Empire in 1802 The city thus became the seat of the prefecture of Po department until the fall of Napoleon in 1814 when the Kingdom of Piedmont Sardinia was restored with Turin as its capital In the following decades the Kingdom of Piedmont Sardinia led the struggle towards the unification of Italy In 1861 Turin became the capital of the newly proclaimed united Kingdom of Italy having been the political and intellectual centre of the Risorgimento movement 9 23 until 1865 when the capital was moved to Florence and then to Rome after the 1870 conquest of the Papal States The 1871 opening of the Frejus Tunnel made Turin an important communication node between Italy and France The city in that period had 250 000 inhabitants Some of the most iconic landmarks of the city like the Mole Antonelliana the Egyptian Museum the Gran Madre di Dio church and Piazza Vittorio Veneto were built in this period The late 19th century was also a period of rapid industrialization especially in the automotive sector in 1899 Fiat was established in the city followed by Lancia in 1906 The Universal Exposition held in Turin in 1902 is often regarded as the pinnacle of Art Nouveau design and the city hosted the same event in 1911 By this time Turin had grown to 430 000 inhabitants After World War I harsh conditions brought a wave of strikes and workers protests In 1920 the Lingotto Fiat factory was occupied The Fascist regime put an end to the social unrest banning trade unions and jailing socialist leaders notably Antonio Gramsci On the other hand Benito Mussolini largely subsidised the automotive industry to provide vehicles to the army Turin was then a target of Allied strategic bombing during World War II being heavily damaged by the air raids in its industrial areas as well as in the city centre Along with Milan Genoa and La Spezia Turin was one of Italy s four cities that experienced area bombing by the RAF the heaviest raid took place on 13 July 1943 when 295 bombers dropped 763 tons of bombs killing 792 people 24 Overall these raids killed 2 069 inhabitants of Turin and destroyed or damaged 54 of all buildings in the city 25 26 The Allied s campaign in Italy started off from the South and slowly moved northwards in the following two years leaving the northern regions occupied by Germans and collaborationist forces for several years Turin was not captured by the Allies until the end of Spring Offensive of 1945 By the time the vanguard of the armoured reconnaissance units of Brazilian Expeditionary Force reached the city it was already freed by the Italian Partisans that had begun revolting against the Germans on 25 April 1945 Days later troops from the US Army s 1st Armored and 92nd Infantry Divisions came to substitute the Brazilians 27 28 In the postwar years Turin was rapidly rebuilt The city s automotive industry played a pivotal role in the Italian economic miracle of the 1950s and 1960s attracting hundreds of thousands of immigrants to the city particularly from the rural southern regions of Italy The number of immigrants was so big that Turin was said to be the third southern Italian city after Naples and Palermo The population soon reached 1 million in 1960 and peaked at almost 1 2 million in 1971 The exceptional growth gains of the city gained it the nickname of Capitale dell automobile Automobile Capital being often compared with Detroit the major centre of the U S automobile industry both cities has been twinned in 1998 In the 1970s and 1980s the oil and automotive industry crisis severely hit the city and its population began to sharply decline losing more than one fourth of its total in 30 years The long population decline of the city has begun to reverse itself only in recent years as the population grew from 865 000 to slightly over 900 000 by the end of the century In 2006 Turin hosted the Winter Olympic Games Geography Edit Turin from space north is on the left Turin is in northwest Italy It is surrounded on the western and northern front by the Alps and on the eastern front by a high hill that is the natural continuation of the hills of Monferrato Four major rivers pass through the city the Po and three of its tributaries the Dora Riparia once known as Duria Minor by the Romans from the Celtic noun duria meaning water the Stura di Lanzo and the Sangone Climate Edit Located in northwestern Italy at the foot of the Alps Turin features a mid latitude four seasons humid subtropical climate Koppen Cfa similar to that of Grenoble located not far away in the French Alps although Turin s average annual rainfall is lower Winters are moderately cold and dry summers are mild in the hills and quite hot in the plains Rain falls mostly during spring and autumn during the hottest months otherwise rains are less frequent but heavier thunderstorms are frequent During the winter and autumn months banks of fog which are sometimes very thick form in the plains 29 but rarely on the city because of its location at the end of the Susa Valley Snowfalls are not uncommon during the winter months although substantial accumulation is quite uncommon Its position on the east side of the Alps makes the weather drier than on the west side because of the fohn wind effect The highest temperature ever recorded was 37 1 C 98 8 F and the lowest was 21 8 C 7 2 F Climate data for Torino Caselle Airport 1971 2000 normals extremes 1946 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 25 1 77 2 26 6 79 9 27 4 81 3 31 0 87 8 32 3 90 1 35 6 96 1 36 8 98 2 37 1 98 8 32 2 90 0 30 0 86 0 22 8 73 0 21 4 70 5 37 1 98 8 Average high C F 6 6 43 9 9 1 48 4 13 4 56 1 16 6 61 9 20 7 69 3 24 8 76 6 27 9 82 2 27 1 80 8 23 0 73 4 17 3 63 1 11 1 52 0 7 6 45 7 17 1 62 8 Daily mean C F 2 0 35 6 4 3 39 7 8 1 46 6 11 1 52 0 15 5 59 9 19 4 66 9 22 4 72 3 21 8 71 2 17 8 64 0 12 4 54 3 6 5 43 7 3 1 37 6 12 0 53 6 Average low C F 2 5 27 5 0 7 30 7 2 7 36 9 5 7 42 3 10 4 50 7 14 0 57 2 16 9 62 4 16 5 61 7 12 7 54 9 7 4 45 3 1 9 35 4 1 6 29 1 7 0 44 6 Record low C F 18 5 1 3 21 8 7 2 10 5 13 1 3 8 25 2 2 3 27 9 4 3 39 7 6 6 43 9 6 3 43 3 1 8 35 2 3 9 25 0 8 2 17 2 13 8 7 2 21 8 7 2 Average precipitation mm inches 47 8 1 88 47 1 1 85 72 5 2 85 113 3 4 46 145 3 5 72 104 3 4 11 70 5 2 78 76 1 3 00 83 8 3 30 106 1 4 18 69 1 2 72 45 1 1 78 981 0 38 62 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 5 4 4 4 5 8 8 6 11 2 8 6 5 8 7 7 6 4 7 0 5 6 4 4 80 9Average relative humidity 75 75 67 72 75 74 72 73 75 79 80 80 75Mean monthly sunshine hours 111 6 118 7 158 1 180 0 195 3 219 0 260 4 223 2 168 0 142 6 105 0 108 5 1 990 4Source Italian Air Force Meteorological Service 30 31 32 Administration Edit Administrative map of Turin See also List of mayors of Turin Turin is split up into 8 boroughs locally called circoscrizioni 33 these do not necessarily correspond to the historical districts of the city which are rather called quartieri rioni borghi borgate or zone The circoscrizioni system originally comprised 10 of them that were reduced to 8 by merging borough 9 into 8 and 10 into 2 The following list numerates the boroughs and the location of the historical districts inside them 33 Circoscrizione 1 Centro Crocetta Circoscrizione 2 Santa Rita Mirafiori Nord Mirafiori Sud Circoscrizione 3 San Paolo Cenisia Pozzo Strada Cit Turin Borgata Lesna Circoscrizione 4 San Donato Campidoglio Parella Circoscrizione 5 Borgo Vittoria Madonna di Campagna Lucento Vallette Circoscrizione 6 Barriera di Milano Regio Parco Barca Bertolla Falchera Rebaudengo Villaretto Circoscrizione 7 Aurora Vanchiglia Sassi Madonna del Pilone Circoscrizione 8 San Salvario Cavoretto Borgo Po Nizza Millefonti Lingotto FiladelfiaThe Mayor of Turin is directly elected every five years The current mayor of the city is Stefano Lo Russo PD elected in 2021 Cityscape EditCity centre Edit See also Residences of the Royal House of Savoy Via Roma Turin s historical architecture is predominantly Baroque and was developed under the Kingdom of Savoy Nonetheless the main street of the city centre Via Roma was built during the Fascist era from 1931 to 1937 as an example of Italian Rationalism replacing former buildings already present in this area Via Roma runs between Piazza Carlo Felice and Piazza Castello Buildings on the portion between Piazza Carlo Felice and Piazza San Carlo were designed by rationalist architect Marcello Piacentini These blocks were built into a reticular system composed by austere buildings in clear rationalist style such as the impressive Hotel Principi di Piemonte and the former Hotel Nazionale in Piazza CLN Porches are built in a continuous entablature and marked with double columns to be consistent with those of Piazza San Carlo The section of the street between Piazza San Carlo and Piazza Castello was built in an eclectic style with arcades characterised by Serliana type arches To this day Via Roma is the street featuring the most fashionable boutiques of the city Piazza San