Saturday, April 2, 2022

How Italy Is Bringing Its Rustic Villages Back to Life


The future will restore these villages but now we are still sittingidle.  The lanbd cost is minor and the present build is long depreciated and can be replaced so long as we no longer use traditional methods.  folks want a nice modern home, but it can be easily be made up to conform to anything.

We presently preserve century old facades in front of twenty story condo builds.  Again prior value is low. and plenty of room exists to produce a class build.

Ultimately the community must make a living and today this is done online and thast is easy enough on an italian village patio.  We now all understand this and Covid filled all those fine properties up country for us for that reason.
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How Italy Is Bringing Its Rustic Villages Back to Life

TRAVEL | APRIL 2022

Take a photographic tour through the country’s effort to revitalize its rural towns


Left, the 19th-century Church of Santa Lucia, in Longiaru, in northern Italy. Right, the largely abandoned southern village of Pentedattilo.Francesco Lastrucci



Photographs by Francesco Lastrucci


https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/italy-bringing-rustic-villages-back-life-180979784/

The world tends to think of Italy as the modern inheritor of ancient Rome, the national home of pizza, espresso and Leonardo da Vinci. But long before it was a unified nation, the boot-shaped peninsula was a loose collection of towns and villages, borghi in Italian, with wildly varied architecture, topography and cultural histories. In picturesque towns in the north, Italian is often the third language spoken after German and Ladin, a surviving Latin dialect with roots in the Roman conquest of the Alps. The central region of Abruzzo has a medieval village that made the Medici family a fortune in the wool trade (they raised their sheep there) and another with a church built on the ruins of a Roman-era Temple of Jupiter.

Until the 20th century, most Italians lived in such rural hamlets, which were often rich in history and natural beauty but short on economic opportunity and social services. When industrialization drove massive migration to the cities, thousands of borghi were left behind. Populations plummeted. Whole towns fell into disrepair or worse, further pummeled by floods, earthquakes, landslides and wildfires. Today, more than 5,000 borghi are considered at risk of depopulation, according to Anci, the National Association of Italian Municipalities, with some 2,000 on the brink of total abandonment—of becoming ghost towns.







The Church of Santa Maria della Pietà, dating to the 16th century, in the Apennine Mountains. Francesco Lastrucci


In recent years, though, artists, agrarian dreamers and entrepreneurs have started driving a return to Italy’s neglected rural villages. New eco-tourism ventures draw visitors and new transplants to remote locales. Crowdfunded cooperatives help newcomers open grocery stores, arts centers, co-working spaces, a pizzeria. In 61 towns across the country, local governments will even sell you a house for €1—you don’t have to be Italian, but you often have to prove you have plans to restore it.

This highly publicized initiative has its charms, but the results so far have been surprisingly modest given contemporary enthusiasm for remodeling. The town of Gangi, in Sicily, is considered an exemplary success, yet only 13 such houses have sold since the program began in 2009, a rate of just one a year.

Still, a recent opinion poll found that the winds are shifting: Two-thirds of people under 39 living in Italy’s borghi say they hope to remain there, suggesting the reversal of a trend going back 70 or so years. Not long ago, the Calabrian village of Pentedattilo, originally a seventh-century B.C. Greek colony, saw the arrival of its first new resident in nearly 40 years: Makandjan Thunkara, a young refugee from Mali, who is working with the town’s only other resident, Rossella Aquilanti, a former postwoman, to restore an abandoned farm. They are rarely without the help of a rotating cast of young people who come to stay and work the land and look after the pigs and goats. “We make cheese and bread, we have a vegetable garden,” Aquilanti says. “The only thing we have to buy is wine.”
Santo Stefano di Sessanio, Abruzzo

The fortified medieval village was once the Medici family’s base for raising sheep whose wool, sold in Florence, helped to make the family rich. The wool trade remains an important local industry, but the town is equally famous for its lentils, which have been farmed here since A.D. 1000 and are known for their intense flavor, attributed to the altitude. Still, Santo Stefano has lost a large proportion of its population and today is home to only 60 permanent residents. In Santo Stefano the terrain is so steep that many streets and alleys consist of long, mazelike staircases.


