E-ISSN 2281-4612
ISSN 2281-3993
Academic Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies
www.richtmann.org
Vol 12 No 1
January 2023
24
.
Research Article
© 2023 Sonia Paone.
This is an open access article licensed under the Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/)
Received: 21 October 2022 / Accepted: 26 December 2022 / Published: 5 January 2023
The Renovation of Italian Railway Stations: From the
Journey to the Consumption of the Journey
Sonia Paone
Associate Professor,
Sociology of the Environment and Territory
Department of Political Science,
University of Pisa,
Italy
DOI: https://doi.org/10.36941/ajis-2023-0003
Abstract
The article analyses the transformations that have affected Italian railway stations in recent decades. The
first part deals with the history of the railway station and is devoted to understanding its functions as well as
its social and symbolic meanings. The construction of railways had a significant impact on the urban form: it
created new centralities and fractures and conditioned the development of the city. The railway station
represented a novelty from an architectural point of view, being a space in which architectural and
engineering knowledge merged. Because of their importance and monumentality, railway stations have been
likened to cathedrals of modernity and movement and have been among the most important public spaces in
the twentieth century. The second part of the article focuses on railway station renovation projects, in
particular the «Grandi Stazioni» project, viewing it in the broader context of the profound changes in urban
policies, which are increasingly oriented towards enhancing competitiveness and attractiveness. The
renovation of stations has been aimed at revitalising rail mobility to address the mounting crisis in both the
freight and passenger sectors, due to competition from road transport first and air transport later. The loss
of centrality of rail transport had also affected railway station spaces, multiplying material and social voids
as well as forms of decay. The renovation of railway stations has taken the form of a privatisation and
commodification of spaces and an increase in surveillance and control. The transformations of railway
stations can thus be read an example of contraction/domestication of public space.
Keywords: railway stations, redevelopment, public space, commodification, surveillance
1. Introduction
1.1 The advent of the railways and station architecture: a periodization
Before analysing the redevelopment and renovation processes that have affected stations in recent
decades, it is a good idea to briefly retrace the most significant stages in the history of station space to
grasp the functions and meanings, including symbolic ones, that it has taken on over time. First, it
should be remembered that the advent of the railways in Europe, which took place in the first half of
the nineteenth century, brought about a revolution in the transport of goods and passengers by