Carlo and the Caval d Brons Bronze Horse in Piedmontese language equestrian monument to Emmanuel Philibert Via Roma crosses one of the main squares of the city the pedestrianized Piazza San Carlo built by Carlo di Castellamonte in the 17th century In the middle of the square stands the equestrian monument to Emmanuel Philibert also known as Caval ed Brons in the local dialect Bronze Horse the monument depicts the Duke sheathing his sword after the Battle of St Quentin Piazza San Carlo arcades host the most ancient cafes of the city such as Caffe Torino and Caffe San Carlo Piazza Castello with Palazzo Reale Royal Palace in the background On the northern edge of Via Roma stands Piazza Castello regarded as the heart of the city The half pedestrianized square hosts some significant buildings such as Palazzo Reale Former Savoy Royal House the Palazzo Madama which previously hosted the Savoy senate and for few years the Italian senate after Italian unification the former Baroque Teatro Regio di Torino rebuilt in modern style in the 1960s after being destroyed by fire the Royal Library of Turin which hosts the Leonardo da Vinci self portrait and the baroque Royal Church of San Lorenzo Moreover Piazza Castello hosts a Fascist era building the Torre Littoria a sort of skyscraper which was supposed to become the headquarters of the Fascist party although it never served as such The building s style is quite different from the Baroque style of Piazza Castello The square regularly hosts the main open space events of the city live concerts included Porta Nuova main railway station As for the southern part of the street Via Roma ends in Piazza Carlo Felice and in its Giardino Sambuy a wide fenced garden right in the middle of the square Across from Piazza Carlo Felice stands the monumental facade of Porta Nuova railway station the central station of the city built between 1861 and 1868 by the architect Alessandro Mazzucchetti The passengers building was renovated to host a shopping mall and more efficient passenger service offices However it is still an example of monumental architecture with its stately foyer and some Baroque sights such as the Sala Reale the former Royal waiting room Piazza Vittorio Veneto square In Piazza Castello converge some of the main streets of the city centre Among them one of the most significant is the arcaded Via Po built by Amedeo di Castellamonte in 1868 and featuring some interesting buildings such as the first and original building of the University of Turin and the historical Caffe Fiorio which was the favourite cafe of the 19th century politicians Via Po ends in Piazza Vittorio Veneto simply called Piazza Vittorio locally the largest Baroque square in Europe and today heart of Turin nightlife Piazza Vittorio features the most fashionable bars and not far from here along the Po riverfront the Murazzi quays used to host several bars and nightclubs open until the morning until a few years ago Baroque facade of Palazzo Carignano the Museum of the Risorgimento Parallel to Via Roma the other two popular pedestrian streets namely Via Lagrange and Via Carlo Alberto cross the old town from Via Po to Corso Vittorio Emanuele II Their recent pedestrianisation has improved their original commercial vocation In particular Via Lagrange has recently increased the presence of luxury boutiques This street also hosts the Egyptian Museum of Turin home to what is regarded as one of the largest collections of Egyptian antiquities outside of Egypt Via Lagrange and Via Carlo Alberto cross two significant squares of the city respectively The former crosses Piazza Carignano well known mainly for the undulating concave convex concave Baroque facade of Palazzo Carignano This building used to host the Parlamento Subalpino the Subalpine Parliament Parliament of the Kingdom of Sardinia which also became the Italian Parliament for a few years after the Italian unification and today houses the Museum of the Risorgimento The square also features the Teatro Carignano a well conserved Baroque theatre Via Carlo Alberto crosses Piazza Carlo Alberto a big square hosting the rear facade of Palazzo Carignano in eclectic style On the other side stands the monumental Biblioteca Nazionale National Library Mole Antonelliana some years ago Not far from Via Po stands the symbol of Turin namely the Mole Antonelliana so named after the architect who built it Alessandro Antonelli Construction began in 1863 as a Jewish synagogue Nowadays it houses the National Museum of Cinema and it is believed to be the tallest museum in the world at 167 metres 548 feet The building is depicted on the Italian 2 cent coin Dome of Turin Cathedral Just behind Piazza Castello stands the Turin Cathedral dedicated to Saint John the Baptist which is the major church of the city It was built during 1491 1498 and is adjacent to an earlier bell tower 1470 Annexed to the cathedral is the Chapel of the Holy Shroud the current resting place of the Shroud of Turin The chapel was added to the structure in 1668 1694 designed by Guarini The Basilica of Corpus Domini was built to celebrate an alleged miracle which took place during the sack of the city in 1453 when a soldier was carrying off a monstrance containing the Blessed Sacrament the monstrance fell to the ground while the host remained suspended in air The present church erected in 1610 to replace the original chapel which stood on the spot is the work of Ascanio Vitozzi Palatine Towers Next to the Turin Cathedral stand the Palatine Towers an ancient Roman medieval structure that served as one of four Roman city gates along the city walls of Turin This gate allowed access from north to the cardo maximus the typical second main street of a Roman town The Palatine Towers are among the best preserved Roman remains in Northern Italy Close to this site the 51 300 square metre 552 189 square foot Piazza della Repubblica plays host to the biggest open market in Europe locally known as mercato di Porta Palazzo Porta Palazzo or Porta Pila are the historical and local names of this area West of the Porte Palatine stands the Quadrilatero Romano Roman Quadrilateral the old medieval district recently renewed The current neighbourhood is characterised by its tiny streets and its several medieval buildings and today it is popular for its aperitivo bars and its small shops run by local artisans The hub of the Quadrilatero is Piazza Emanuele Filiberto South of the Quadrilatero Romano stands Via Garibaldi another popular street of the city It is a 1 km 0 6 mi pedestrian street between Piazza Castello and Piazza Statuto which features some of the old shops of the city Large Piazza Statuto is another example of Baroque square with arcades Another main street of downtown is Via Pietro Micca which starts in Piazza Castello and ends in the large Piazza Solferino The street continues in Via Cernaia up to Piazza XXV Dicembre which features the former Porta Susa passengers building relocated in 2012 a little more southward The new and larger passengers building is situated between Corso Bolzano and Corso Inghilterra and is an example of contemporary architecture being a 300 metre long 980 foot and 19 metre high 62 foot glass and steel structure Porta Susa is currently the international central station of the city high speed trains to Paris and it is becoming the central hub of railway transportation of the city being the station in which local trains so called Ferrovie Metropolitane national trains and high speed national and international trains converge Close to Via Cernaia stands the Cittadella Citadel in the Andrea Guglielminetti garden What remains of the old medieval and modern fortress of the city it is a starting point for a tour into the old tunnels below the city San Salvario Edit Borgo Medioevale Castello del Valentino in Parco del Valentino Southeast of the city centre stands San Salvario district which extends from Corso Vittorio Emanuele II to Corso Bramante and is delimited by the Turin Genoa railway on the west side and by the Po river on the east side Home to an increasing immigrants community the district is an example of integration among different cultures it also features an incremented nightlife after the opening of several low cost bars and restaurants San Salvario is crossed by two main roads Via Nizza and Via Madama Cristina and just as the city centre it is characterised by the grid plan typical of Turin s old neighbourhoods The hub of the district is Piazza Madama Cristina which hosts a big open market while several commercial activities flourish around it The celebrated Parco del Valentino is situated in the east side of San Salvario and albeit not in downtown it represents kind of central park of Turin Thanks to the vicinity to the city centre the park is very popular among the local people during the day but also at night because of the several bars and nightclubs placed here