Politiche e strategie istituzionali per la riqualificazione del patrimonio militare dismesso in Italia

  1. Gastaldi, Francesco 1
  2. Camerin, Federico 2
  1. 1 Università Iuav di Venezia
    info

    Università Iuav di Venezia

    Venecia, Italia

    ROR https://ror.org/01e6ksd91

  2. 2 Universidad de Valladolid
    info

    Universidad de Valladolid

    Valladolid, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01fvbaw18

Actes de conférence:
Military Landscapes. A future for military heritage

Éditorial: Skirà (Milán)

ISBN: 978-88-572-3732-9

Année de publication: 2017

Type: Communication dans un congrès

Résumé

This article aims to highlight the longstanding issues concerning properties no longer useful to the institutional goals of Italian Ministry of Defense, to analyze the State dismissal and valorization policies and the related procedures (such as the ‘Territorial Unitary Development’ and ‘federalism state property’ programs). Specifically, it will focus the attention on role of the task force between the Ministryof Defense and State Property Agency for the elaboration of hypotheses and paths of rationalization andoptimization projects of the use of military sites. Starting from some research already carried out by thetwo authors, it will update the ongoing procedures of refurbishment of abandoned military sites in Italy(among them, the art. 26 of Decree Law ‘unlocked Italy’ and the ‘federal building’) and it will analyze the role of ‘new’ actors in the procedures, as the Investment Management Companies ‘Cassa Depositi e Prestiti’ and ‘Invimit’. Those actors, through their real estate investment trusts, are acting as private stakeholders in an attempt to unlock the planning, design, economic and sometimes social inertia related to urban regeneration projects of former military assets in several Italian cities (such as Bologna, Florence, Milan, Rome and Turin). Eventually, it will try to understand if nowadays it is facedwith a season characterized by more efficient procedures.

Information sur le financement

European Joint Doctorate “urbanHIST”. European Union. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 721933.

Financeurs