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The "Spina Centrale" project
The "Spina Centrale" project (redevelopment plans
were approved at the end of 1998) refers to the railway line that
crosses the city from north to south and the disused industrial
areas along its route. The work will be carried out over a ten-year
period, between 2000-2010, with the use of both public and private
resources. Work has been started to demolish and improve these industrial
areas and interventions along the railway line are already underway.
Context
Turin, chief town of the Piedmont Region (Northern Italy, territorial
area covering approximately 2,500,000 m2), has approximately 950,000
inhabitants. The population of the region numbers approximately
4,300,000.
Concrete steps have been taken to implement the main guidelines
of the General Urban Development Scheme, which has been regularly
revised in the light of continual and constant progress. Indeed,
many things have changed since the plan was originally conceived.
New spaces are needed to house new production activities, innovative
technologies must be used to provide services to businesses and
families, new trade laws have been introduced and the city's higher
education establishments, namely the university and polytechnic
(Engineering and Architecture), have more diversified requirements.
Turin has decided not to associate development with a new period
of expansion. Instead, it intends to re-launch the city by converting,
completing and reorganising existing built-up areas. Of these, the
most important are those that played a leading role in the "industrial
city's" previous growth process and which has now fulfilled
and concluded its functional cycle. These are the areas of Turin's
large industrial complexes that have long-since fallen into disuse;
they also include the important 19th-century services that supported
the organisation of the modern city.
The General Urban Development Scheme has located the 4 areas of
the "Spina Centrale" (called "Spina" 1, 2, 3,
4) that constitute the most important complex of disused industrial
areas that are suitable for redevelopment. Approximately ITL 2,000
milliard will be invested to redevelop these areas, which cover
an area of more than 2,000,000 m².
The railway trench crosses the city from north to south and dates
back to the end of the 19th century. In the 20th century it played
a strategic role in orientating and promoting the city's development
and that of those specific areas located along such an important
access route. On the other hand, it also represents a line of separation,
a barrier, a fracture in the city as a whole.
The project provided for in the General Urban Development Scheme
for the "Spina Centrale" - one of the three main axes
that form the basis for large scale redevelopment - exploits the
restructuring of the Turin railway link in order to carry out an
important urban renewal operation.
The realisation of the Metropolitan Rail Network, the purpose of
which is to develop the railway as a public transportation axis
at the urban, metropolitan, regional, national and international
levels, also involves lowering the rail level. This will enable
the surface to be redeveloped, thus eliminating the fracture caused
by the railway. The Metropolitan Rail Network project provides for:
twelve kilometres of track, seven of which will run underground,
crossing the city from Lingotto to the Stura station (from south
to north), 7 stations, 2 of which will be new and 3 re-built, 50
million passengers per year, and investments of ITL 2,300 milliard.
This transportation project is innovative in that it also includes
plans that valorize urban aspects. Firstly, at the environmental
level: the whole distance covered by the railway line will be covered
over and a wide boulevard will be created. This constitutes an important
factor in terms of image and urban quality. Secondly, in terms of
improving connections: the project valorizes the function of the
railway link as well as the improvements to urban accessibility
provided by the new road axis, which links the existing road network
and city.
One of the main objectives of the project is to return reclaimed
areas to the city's inhabitants. These areas will be used to develop
parks, works of art and wide boulevards because the way in which
the inhabitants of a specific neighbourhood or an entire city perceive
the various stages of an urban development scheme is essential to
the success, or otherwise, of a project.
Challenges
Turin was the first Italian city to develop a Strategic Plan for
a ten-year period. Drawn up in collaboration with about 1,000 representatives
of the most important public and private bodies, it outlines six
strategic guidelines for the city. An association with over 100
members is dedicated to implementing approximately 84 projects contained
in the plan.
The City of Turin has also developed an innovative site/laboratory
to accompany and explain the urban policies of the Turin metropolitan
district. A permanent centre of knowledge, debate and research that
integrates with existing national and international networks to
interpret the complexities of the contemporary city, where information
about territorial projects is stored and made available in order
to establish a new form of dialogue with the city's inhabitants
and promote Turin's international image. The first step towards
implementation of this project consisted of a feasibility study,
