Author
Listed:
- Maristella Bergaglio
(Department of Cultural and Environmental Heritage, University of Milan, 20142 Milano, Italy)
- Valentina Capocefalo
(Department of Cultural and Environmental Heritage, University of Milan, 20142 Milano, Italy)
- Alice Giulia Dal Borgo
(Department of Cultural and Environmental Heritage, University of Milan, 20142 Milano, Italy)
- Giuseppe Gambazza
(Department of Cultural and Environmental Heritage, University of Milan, 20142 Milano, Italy)
Abstract
Italian inner areas face population decline, limited access to services and fragile infrastructure; however, the micro-mechanisms through which community practices generate tangible improvements often remain unclear. Still, local communitarian initiatives, such as those represented by ecovillages, can be an effective response to the ongoing process of marginalisation, becoming true living labs for place-based transitions. Through the analysis of the Torri Superiore Ecovillage (Imperia, Italy), a recognised and well-known good practice in the national and international ecovillage circuit, we want to find answers to three research questions: (RQ1) To what extent can an ecovillage act as a living lab for social innovation and ecological transition in inner areas? (RQ2) Which demographic and governance conditions enable territorial resilience and which ones block it? (RQ3) Which environmental practices generate locally significant improvements and with what limitations? Based on qualitative and interpretative evidence (2016–2025)—field observations, internal documents and testimonies—and on essential demographic indicators (ISTAT/SNAI), this study examines the Torri Superiore Ecovillage as a small-scale living lab. Torri Superiore and the surrounding municipalities are ageing and have reduced demographic bases; however selective immigration and heterogeneity of skills act as partial buffers. The governance of the Torri Superiore Ecovillage combines clear rules, participatory routines and coordination mechanisms, promoting problem solving while remaining sensitive to leadership burdens. The “bridging” between multiple actors enables terrace maintenance, local water resource management, agroecological practices, renewable energy adoption, waste prevention/composting and light mobility to achieve tangible environmental improvements on a small scale. We frame transferability as analytical (not statistical), specify the enabling conditions (sufficient active participants, stable routines, territorial management) and outline the relevant policy implications for SNAI classes and a lightweight longitudinal observatory.
Suggested Citation
Maristella Bergaglio & Valentina Capocefalo & Alice Giulia Dal Borgo & Giuseppe Gambazza, 2025.
"Ecovillages as Living Labs for Social Innovation: The Case of Torri Superiore,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(1), pages 1-23, December.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2025:i:1:p:188-:d:1825360
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