From the terraces of Parco del Valentino many sights of the hills on the other side of the river can be appreciated In the centre of the park stands the Castello del Valentino built in the 17th century This castle has a horseshoe shape with four rectangular towers one at each angle and a wide inner court with a marble pavement The ceilings of the false upper floors are in transalpino i e French style The facade sports the huge coat of arms of the House of Savoy Today Castello del Valentino serves as the faculty of Architecture of the Polytechnic University of Turin Another cluster of buildings in the park is the Borgo Medioevale Medieval village a replica of medieval mountain castles of Piedmont and Aosta Valley built for the 1884 International Exhibition Other buildings in Corso Massimo d Azeglio include the Torino Esposizioni complex Turin s exhibition hall built in the 1930s featuring a monumental entrance with a large full height porch a main hall designed by Pier Luigi Nervi in reinforced concrete and the Teatro Nuovo a theatre mostly focused on ballet exhibitions Another building is the largest synagogue of the city in Piazzetta Primo Levi a square Its architecture stands in the main sight of the city as characterised by four large towers 27 metres 89 feet high topped by four onion shaped domes Crocetta Edit Monumento a Vittorio Emanuele II The Polytechnic University of Turin The Spina Centrale is a new under construction boulevard built over the undergrounded railway It is already completed in Crocetta South of Centro stands the Crocetta district considered one of the most exclusive districts of the city because of highly rated residential buildings At the heart of the district is the partially pedestrianised area crossed by Corso Trieste Corso Trento and Corso Duca D Aosta plenty of some notable residential buildings in eclectic neo Gothic and Art Nouveau style The area was built between 1903 and 1937 replacing the old parade ground which was moved in the Southern part of the city North of this area stands the GAM Galleria d Arte Moderna one of the two Museum of Modern Arts of the Turin Metro area the second and largest one is hosted in Castello di Rivoli a former Savoy Royal castle in the suburbs The Museum stands in front a huge monument situated in the centre of the roundabout between Corso Vittorio Emanuele II and Corso Galileo Ferraris the Monument to Vittorio Emanuele II a King of Savoy statue situated on a 39 meters high column Next to the Museum another significant residential building previously hosted the head office of Juventus one of the two main Turin football clubs West of this area the main building of Polytechnic University of Turin stands along Corso Duca Degli Abruzzi The 1958 building a 122 000 square metre 1 313 197 square foot complex hosts approximately 30 000 students and is considered one of the major Institutes of Technology of the country mainly due to the vocation of the city for the industrialisation pushed by the automotive sector This institute recently expanded in the western district of Cenisia with additional modern buildings Crocetta is crossed by large and modern avenues such as Corso Duca degli Abruzzi Corso Galileo Ferraris and Corso Einaudi These avenues feature long rows of trees symbolic of Turin s typical urbanity However the most popular avenue is Corso De Gasperi which albeit smaller than other avenues of the district hosts one of the most fashionable open markets of the city the so called Mercato della Crocetta in which it is possible to find some discounted branded clothing among the more popular ones The Western border of Crocetta is instead an example of contemporary architecture The huge avenue made up of Corso Mediterraneo and Corso Castelfidardo is part of Spina Centrale boulevard and was recently built over the old railway now undergrounded as a result the avenue is very large up to 60 metres 200 feet and modern having been rebuilt with valuable materials including a characteristic lighting system supported by white high poles This avenue hosts some examples of contemporary art such as Mario Merz s Igloo fountain or the Per Kirkeby s Opera per Torino monument in Largo Orbassano The East side of the district is also known as Borgo San Secondo named after the church of the same name standing in Via San Secondo a major street in the neighbourhood This is near Porta Nuova railway station and is older than the rest of the district featuring several apartment buildings from the late 19th century to include the birthplace and home of author Primo Levi on Corso Re Umberto 34 A local open market is held in Piazza San Secondo and along Via Legnano The market square also hosts the former washhouse and public baths of the neighbourhood among the oldest examples of their kind in Turin 1905 One of the main thoroughfares crossing Borgo San Secondo is Via Sacchi which serves as an ideal gate to the city centre its Serlian arcades on the west side of the street the east side is enclosed by Porta Nuova railway station service buildings host some significant boutiques and hotels such as the historic Pfatisch pastry shop and the Turin Palace Hotel totally refurbished and reopened in 2015 South of Via Sacchi Ospedale Mauriziano is one of the ancient and major hospitals of the city Going further southwards it is possible to appreciate an interesting residential cluster of old public housing gravitating around Via Arquata Cenisia Edit The Piazza Carlo Alberto A heating power plant Bordered by Corso Castelfidardo Corso Vittorio Emanuele II Corso Trapani and Corso Peschiera this small district is mainly significant for hosting the recent expansion of Turinese Institute of Technology Politecnico The expansion was possible after under grounding the railway under Corso Castelfidardo and the subsequent disposal of the old buildings dedicated to the train maintenance present in this area so called Officine Grandi Riparazioni or OGR Politecnico expanded its facilities through two huge overpass buildings over the avenue linked to new buildings on the west side This cluster of buildings forms an evocative square with a unique architectural style The main building on the west side hosts a General Motors research centre the General Motors Global Propulsion Systems formerly known as General Motors Powertrain Europe Politecnico area extends until Via Boggio with further facilities hosted in the former OGR facilities The Institute plans to further build new facilities in the current parking area North of Politecnico facilities the main building of the OGR former cluster which consists in three 180 meters long joint parallel buildings became recently a big open space which hosts temporary exhibitions and during the hot seasons its external spaces became a fashionable site to have a typical Italian aperitivo North of OGR a former prison complex called Le Nuove is a significant example of old European prison building The complex was built between 1857 and 1869 during the reign of Victor Emmanuel II After being disposed of during the 1990s the complex was changed into a museum and it is possible to visit its facilities An example of contemporary art is the heating plant in Corso Ferrucci which has been covered with aluminium panels Another building 19th century now abandoned is the former Westinghouse factory of train brakes situated in Via Borsellino The residential and business zone of the district sprawls westward beyond the former now demolished customs wall cinta daziaria which previously separated the city from the mainly rural landscape that marked the outskirts of Turin until the late 19th century Urban planning outside the local city gate so called barriera di San Paolo led to the construction of an industrial and working class neighborhood in the early 20th century although factories have long been discontinued torn down or converted to other uses nowadays Together with San Paolo district Cenisia hosts an extensive street market along Corso Racconigi which is locally known as the longest street market in Europe Cit Turin Edit Casa della Vittoria 1918 1920 is an example of Turin s neo gothic architecture The smallest district of the city is Cit Turin Little Turin in Piedmontese language This small triangle surrounded by Corso Vittorio Emanuele II Corso Francia and Corso Inghilterra hosts some high rated residential buildings and is regarded as a prestigious residential neighbourhood by local people Intesa Sanpaolo banking group headquarters The district features many buildings in Art Nouveau Art Deco and Neo Gothic style Among them one of the most impressive and well known is the Casa della Vittoria architect Gottardo Gussoni Another notable example is Casa Fenoglio Lafleur Both buildings face Corso Francia The district is well known for its commercial vocation mainly in its two main streets Via Duchessa Jolanda and Via Principi d Acaja ideally crossing each