Venue
The FPL24 conference will be held at Energy Center of Politecnico di Torino (PoliTo) in Turin (Torino), Italy. Politecnico di Torino is the first Italian School for Engineers, and has been training engineers, architects, designers, and urban planners involved in all societal changes and innovations since 1859.
The Energy Center is a new building conveniently located in proximity to the university’s main campus. The suggested way to reach it is by pointing your navigation app to this address: Via Paolo Borsellino, 38 int. 16, 10138 Torino TO (not the main entrance of Politecnico di Torino, which is 10/15 minutes away on foot).
Location: Energy Center of Politecnico di Torino
Address: Via Paolo Borsellino, 38 int. 16, 10138 Torino TO
Coordinates: 45.06770864287009, 7.656352906509019
Transportation
Turin (Torino) can be easily reached by plane and train. The city has its own international airport (TRN) and is well connected with the Intercontinental Milano Malpensa airport (MXP). High-speed trains are available from/to the major cities in Italy and Europe, e.g., Milan, Rome, Venice, Florence, Naples, Paris, Lyon, etc.. Please note that currently, some issues are occurring in trains between France and Turing due to a rock slide on the French side.
Bus Stations Near the Venue
- IDs: 3149/3151 – MORETTA (c. Ferrucci / v. Moretta) – 2 minutes by walk – bus line 56;
- IDs: 557/558 – PALAGIUSTIZIA (c. Vittorio Emanuele) – 8 minutes by walk – bus lines 55, 68; tram line 9;
- IDs 3284/3283 – POLITECNICO (c. Castelfidardo) – 8 minutes by walk – bus line 12;
- IDs 618/622 – FERRUCCI (c. Ferrucci) – 8 minutes by walk – bus line 33, 42; tram line 15, 16CD.
Underground Train Station near the Venue (Metropolitana)
- VINZAGLIO – 14 minutes by walk
- PORTA SUSA – 16 minutes by walk
More About Turin
Torino (Turin in English) is an important business and cultural center in northern Italy, the capital of the Piedmont region, located mainly on the left bank of the Po River, surrounded by the western Alpine arch. The population of the urban area is estimated to be 1.7 million people. The city has a rich culture and history and is known for its numerous art galleries, restaurants, churches, palaces, opera houses, city squares, parks, gardens, theatres, libraries, museums, and other venues. Turin is well known for its baroque, rococo, neo-classical, and Art Nouveau architecture. Much of the city’s public squares, castles, gardens, and elegant palazzi, such as Palazzo Madama, were built in the 16th and 18th century, after the capital of the Duchy of Savoy was moved to Turin from Chambéry (nowadays in France), as part of the urban expansion.
Torino is sometimes called the “cradle of Italian liberty”, for having been the birthplace and home of notable politicians and people who contributed to the Renaissance, such as Cavour, a leading figure in the movement toward Italian unification, and many of the protagonists of Italian political and social life in the 20th century, among the others, Antonio Gramsci, Piero Gobetti, and Palmiro Togliatti. The city used to be a major European political center, being Italy’s first capital in 1861 and being home to the House of Savoy, the Italian royal family. The city currently hosts some of the best Italian universities, colleges, academies, such as the six century-old Univ. di Torino and the prestigious Engineering school Politecnico di Torino.
In addition to Italian cuisine, the region around Torino offers some specialties, including a variety of cheese from the neighboring mountains. Dessert traditions include creative uses of hazelnuts cream. The region has seen the birth of internationally recognized movements, such as SlowFood and the Eataly “gourmet” grocery and restaurant chain. Torino is the home of several microbreweries, winners of international prizes every year.
Turin hosts prestigious museums and monuments, including the Egyptian Museum (the oldest museum entirely dedicated to Ancient Egypt and the second largest after Cairo’s) and the Mole Antonelliana (featured on the Italian 2-cent euro coins). Turin’s several monuments and sights make it one of the world’s top 250 tourist destinations. Turin is also well known as the home of the Shroud of Turin, the football teams Juventus F.C. and Turin F.C., the headquarters of automobile manufacturers FIAT, Lancia and Alfa Romeo, and as host of the 2006 Winter Olympics. Several International Space Station modules, such as Harmony, Tranquility, and Columbus, were also manufactured at the Thales Alenia Space factory in Turin. Turin is the only Italian city listed in the New York Times “52 Places to Go in 2016” guide.