Here, the road from Piazza Medicea, in the town’s historic center, leading down toward Piazza Cristoforo Colombo. Francesco Lastrucci


Dyed wool in the shop of Valeria Gallese, just off the town’s main square. Francesco Lastrucci


Corno Grande, at 9,554 feet the highest peak in the Apennines. Francesco Lastrucci
Gangi, Sicily


Built on the sloping crest of Mount Marone, 50 miles southeast of Palermo, the town was settled in the Roman era, if not before. In 2014, it was one of the first in Italy to sell abandoned houses for €1, a program that here, at least, has been relatively successful.


Left, the view from a piazza near Corso Fedele Vitale, overlooking a neighborhood where most of the discounted homes were located. Top right, children play soccer on the terrace of the Duomo di San Nicola di Bari. Bottom right, 19th-century frescoes inside the Church of San Cataldo. Francesco Lastrucci

Ostana, Piedmont

Not far from the French border, in the western Alps, Ostana lost waves of residents to industrial jobs in nearby Turin in the 1950s and ’60s. Recently, it has lured new residents with a civic cooperative that built a co-working space and a children’s library and organizes artists’ residencies.


Top left, a townsperson sips tea on the stone-covered rooftops of Ostana. The peaks of Monviso and Pian del Re, along the French border, are in the background. Right, Roberto Miretto, a former truck driver who arrived in Ostana by chance while making a delivery. “It was love at first sight,” he says. “I knew I wanted to live here for the rest of my life.” Today he runs an agriturismo, a combined restaurant, bed-and-breakfast and farmhouse where he breeds cashmere goats. Bottom left, cows graze on the Alpine meadows of Pian del Re, near the source of the Po River. Francesco Lastrucci

Vaccarizzo di Montalto, Calabria

"Through the years we lost everything,” Roberta Caruso says of her long impoverished hometown. “Even the post office shut down.” But in 2019, architects and entrepreneurs affiliated with MIT launched a program to revive the village, renovating buildings, blazing hiking trails and opening an artisanal food shop.


A carpenter restores old movie theater seats. Francesco Lastrucci


Left, a city-dweller, home for the weekend, gives his father a haircut. Center, a detail of nearly mature olives in a Vaccarizzo backyard. Right, the 13th-century Church of San Rocco. Francesco Lastrucci
Pentedattilo, Calabria

Founded by Greeks in the seventh century B.C., the town is famous for a 17th-century blood feud between aristocrats. In the 1960s, poverty and devastating flooding led to abandonment, but the arrival of Rossella Aquilanti, a former postwoman, sparked a modest revival.



Left, a vacant house, with Mount Etna in the background. Right, volunteers harvest almonds on Aquilanti’s farm. Francesco Lastrucci


Makandjan Thunkara, one of the town's only permanent residents. Francesco Lastrucci


Prickly pears ripening in October in the Calabrian countryside. Francesco Lastrucci

Fontecchio, Abruzzo

After a major earthquake in 2009, half of the town’s homes were condemned as unsafe. Today, though, Fontecchio is buzzing with construction and activity, and has become a hub for international artists.


Workers restore a medieval palace. Francesco Lastrucci


Left, a cracked ceiling in the home of Valeria Pica, a Naples-born art historian who relocated to restore her ancestral property. Center, a 14th-century fountain, long a social gathering place, in the Piazza del Popolo. Right, a fresco adorns the exterior of a damaged house. Francesco Lastrucci

Longiaru, Trentino-Alto Adige


Nestled in the Dolemites, the village has retained a small but steady community of Ladin heritage. In the past, residents farmed wheat and barley but now rely on dairy production and sustainable tourism, which is closely regulated. "Tourism is good, say Christoph Alfreider, a mountain guide, "but it cannot become a monoculture, otherwise it would kill the land we live on." A young resident named Neomi Clara considered moving away—"a fleeting thought," she says now.


Left, huts dot the steep alpine pastureland near Longiaru in the Dolomites. The road leads to the Sass de Putia summit, one of the highest peaks in the area. Right, a highland cow at a farm near Longiaru. Originally from Scotland, the breed’s long hair protects it during the region’s cold winters. Francesco Lastrucci


A small local museum celebrating regional Ladin culture boasts a grand view of the Dolomites.

 

A resident cares for her robust flower garden adorning her front yard. Francesco Lastrucci


Francesco Lastrucci | READ MORE

Francesco Lastrucci is a photographer based in Italy whose work has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and Vanity Fair, among others.


Ferdinando Cotugno | READ MORE

Ferdinando Cotugno, a Milan-based journalist, wites for GQ, Vanity Fair, Domani and L'Essenziale.

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