other among the gardens Giardino Luigi Martini locally called Piazza Benefica which hosts a popular open market The district is also characterised by two massive recent buildings the Palazzo di Giustizia Turin s new courthouse built in the 1990s in a 350 metre long facility and the first real skyscraper of Turin the Torre Intesa Sanpaolo 35 which house the headquarters of one of the major Italian private banks San Donato Edit Chiesa di Nostra Signora del Suffragio e Santa Zita The Torre Littoria San Donato district is between Corso Francia Corso Lecce Corso Potenza Via Nole the Parco Dora and Corso Principe Oddone It was populated since the medieval era but becomes bigger during the 19th century prospering around the canal Canale di San Donato which does not exist any more currently replaced by the central street of the district Via San Donato Buildings in the district are relatively recent around 1820 except for the oldest group of small houses in the Brusachœr neighbourhood Palazzo Forneris building along Via Pacinotti near the small Piazza Paravia The conservation of the street and of this old building influences the straightness of Via San Donato which makes a slight curve to result in parallel with Via Pacinotti before ending in central Piazza Statuto square Main church of the district is the Chiesa di Nostra Signora del Suffragio e Santa Zita which with its 83 metres 272 feet height of its bell tower is well known to be the fifth tallest structure in the city of Turin after the Mole Antonelliana the Intesa Sanpaolo skyscraper the Torre Littoria and the two pennons of the Juventus Stadium The church is hosting the Istituto Suore Minime di Nostra Signora del Suffragio and it was promoted and designed by Francesco Faa di Bruno The legend says that he wanted to build the tallest bell tower of the town and put a clock on the top to all the poor people to know the time for free The small building near the church is what remains of Casa Tartaglino a small residential building which was also extended and modified by Faa di Bruno Villino Cibrario in Via Saccarelli is another significant building designed by Barnaba Panizza in 1842 The building was equipped with a large garden which was eliminated to host the street The neighbourhood has a high concentration of historic buildings in Art Nouveau style designed by architect Pietro Fenoglio among the others the prestigious Villino Raby in Corso Francia 8 Other significant buildings are the Villa Boringhieri in Via San Donato and other Art Nouveau and Neo Gothic buildings are situated in Via Piffetti and Via Durandi Among the modern buildings of the district the most significant one is of course the Torre BBPR Tower which took the name from the architecture office who designed it The building is representing the post rationalism Italian architecture same style of the better known Torre Velasca tower in the city of Milan The tower is facing the central Piazza Statuto square The district is crossed by some significant avenues on Corso Svizzera which crosses the district from North To South faces the Business Centre Piero Della Francesca where the offices of Tuttosport one of the three national sports daily newspapers has its head offices Also on Corso Svizzera stands one of the oldest hospitals of the city the Ospedale Amedeo di Savoia specialised in infectious diseases Other major avenues are Corso Umbria and Corso Tassoni Another big avenue which borders the district on its East is Corso Principe Oddone which in the past was along the railway to Milan Currently the railway has been under grounded the avenue will be enlarged and have same architecture style of southern Corso Inghilterra in downtown becoming one of the major avenue of Turin The northern part of the district was part of the former industrial district of Turin recently reconverted to a park called Parco Dora Mainly in San Donato the portion reconverted was the one occupied by the plant of Michelin west of Via Livorno and FIAT ironwork plants on the East Differently for other portions of Parco Dora this part has been totally reconverted to park without letting any evidence of the industrial area except for the cooling tower which stands along Corso Umbria and became a symbol of the park Works are completed in the western area where Corso Mortara has been closed to traffic and moved just a bit northern and covered by an artificial tunnel It is possible to access the southern shore of the Dora river South of the Park an interesting architecture of different levels is hosting a new shopping mall called Centro Commerciale Parco Dora East of Via Livorno works are still partially in progress with the Dora river still to be uncovered by a big slab on which the FIAT plants used to stand West of Via Livorno the Environment Park is a research centre for renewable energy Aurora Edit Tiny streets of Borgo Dora Aurora is one of the most ancient districts which developed out of the medieval city walls north of the historical city centre It stretches from downtown northern boundaries in Corso Regina Margherita an extended and important thoroughfare of Turin up to Corso Vigevano and Corso Novara in the North Side namely the old excise boundary until the early 20th century the western boundary is Corso Principe Oddone now part of the Spina Centrale boulevard and the eastern border is the Dora river The district was named Aurora after the so called Cascina Aurora an old farmstead lying north of the Dora river right at the intersection between Corso Giulio Cesare and Corso Emilia The farmstead has long been demolished and the area has been converted to office buildings hosting the Turinese textile company Gruppo Finanziario Tessile GFT headquarters until the early 21st century The historical hub of the district is Borgo Dora The Dora Borough a small neighbourhood next to Porta Palazzo and enclosed by Corso Regina Margherita Via Cigna the Dora river and Corso Giulio Cesare Once known as Borgo del Pallone literally Ball Borough or Balon in Piedmontese dialect locally baˈlun this neighbourhood is famous for its mercatino del Balon or simply Balon the Turinese flea market that opens every Saturday in its tiny and twisted streets Borgo Dora hosts several remarkable places such as Piccola Casa della Divina Provvidenza Little House of the Divine Providence also known as Cottolengo a well known charitable organization which has been operating for almost 200 years in the city Arsenale della Pace Arsenal of Peace a former weapons factory that currently hosts the headquarters of SERMIG Servizio Missionario Giovani a nonprofit association which assists poor and homeless people Caserma Cavalli Cavalli Barracks one of the most representative buildings of the district a former barracks topped by a clock tower which now hosts Scuola Holden a storytelling and performing arts school the evocative Cortile del Maglio Mallet Courtyard a covered pedestrian area featuring bars and clubs Across from Cortile del Maglio and Arsenale della Pace stands a wide pedestrian area which features a hot air balloon a clear allusion to the neighbourhood s old name Balon recently installed the balloon is open to public which can now take an interesting view of the city from this new high observation point Right at the borders of Borgo Dora stands part of Porta Palazzo open market which hosts the New Exhibition Hall designed by the Italian architect Massimiliano Fuksas The building has replaced the Clothes Market one of the four covered pavilions of Porta Palazzo market but unfortunately this glass green shaded building has been highly criticized because of its lack of usability for commercial activities albeit an example of contemporary architecture Another interesting building at the borders of the neighbourhood is Porta Milano a k a stazione della Cirie Lanzo a former 19th century railway station that marked the terminus of Cirie Lanzo railway line until the 1980s To this day the station is no longer in use as well as the rails up to Piazza Baldissera The station building was recently renovated and now hosts some old locomotives even though it is not open to the public Unfortunately the old rails crossing the district are totally disused and neglected adding decay to the whole area Borgo Dora as many other pockets of Aurora is characterized by the marked multi ethnicity of its population being home to a large community of immigrants from emerging countries Santuario di Maria Ausiliatrice West of Borgo Dora stands Rione Valdocco Valdocco neighbourhood enclosed by Via Cigna Corso Regina Margherita Corso Principe Oddone and the Dora river This neighbourhood hosts the significant architecture of Santuario di Maria Ausiliatrice Maria Ausiliatrice Sanctuary in the homonymous square and behind the church stands San Pietro in Vincoli old cemetery Overall the main thoroughfares of the West side of Aurora are Via Cigna which crosses the