the results of which portray a lively, interactive, technologically
advanced place, designed to involve and inform visitors so that
they can discuss and take part in urban redevelopment plans. One
of the first products created by the "City Workshop" is
the experimental web site (www.oct.torino.it)
and the construction of a three-dimensional model of the city of
Turin, which includes important projects such as the Metropolitan
Rail Network and the "Spina Centrale". A video and CD-ROM
illustrating the website have been made available for the 4th Convention
in Rotterdam.
The purpose of interventions on the "Spina Centrale" is
to transform areas of urban decay, in the central part of the city,
from the north to the Lingotto area (in the south), into new urban
centres, by physically, functionally and, morphologically integrating
parts of the city that are currently separated by the railway trench.
Complex transformations are involved, including the expansion of
the universities, the creation of new integrated cultural centres,
buildings for the tertiary and advanced production sectors, trade,
services, and new residential complexes incorporated into a new
system of public spaces that are beneficial to the environment.
The "Spina" axis, which extends outwards into the metropolitan
area, is part of a unitary project that combines the potential of
the 'underground' railway system with urban renewal at ground level,
to reveal a new urban landscape.
Turin will no longer be divided in two. A boulevard with three traffic
lanes in each direction (one reserved for public transport) will
cross the city. It will have trees along its central island and
9-metre tree-lined borders each side.
Strategy and results
The City of Turin considers the theme of the quality of architecture
and public space worthy of particular attention. For this reason,
it has appointed a qualified professional architect (selected by
means of an international competition) who will be responsible for
co-ordinating private and municipal building projects. Urban redevelopment
plans concerning the "Spina Centrale" project - drawn
up in line with the General Urban Development Scheme - were subsequently
examined and are currently being further improved under the guidance
of the co-ordinating architect.
In view of this scheme, the city council and other bodies concerned
have announced a competition to enable designers to submit proposals
for high quality projects for planned new buildings that will eventually
characterise the image of the "Spina" itself.
The term for taking part in international competitions for projects
for the new Piedmont Region Office Building ("Spina" 1)
and the New Civic Library ("Spina" 2) has now expired.
In addition to the "Spina Centrale" area redevelopment
scheme, over the next few years new schemes are planned to redevelop
more areas that constitute the natural continuation of the "Spina"
to the south, namely the Lingotto - Central Market areas. These
areas are strategic, not only because they constitute the continuation
of the "Spina" along the Metropolitan Rail Network, but
for the potential for improvement and redevelopment that, during
the 2006 Winter Olympic Games, will distinguish the area as the
fulcrum of the Olympic Village.
The "Spina Centrale" project in brief
"Spina" 1
- Territorial area: 142,000 m²
- Gross floor area: 75,800 m²
- Total investment for implementation of public and private operations:
ITL 155,393,800,000.
"Spina" 2
- Territorial area: 133,080 m²
- Overall gross floor area (residential, tertiary, university buildings,
ASPI (services to businesses)): 50,000 m²
- Gross floor area (library and theatre): 40,000 m²
- Private resources: approx. ITL 112,000,000,000.
- Public resources (library and theatre): ITL 160,000,000,000.
"Spina" 3
- Territorial area: 1,017,700 m²
- Gross floor area: 586,000 m²
- Total investment for implementation of public and private operations:
ITL 1,000,000,000,000.
"Spina" 4
- Territorial area: 149,953 m²
- Gross floor area: 87,200 m²
- Total investment for implementation of public and private operations:
ITL. 130,386,000,000.
Lingotto
- Territorial area: 1,241,320 m²
- Total gross floor area being redeveloped: 579,323 m²
- Total investment: ITL 1,428,000,000,000.
Citta di Torino
Divisione Edilizia ed Urbanistica
Settore Progetti di Riassetto Urbano
Links:
Strategic Plan
http://www.torino-internazionale.org/Page/t07/view_html?idp=1065
Qualità Urbana
http://www.torino-internazionale.org/Page/t01/view_html?idp=90
Progetto Periferie
http://www.comune.torino.it/periferie/
Virtual Urban Center (Pdf)
http://www.larchitetto.archiworld.it/architetto/archivio/
architetto154/perletti.pdf
Officina Città Torino
http://www.oct.torino.it/index0.htm
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(scrollable window
Aerial view of the
City of Turin showing
the perimeter of the "Spina Centrale" area. Current situation.

500 x 396 px, 47 KB
View of "Spina 1"
on the part of road
that has already
been completed.

500 x 352 px, 49 KB
Project that won the competition to design
the new Piedmont
Region Office Building. Architect
Massimiliano Fuksas.

720 x 546 px, 83 KB
Project that won the competition to design
a cultural centre. Table of urban relations.
Architect Mario Bellini.

800 x 343 px, 86 KB
Plan for the "Spina 3" area redevelopment scheme.
Architect J.P.Buffi,
planning co-ordinator.
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