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Turin and Lingotto: resilience, forgetting and the reinvention of place

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  • Annalisa Colombino
  • Alberto Vanolo

Abstract

Lingotto used to be an important industrial site and a highly symbolic space at the heart of the city of Turin, Italy. The aim of this article is to analyse the multiple trajectories, spatialities and layers of memories, meanings and practices that overlapped within and across Lingotto in the last decades, following the changing economic conditions and connected discursive paradigms associated with the evolution of the local economy since the Fordist crisis of the 1970s. The analysis shows that Lingotto may be interpreted as a mirror of Turin’s resilience strategies used to cope with the economic crises that have hit the city. Furthermore, it shows how Lingotto is a highly resilient urban fragment and building. Contrary to mainstream debates about the need to conserve and stage local urban heritages, this paper offers an account of Lingotto’s resilience, which highlights how forgetting the past may be a strategy for tackling the present and being resilient. The analysis of the evolution of Lingotto thus contributes to understanding urban processes that entwine with the quest for resilience in the contemporary post-industrial city, stressing the ambiguous role of the often-implicit politics of forgetting and amnesia in a framework of urban resilience.

Suggested Citation

  • Annalisa Colombino & Alberto Vanolo, 2017. "Turin and Lingotto: resilience, forgetting and the reinvention of place," European Planning Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 25(1), pages 10-28, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:eurpls:v:25:y:2017:i:1:p:10-28
    DOI: 10.1080/09654313.2016.1254598
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Abid Mehmood, 2016. "Of resilient places: planning for urban resilience," European Planning Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 24(2), pages 407-419, February.
    2. James McGlade & Robert Murray & James Baldwin & Keith Ridgway & Belinda Winder, 2006. "Industrial Resilience and Decline: A Co-Evolutionary Framework," Chapters, in: Elizabeth Garnsey & James McGlade (ed.), Complexity and Co-Evolution, chapter 6, Edward Elgar Publishing.
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