district from North to South Corso Vercelli a historical avenue starting north of the Dora river and Corso Principe Oddone part of the long Spina Centrale boulevard that will be built over the underground Turin Milan railway However the Spina Centrale project is proceeding slowly because of the lack of funds and the boulevard is still occupied by a large worksite along its span Once completed Aurora district will be connected to Eastern San Donato thanks to a better connection among the roads of the two adjacent districts i e Corso Cirie will continue in Corso Gamba and Strada del Fortino in Corso Rosai As for the rest of Aurora the district is crossed by an important thoroughfare named Corso Giulio Cesare a long boulevard that extends from Porta Palazzo up to Turin Trieste motorway entrance in the Northern urban fringe of Turin Other significant roads are Corso Palermo Via Bologna and Corso Regio Parco mostly in the East side of Aurora which is known as Borgo Rossini Rossini Borough Albeit not a road the Dora river is also a significant element for the whole district since it completely crosses it from West to East Lavazza famous Turin coffee brand The area north of the river features a mix of old residential buildings and remains of former factories and facilities from the 20th century An example are the remains of FIAT Officine Grandi Motori OGM in Corso Vigevano an old factory that produced big industrial and automotive Diesel engines a sort of symbol of the industrial history of Turin Another disused facility is Astanteria Martini Martini Emergency Department in Via Cigna a former emergency department from the 1920s which has been lying vacant since long As for the old residential buildings of the area this part of Aurora hosts the oldest public housing block of the city built by Istituto Autonomo Case Popolari IACP in 1908 in lieu of an old dilapidated small farm once known as Chiabotto delle Merle Despite its run down look the famous Lavazza coffee company along with IAAD School of Design chose this part of the city as the location for their new headquarters which will be built in a contemporary building dubbed Nuvola Cloud right at the borders of Borgo Rossini Designed by the architect Gino Zucchi this project is still a work in progress but excavations in the area revealed the remains of a medieval cemetery and an early Christian basilica these findings will be preserved and will be shown to the public Borgo Rossini hosts a number of businesses for instance the Robe di Kappa flagship store Kappa is a noted Italian sportswear brand founded in Turin and the Cineporto Cineport a k a La Casa dei Produttori The Filmmakers House which hosts the Turin Piedmont Film Commission Foundation Vanchiglia Edit Piedmont Region Headquarters 209 m one of the tallest skyscrapers in Italy Fetta Di Polenta northern side Vanchiglia is bordered by Corso San Maurizio Corso Regio Parco and the Po river crossed also by the Dora Riparia river and by two big avenues Corso Regina Margherita and Corso Tortona Borgo Vanchiglia is the historical district a little triangle next to downtown situated between Corso San Maurizio Corso Regina Margherita and the Po river The district is quite popular nowadays because being quite closer to the heart of Turin nightlife Piazza Vittorio Veneto many bars and restaurants opened recently in this area However Vanchiglia also includes the area called Vanchiglietta north of Borgo Vanchiglia Notable church in Borgo Vanchiglia is the French neo Gothic Chiesa di Santa Giulia situated into Piazza Santa Giulia A notable and unusual building in the area is the so called Fetta di Polenta literally polenta slice formerly known as Casa Scaccabarozzi This building is where Corso San Maurizio meets Via Giulia di Barolo and it is one of the most peculiar examples of Turin architecture a thin trapezoid 27 meters wide on Via Giulia Di Barolo 5 meters on Corso San Maurizio and just 0 70 meters wide on the opposite end It was designed in 1840 by Alessandro Antonelli for his wife Francesca Scaccabarozzi probably because of a bet citation needed The curious name comes from the shape of the palace which resembles a slice of polenta and also because it is painted with an ocher colour In the surroundings in Via Vanchiglia 8 although in downtown and not really in Vanchiglia anymore there is another trapezoid house albeit with less extreme design similarly this building is nicknamed Fetta di Formaggio cheese slice built in 1832 for the rich Marchese Birago di Vische by the architect Antonio Talentino Other notable buildings are the town public baths eclectic building built in 1905 Corso Regina Margherita crossing Via Vanchiglia and theTeatro della Caduta theatre opened in 2003 in Via Michele Buniva 23 which with its 45 seats is the smallest theatre in Turin and among the smallest theatres in Europe In Corso Regina Margherita another notable building is the former Opera pia Reynero a charitable organization The building was built in 1892 Being abandoned for a long time after it closed in 1996 it was then occupied by the Askatasuna Social Center a non profit anarchic organization hosting since then various activities such as concerts dinners seminars and homeless solidarity initiatives Campus Luigi Einaudi North of Corso Regina Margherita district is losing the flavour and architecture typical of Turin downtown cause a significant portion of the district was formerly occupied by factories nowadays partially abandoned or replaced by modern buildings A significant example was the area occupied by gas companies between Corso Regina Margherita and the Dora river which were partially demolished to make place to the new modern Faculty of Law building Campus Luigi Einaudi designed by the architect Norman Foster This building was classified by the American television company CNN among the 10 most spectacular university buildings in the world 36 In the campus courtyard a large wood statue representing a bull symbol of Turin has been erected by Mario Ceroli The area hosts also a student campus Next to the campus a new cycling and pedestrian bridge on the Dora river was opened on 16 April 2010 linking the campus area to Corso Verona Parco Colletta is a big park area touched by the two rivers of the district which also hosts some sport facilities mainly football fields and a swimming pool The district is completed by the Cimitero Monumentale cemetery This huge complex formerly known as Cimitero Generale is the largest cemetery in Turin and among the first in Italy for the number of buried people over 400 000 It is close to the Colletta park The ancient part of the cemetery rises from the main entrance of Corso Novara with his octagonal shape It contains numerous historical tombs and 12 km of arcades enriched by artistic sculptures that s why it is called a monumental cemetery Over the years there have been subsequent extensions of the central historical body in the direction of the Colletta park In the cemetery there is a crematory temple built in 1882 one of the largest in Italy Main churches Edit Turin Cathedral featuring the Chapel of the Holy Shroud Basilica of Superga See also List of places of worship in Turin The Santuario della Consolata a sanctuary much frequented by pilgrims stands on the site of the tenth century Monastery of St Andrew and is a work by Guarini It was sumptuously restored in 1903 Outside the city are the Basilica of Our Lady Help of Christians built by St John Bosco the Gran Madre built in 1818 on occasion of the return of King Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia and Santa Maria del Monte 1583 on Monte dei Cappuccini In the hills overlooking the city the Basilica of Superga provides a view of Turin against a backdrop of the snow capped Alps The basilica holds the tombs of many of the dukes of Savoy as well as many of the kings of Sardinia Superga can be reached by means of the Superga Rack Railway from Sassi suburb The Basilica of Superga was built by Amadeus II of Savoy as an ex voto for the liberation of Turin 1706 and served as a royal mausoleum since 1772 37 Villas parks and gardens Edit The medieval village in Valentino Park La Mandria Regional Park The most popular park in the city is Parco del Valentino In 1961 during the celebrations of Italia61 Italian unification centenary an important international exhibition FLOR61 Flowers of the world in Turin took place in the park with 800 exhibitors from 19 countries For the occasion the plan for the new lighting of the park along with its fountains and paths was assigned to Guido Chiarelli the head engineer at the city hall Other large parks are Parco della Pellerina Parco Colletta Parco Rignon Parco Colonnetti and the University botanical gardens Around the city are several other parks such as La Mandria Regional Park and the Parco della Palazzina di Caccia di Stupinigi once hunting grounds of the Savoy and those