Bologna’s Leaning Tower to Undergo €4m Repair Project, Ensuring Preservation

Bologna’s Leaning Tower to Undergo €4m Repair Project, Ensuring Preservation

Officials have announced plans to repair one of two 12th-century towers in the‌ Italian city of Bologna after the area around it had to secured last month over fears its leaning could lead ​to collapse.

The city said the €4.3m (£3.7m) project to shore up ​the Garisenda tower‍ – ‌one ‍of the ⁢Two ⁢Towers ⁢that look out over⁣ central⁤ Bologna, providing inspiration over the centuries to painters and poets and a lookout spot ‍during conflicts – would proceed in ‌January and ⁣February.

Italy’s civil protection agency has ⁢maintained a yellow alert​ on the site, ​denoting caution but not imminent⁢ danger. The Garisenda, the shorter‌ of two⁤ towers built between 1109 and 1119, stands at 48 metres (157ft) in height to ⁣the Asinelli‌ tower’s 97 metres (320ft).

The city’s ⁣mayor, Matteo Lepore, ⁣noted⁣ in ⁢a debate earlier this month that the Garisenda tower had leaned since ⁢it was built “and has been a concern‍ ever since”.⁢ It sustained additional⁢ damage in the medieval era when ironwork and bakery ovens were built inside.

“We inherited ⁢a situation that over the centuries has caused this‍ illness,” he said. The mayor has asked​ the government to petition to make the towers Unesco world ⁣heritage sites.

Work ⁣to reinforce both towers has been ongoing since ⁢the 1990s. Preliminary work on the Garisenda tower will include creating a containment area to‌ prevent any⁢ damage to nearby structures or harm to passersby from a “possible collapse”, the city said in​ a statement. Video ​cameras will maintain surveillance of the site.

The Garisenda‌ slants at 4 degrees, compared with 3.9 degrees ⁤for Italy’s more‌ famous ⁣Leaning Tower of Pisa.

The Garisenda ⁢and ​Asinelli ‌towers are named after the rival families who built them, believed to have‌ been a way to compete ‌over their power and ⁤wealth, and are located at what was​ the entrance to‍ the city. The Garisenda was originally 60 metres’ tall but had to be lowered after ‍it​ began to lean.

The tower is cited several times ⁣in Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy and Le Rime, and Charles‌ Dickens wrote about it in his Pictures⁣ from Italy. The Garisenda was also referred to ​in Goethe’s Italian Journey.

2023-12-02 10:18:56
Article from www.theguardian.com
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