on the hills of Turin Many parks are smaller in the various districts there is also a total of 240 playgrounds in these parks In the early 1960s mayor Amedeo Peyron had the first garden in Italy with games for children inaugurated According to a Legambiente report from 2007 Turin is the first Italian city as far as structures and policies on childcare are concerned 38 One of the most famous parks featuring a children s playground is Parco della Tesoriera which is also home to Andrea della Corte Municipal Music Library this facility is housed in Villa Tesoriera built in 1715 and once the Royal Treasurer s residence The park is in the Parella suburb Turin s West Side and hosts many concerts in summer Rosa Vercellana commonly known as Rosina and in Piedmontese as La Bela Rosin the beautiful Rosin was the mistress and later wife of King Victor Emmanuel II She was made Countess of Mirafiori and Fontanafredda but never Queen of Italy As the Savoy family refused to allow her to be buried next to her husband in the Pantheon her children had a mausoleum built for her in a similar form and on a smaller scale in Turin next to the road to the Castello di Mirafiori The circular copper domed neoclassical monument surmounted by a Latin cross and surrounded by a large park was designed by Angelo Dimezzi and completed in 1888 39 40 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 1901329 691 1911415 667 26 1 1921499 823 20 2 1931590 753 18 2 1936629 115 6 5 1951719 300 14 3 19611 025 822 42 6 19711 167 968 13 9 19811 117 154 4 4 1991962 507 13 8 2001865 263 10 1 2011872 367 0 8 2015897 265 2 9 Source ISTAT 2001In 2009 the city proper had a population of about 910 000 which is a significant increase on the 2001 census figure This result is due to a growing immigration from Southern Italy and abroad Approximately 13 5 per cent 122 946 of the population is composed of foreigners the largest numbers coming from Romania 51 017 Morocco 22 511 Albania 9 165 China 5 483 and Moldova 3 417 41 Like many Northern Italian cities there is a large proportion of pensioners in comparison to youth Around 18 per cent of the population is under 20 years of age while 22 per cent is over 65 42 The population of the Turin urban area totals 1 7 million inhabitants ranking fourth in Italy while the Turin metropolitan area has a population of 2 2 million inhabitants The median age is 43 7 6 Largest groups of foreign residents 43 Nationality Population 2020 Romania 49 644 1 590 units Morocco 16 808 212 units China 7 511 3 units Peru 7 195 76 units Nigeria 5 489 72 units Egypt 5 450 390 units Albania 5 360 15 units Philippines 3 778 23 units Moldova 3 331 244 units Bangladesh 1 949 213 units Senegal 1 901 84 units Brazil 1 698 6 unit Tunisia 1 258 45 units Iran 1 204 197 units Pakistan 1 198 62 units Algeria 1 173 16 units Ecuador 1 118 70 units other countries each lt 1000Economy Edit The Lingotto building in Via Nizza the world headquarters of Fiat Main article Economy of Turin Turin developed as a Fordist city in the early twentieth century which meant a shift from a service based economy to an industry based one 44 In the vein of many Fordist economies Turin s economy relies heavily upon its automotive and aerospace industries 45 46 Despite the general decline of the automotive industry since the oil crisis of 1973 the city still relies heavily upon its automotive industry Since before the second world war the automotive industry has been the largest employer in the city and almost all exports from Turin are manufactured goods 45 47 The city serves as the headquarters to Fiat Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino Turin Italian Automobiles Factory which has since been absorbed by its parent company the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles group now Stellantis headquartered in Amsterdam the eighth largest automotive company in the world 48 Turin is still home to a sizeable Fiat factory 49 From the 1980s Turin diversified its economy and is shifting back towards a service economy Tech and innovation industries are booming in Turin which was ranked third in number of innovative startups and firms in the information tech sector and has some of the most patent applications to the European Patent Office of any city 45 50 In 2008 the city generated a GDP of 68 billion ranking as the world s 78th richest city by purchasing power 51 and 16th in Europe according to PricewaterhouseCoopers 52 Turin accounts for 8 percent of Italy s GDP 53 The city has been ranked in 2010 by Globalization and World Cities Research Network as a Gamma level city Other companies operating in Turin are Maserati Lancia Alfa Romeo Iveco Pininfarina Bertone Sparco Italdesign Giugiaro New Holland Comau Magneti Marelli Graziano Oerlikon Ghia Fioravanti automotive Rai national broadcasting company Banca Investis FCA Bank Intesa Sanpaolo Reale Mutua finance Invicta Kappa Superga fashion Ferrero Lavazza Martini amp Rossi food amp beverage Alpitour hospitality and tourism TILab ex CSELT and Aurora pen manufacturer The city is also well known for its aerospace industry Alenia Aeronautica Thales Alenia Space and Avio The International Space Station modules Harmony Columbus Tranquility as well as the Cupola and all MPLMs were produced in Turin The future European launcher projects beyond Ariane 5 will also be managed from Turin by the new NGL company a subsidiary of EADS 70 and Aircraft Division of Leonardo 30 Culture EditVisual art and museums Edit The royal hunting lodge of Stupinigi The inside of the Egyptian Museum of Turin It is the world s second largest after the Museum of Cairo Turin as the former capital of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the Kingdom of Italy is home of the Savoy Residences In addition to the 17th century Royal Palace built for Madama Reale Christine Marie of France the official residence of the Savoys until 1865 there are many palaces residences and castles in the city centre and in the surrounding towns Turin is home to Palazzo Chiablese the Royal Armoury the Royal Library Palazzo Madama Palazzo Carignano Villa della Regina and the Valentino Castle The complex of the Residences of the Royal House of Savoy in Turin and in the nearby cities of Rivoli Moncalieri Venaria Reale Aglie Racconigi Stupinigi Pollenzo and Govone was declared a World Heritage Sites by UNESCO in 1997 In recent years Turin has become an increasingly popular tourist destination ranking 203rd in the world and tenth in Italy in 2008 with about 240 000 tourist arrivals 15 The Egyptian Museum of Turin specialises in archaeology and anthropology in particular the Art of Ancient Egypt It is home to what is regarded as one of the largest collections of Egyptian antiquities outside of Egypt In 2006 it received more than 500 000 visitors 54 The Museum of Oriental Art houses one of the most important Asian art collections in Italy 55 56 Other museums include the National Museum of Cinema the Museo Nazionale dell Automobile the J Museum the Museum of Human Anatomy Luigi Rolando the Museo delle Marionette puppet museum and the Museo Nazionale della Montagna National Museum of the Mountains Art museums include the Sabauda Gallery the Museo Civico d Arte Antica Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli the Accademia Albertina and the Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art After it had been little more than a town for a long time in 1559 the Duke Emmanuel Philibert of Savoy made Turin the capital of his domains The Duke had the ambition to transform the city into a major artistic and cultural capital and in the following centuries numerous artists were to work at the Savoy court especially architects and planners like Carlo di Castellamonte and his son Amedeo Guarino Guarini and in the 18th century Filippo Juvarra and Benedetto Alfieri As for the painting and the visual arts Turin became a point of reference especially in the 20th century In the 1920s the painter Felice Casorati inspired a number of students called The group of six of Turin and these included Carlo Levi Henry Paolucci Gigi Chessa Francis Menzio Nicola Galante and Jessie Boswell Artists born in Turin include the sculptor Umberto Mastroianni and the architect Carlo Mollino Between the 1960s and the 1970s the international centre of Turin Arte Povera the presence in the city of artists like Alighiero Boetti Mario Merz Giuseppe Penone Piero Gilardi and Michelangelo Pistoletto In those years there was a strong artistic influence of designer Armando Testa Artists currently operating in the city include Ugo Nespolo and Carol Rama Music Edit Teatro Regio opera house The city s main opera house is Teatro Regio di Torino where Puccini premiered his La Boheme in 1896 It was burned down in 1936 and was rebuilt after World War II Street posters promoting the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 On 8 October 2021 the European Broadcasting Union EBU and RAI announced that the city would host the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 following Italy s victory at the 2021 contest in Rotterdam Netherlands with the song Zitti e buoni performed by Maneskin The contest took place at the Pala Alpitour with both semi finals of the contest took place on 10 and 12 May and the grand final on 14 May It was the first time that Turin has hosted the contest and the third time that Italy has hosted the contest overall with the last being in Rome in 1991 57 Literature Edit National Library A literary centre for many centuries Turin began to attract writers only after the establishment of the court of the Dukes of Savoy One of the most famous writers of the 17th century was Giambattista Marino which in 1608 moved to the court of Charles Emmanuel I Marino suffered an assassination attempt by a rival Gaspare Murtola and was later imprisoned for a year because of gossip that he had said and written against the duke Perhaps because of this in 1615 Marino left Turin and moved to France The main literary figures during the Baroque age in Turin were Emanuele Tesauro and Alessandro Tassoni In the next century Torino hosted the poet Vittorio Alfieri from Asti for a while The situation was very different in the 19th century especially since the city became a point of reference for Italian unification and subsequently the capital of the Kingdom of Italy Indeed in those years Tommaseo Settembrini and John Meadows resided in the city A major literary and cultural woman of that time was Olimpia Savio In the late 19th and early 20th centuries Turin was home to writers such as Guido Gozzano Edmondo De Amicis Emilio Salgari and Dino Segre the latter known by the pseudonym of Pitigrilli Turin had a very important role in Italian literature after World War II A major publishing house Giulio Einaudi published works by authors such as Cesare Pavese Italo Calvino Vitaliano Brancati Primo Levi Natalia Ginzburg Fernanda Pivano Beppe Fenoglio Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini In more recent years writers active in the city are Giovanni Arpino Nico Orengo Giuseppe Culicchia Margherita Oggero Laura Mancinelli Alessandra Montrucchio Alessandro Perissinotto Guido Quartz Piero Soria and Alessandro Baricco Baricco was also among the founders of the Scuola Holden dedicated to writing techniques teaching In the local Piedmontese language has a literary tradition with names such as Nicoletto da Torino Ignas Isler author of epic poems and Eduard Calv Religion Edit The city is home to the well known Shroud of Turin a linen cloth bearing the image of a man who appears to have suffered physical trauma in a manner consistent with crucifixion It is kept in the royal chapel of the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist in the city centre The shroud is one of the city s main symbols and tourist attractions it is a symbol of religious devotion Science and Technology Edit Turin had an Astronomical observatory where was active Giovanni Plana The scientist Amedeo Avogadro worked as a professor in Turin The professor of Turin University Galileo Ferraris discovered the principle under electric motor during the 19 century In modern times Turin hosted the CSELT telco laboratory Media Edit Main article List of radio stations in Turin After Alexandria Madrid New Delhi Antwerp and Montreal Turin was chosen by UNESCO as World Book Capital for the year 2006 The International Book Fair is one of the most important fairs of its kind in Europe Turin is home to one of Italy s principal national newspapers La Stampa and the sports daily newspaper Tuttosport The city is also served by other publications such as the Turin editions of La Repubblica il Giornale Leggo City Metro and E Polis RAI has had a production centre in Turin since 1954 Sports Edit Main article Sports in Turin Juventus Stadium home of Juventus F C The Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino home of Torino F C The city has a rich sporting heritage as the home to two historically significant football teams Juventus F C founded in 1897 and Torino F C founded in 1906 Juventus has the larger fan base especially all over Italy and worldwide while Torino enjoys a greater support in the city itself The two clubs contest the oldest derby in Italy the Derby della Mole or the Turin derby 58 Juventus is Italy s most successful football club and one of the most winning in the world 59 It ranks joint twelfth in the list of the world s clubs with the most official international titles sixth between European clubs 60 and was the first in association football history remaining the only one in the world as of 2022 update after the first UEFA Europa Conference League Final to have won all possible official continental competitions and the world title 61 Juventus owned ground the Juventus Stadium was inaugurated in 2011 The Juventus Stadium hosted the 2014 UEFA Europa League Final This was the first time the city hosted a seasonal UEFA club competition s single match final Torino F C was founded by the union of one of the oldest football teams in Turin Football Club Torinese founded in 1894 with breakaways from Juventus and was the most successful team called Grande Torino in the Serie A during the 1940s In 1949 in the Superga air disaster a plane carrying almost the whole team crashed into the Basilica of Superga in the Turin hills Torino currently plays its home games at the Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino named after the team of the 1940s which was the host stadiums for the 1934 FIFA World Cup and the venue of the XX Winter Olympics moreover the team recently rebuilt the historic Stadio Filadelfia used for games of the youth teams and trainings of the first squad and seat of the team museum The city hosted the final stages of the EuroBasket 1979 The most important basketball club team is the Auxilium Torino refounded in 2009 playing in the Italian LBA In 2018 Auxilium Torino went to win its first Italian Basketball Cup ever 62 Turin hosted the 2006 Winter Olympics in February 2006 Turin is the largest city to have ever hosted a Winter Olympics and was the largest metropolitan area to host them at the time 63 64 65 The city was awarded with the title of European Capital of Sport 2015 66 The candidature sees the city strongly committed to increasing sports activities 67 68 The city hosts the ATP Finals tennis event from 2021 to 2025 69 Cinema Edit Mole Antonelliana Turin is the Italian city where film chromatography was first established As such it forms the birthplace of Italian cinema Because of its historic geographical and cultural proximity to France Italian filmmakers were naturally influenced by French cinema and the Lumiere brothers The first Italian cinema screening occurred in Turin in March 1896 In November 1896 Italian filmmakers performed the first cinema screening of a film before a fee paying audience 70 By the start of the 20th century especially after 1907 a number of the first Italian films were aired in Turin Examples include Giovanni Pastrone Cabiria in 1914 one of the first blockbusters in history The Turin based company Ambrosio Film established in 1906 by Arturo Ambrosio was one of the leading forces in Italian cinema and boosted the importance of the city as a filmmaking destination The company noted in particular for its historical epics produced a large number of films until it was dissolved in 1924 During the 1920s and 30s Turin hosted a number of film productions and major film studios film houses such as the Itala film Aquila and Fert Studios Today their heritage is in the modern Lumiq Studios 71 and Virtual Reality Multi Media Spa 72 73 Turin s prominence in Italian film continued until 1937 the year Cinecitta was inaugurated in Rome After World War II the cinematic scene in Turin continued to thrive 1956 saw the opening of the National Museum of Cinema first housed in the Palazzo Chiablese and then from 2000 in the imposing headquarters of the Mole Antonelliana In 1982 the film critic Gianni Rondolino created Festival Internazionale Cinema Giovani 74 which later became the Torino Film Festival Today Turin is one of the main cinematographic and television centres in Italy thanks to the role of the Turin Film Commission that reports the production of many feature films soap operas and commercials Turin streets were the locations where Audrey Hepburn played War and Peace Michael Caine drove a Mini Cooper in The Italian Job Claudio Bisio becomes the president of the Italian Republic Carlo Verdone set his version of Cinderella Marco Tullio Giordana shot Piazza Fontana The Italian Conspiracy Woody Allen shot Hannah and Her Sisters Cate Blanchett played Heaven Giovanna Mezzogiorno Vincere Marcello Mastroianni and Jacqueline Bisset The Sunday Woman and Harvey Keitel The Stone Merchant Turin also became the capital of the tsar for The Demons of St Petersberg Cuisine Edit The iconic gianduiotto chocolate Bicerin chocolate drink served in its trademark rounded glass Turin is well known for its chocolate production especially for its traditional ingot shaped chocolate called gianduiotto named after Gianduja a local commedia dell arte mask Moreover the city is also known for the so called bicerin a traditional hot drink made of espresso drinking chocolate and whole milk served layered in a small rounded glass Every year Turin organizes CioccolaTO a two week chocolate festival run with the main Piedmontese chocolate producers such as Caffarel Streglio Venchi and others as well as some big international companies such as Lindt amp Sprungli A typical Italian Aperitivo As for snack food the now popular tramezzini were first served in a historic cafe of downtown Turin namely Caffe Mulassano where they were devised in 1925 as an alternative to English tea sandwiches 75 76 In recent years another trademark drink of the city is MoleCola an Italian Coca Cola that entered production in 2012 and quickly spread both in Italy and outside its native country 77 Local cuisine also features a particular type of pizza so called pizza al padellino or pizza al tegamino which is basically a small sized thick crust and deep dish pizza typically served in several Turin pizza places 78 79 80 Since the mid 1980s Piedmont has also benefited from the start of the Slow Food movement and Terra Madre events that have highlighted the rich agricultural and vinicultural value of the Po Valley and Northern Italy Education Edit Hall of the Rectorate Palace of the University of Turin Turin is home to one of Italy s oldest universities the University of Turin including its affiliated Collegio Carlo Alberto which ranks among the best universities in the country Another established university in the city is the Polytechnic University of Turin ranking among Top 50 universities in the world and 1 in Italy in the fields of engineering technology and computer science Academic Ranking of World Universities published by Shanghai Jiao Tong University Turin also hosts the United Nations System Staff College the European Training Foundation and a campus of the ESCP business school ranked among the 10 best business schools in Europe Moreover the city hosts three small English language post secondary institutions St John International University International University College of Turin and the Turin School of Development Transport EditSee also Gruppo Torinese Trasporti ToBike and Turin Metro Porta Susa railway station The city currently has a large number of rail and road work sites Although this activity has increased as a result of the 2006 Winter Olympics parts of it had long been planned Some of the work sites deal with general roadworks to improve traffic flow such as underpasses and flyovers but two projects are of major importance and will radically change the shape of the city One is the Spina Centrale Central Spine project which includes the doubling of a major railway crossing the city the Turin Milan railway locally known as Passante Ferroviario di Torino Turin Railway Bypass The railroad previously ran in a trench which will now be covered by a major boulevard running from North to South of Turin in a central position along the city Porta Susa on this section will become Turin s main station to substitute the terminus of Porta Nuova with a through station Other important stations are Stura Rebaudengo Lingotto and Madonna di Campagna railway stations though not all of them belong to the layout of the Spina Centrale Turin Massaua metro station The other major project is the construction of a subway line based on the VAL system known as Metrotorino This project is expected to continue for years and to cover a larger part of the city but its first phase was finished in time for the 2006 Olympic Games inaugurated on 4 February 2006 and opened to the public the day after The first leg of the subway system linked the nearby town of Collegno with Porta Susa in Turin s city centre On 4 October 2007 the line was extended to Porta Nuova and then in March 2011 to Lingotto A new extension of the so called Linea 1 Line 1 is expected in the near future reaching both Rivoli up to Cascine Vica hamlet in the Western belt of Turin and Piazza Bengasi in the Southeast side of the city Furthermore a Linea 2 is in the pipeline that will connect the south western district of Mirafiori with Barriera di Milano in the north end In June 2018 the project entered the public consultation phase with the proposed list of 23 stations published on the city s website 81 Turin Caselle International Airport The main street in the city centre Via Roma runs atop a tunnel built during the fascist era when Via Roma itself was totally refurbished and took on its present day aspect The tunnel was supposed to host the underground line but it is now used as an underground car park A project to build an underground system was ready in the 1970s with government funding for it and for similar projects in Milan and Rome Whilst the other two cities went ahead with the projects Turin s local government led by mayor Diego Novelli shelved the proposal as it believed it to be too costly and unnecessary The city has an international airport known as Caselle International Airport Sandro Pertini airport code TRN in Caselle Torinese about 13 km 8 mi from Turin s centre connected to the city by rail from Dora Station and bus from Porta Nuova and Porta Susa railway stations As of 2010 update a bicycle sharing system the ToBike is operational The metropolitan area is served by Turin metropolitan railway service Central districts are served by tram lines 3 4 9 are light rail City tram bus can be seen behind Public transportation statistics Edit The average amount of time people spend commuting with public transit in Turin for example to and from work on a weekday is 65 min 14 of public transit riders ride for more than 2 hours every day The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 14 min while 19 of riders wait for over 20 minutes on average every day The average distance people usually ride in a single trip with public transit is 5 9 km 3 7 mi while 9 travel more than 12 km 7 5 mi in a single direction 82 Notable people EditMain article List of people from TurinInternational relations EditTwin towns sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Italy Turin is twinned with 83 Chambery France Cologne Germany Cordoba Argentina Detroit United States Esch sur Alzette Luxembourg Gaza City Palestine Glasgow Scotland United Kingdom Liege Belgium Lille France Nagoya Japan Quetzaltenango Guatemala Rosario Argentina Rotterdam Netherlands Salt Lake City United States Shenyang China The sixth district of Turin is twinned with 84 Bagneux FranceCooperation agreements Edit Turin also cooperates with 83 Bacău Romania Barcelona Spain Bethlehem Palestine Campo Grande Brazil Cannes France Fortaleza Brazil Haifa Israel Harbin China Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam Kharkhorin Mongolia Lyon France Marseille France Nantes France Nice France Praia Cape Verde Rosario Argentina Saint Petersburg Russia Salvador Brazil Skopje North Macedonia Shenzhen China Yangon Myanmar Yekaterinburg Russia Zlin Czech RepublicSee also EditOutline of Turin 512 TaurinensisReferences Edit Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved 16 March 2019 City population i e that of the comune or municipality from www demo istat it bilmens2012gen index html ISTAT Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 40588118 0 Latin Augusta Taurinorum then Taurinum Statistiche demografiche ISTAT www demo istat it Archived from the original on 19 October 2019 Retrieved 2 June 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which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Archived 16 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine a b Twinnings and Agreements comune torino it Turin Archived from the original on 18 June 2013 Retrieved 21 March 2022 Cooperation internationale bagneux92 fr in French Bagneux Archived from the original on 17 August 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2020 Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of TurinExternal links Edit Media related to Turin at Wikimedia Commons Wikiquote has quotations related to Turin City of Turin Official website tourist informations Weather Turin How to reach Turin Turin Museums This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Turin Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Turin travel guide from WikivoyagePreceded byRotterdam 2020 2021 Eurovision Song Contest host city2022 Succeeded byLiverpool 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turin amp oldid 1132904478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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