Venice Lido to rediscover

Venice Lido launches €430m bid to rediscover its glory days

venice_lidoOne hundred years on from its heyday as Europe’s most glamorous playground for royals and starlets, the Venice Lido is set for a €430m facelift aimed at creating a 21st-century version of the belle époque.

This 11-mile strip of land dividing the Venice lagoon from the Adriatic comes alive once a year in September for the Venice Film Festival, when it is besieged by actors, journalists and paparazzi. But for the rest of the year it lapses into a genteel slumber. Elegant beachfront hotels such as the Excelsior, which once hosted Joan Crawford and Errol Flynn, have seen business fade, while tourists flock in ever greater numbers to the main island of Venice, just a short vaporetto (ferry) ride away.

“The Lido has slowly turned residential and gone to sleep, covered in dust,” said Giovanni Gusso, president of the Lido’s municipal council.

Hundreds of millions of euros in private funding have been lined up to restore the Lido’s art nouveau and art deco gems and the wide expanse of beach where servants once set out silver cutlery in beach huts, while government cash is being spent on a new vaporetto terminal and a vast new cinema to serve the festival and double as a year-round conference centre for 6,000 visitors.

One of the most famous films in the history of Italian cinema is at the heart of the battle for the Lido’s future. More than 2,000 people have signed up to protest against plans to demolish the turn-of-the-century Alberoni beach pavilion at the south end and the beach huts featured in the closing scene of Luigi Visconti’s 1971 film Death in Venice, starring Dirk Bogarde.

The Hotel des Bains, in which Thomas Mann wrote the masterpiece on which the film is based, and which appears in Death in Venice as well as in The English Patient, will also be spruced up.

The bar at the Excelsior is still the preferred hangout for stars at the film festival but the slow trade during the rest of the year means the hotel will also be closed next year for restoration. “In 40 years, the previous owners of these hotels invested zero and people just stopped coming,” said Gianfranco Mossetto, a spokesman for Italian fund manager EstCapital, which is behind the investment plan.

“We aim to increase the hotel staff head count on the Lido from 400 for six months of the year to 1,100 all year round,” said Gusso, adding that a tendering process was also under way for the conversion of a former hospital on the island to residential usage.

Until then, the Lido remains “ghostly and sad, frozen in time”, said Renata Codello, the Italian government’s architecture and environment officer for Venice and the Lagoon.

Apart from the hotels, Codello has catalogued 150 fine specimens of art nouveau and art deco villas on the Lido, giving it Italy’s largest concentration of architecture from the era.

Mossetto said he was not fooling himself that Europe’s aristocrats would reappear like magic when the hotels reopen.

“I am not asking for the King of Bulgaria to come back, but we do want to offer the very best accommodation, with a cultural accent, to people who appreciate the history,” he said.

by: www.guardian.co.uk

400th anniversary of Galileo Galilei’s Telescope

400 Years of Modern Astronomy

galileo_galilei_telescopeFour hundred years ago on Tuesday, an Italian professor of physics and mathematics called Galileo Galilei demonstrated a simple contraption to the Venetian Senate that would set in motion one of the most profound revolutions in human thought — a revolution that continues today.

Galileo’s device was a simple telescope — two glass lenses at the ends of a leather tube that magnified objects nine times — and it would forever change our understanding of the universe. Established theories, centuries old, would fall; it would embarrass and anger the Roman Catholic Church; and it would mark the birth of modern astronomy.

But on Aug. 25, 1609, the practical Galileo focused on the telescope’s military benefits: He told the Venetian senators that it would be invaluable in war, since one could see ships sailing into Venice’s harbor a full two hours before they became visible to the naked eye. The Senate, duly impressed, doubled his salary. (The tradition perseveres: Scientists routinely tout military and other applied uses for their research in hopes of securing funding.)

Galileo was not the first to invent the telescope. The previous year, a Dutchman called Hans Lipperhey had filed for a patent on the device in the Hague. (It was not granted since two others had filed similar claims.) In the summer of 1609, Thomas Harriot of England made telescopic observations of the moon. But it was Galileo who made the telescope famous, and with it created modern astronomy.

He worked incessantly to improve his “optick tube.” He first observed the moon, and saw that its surface was marred by craters, mountains and valleys. Nor was it perfectly spherical, as Aristotelian dogma held would be true for heavenly bodies. Turning his telescope to Jupiter, he discovered its moons Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Observing the Milky Way, he noted that he could see 10 times the number of stars that were visible to the naked eye.

Galileo would go on to catalogue sunspots on the surface of the Sun, in direct conflict with the prevailing view that the heavens were perfect and unchanging, as had been held from the time of the Greeks, and had gotten enshrined by the Church.

Galileo realized that his observations supported the Copernican view of the universe, and not the geocentric view espoused by the Church. In 1543, just before his death, the Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus had published a book on heliocentric cosmology that showed that the Earth didn’t need to be at the center of the universe. It had excited little attention; it was only Galileo’s observations and Johannes Kepler’s laws of planetary motion — also published in 1609 — that would help Copernicanism supplant Ptolemaic astronomy, the erroneous theory of celestial mechanics that had held sway for 1,400 years.

In March, 1610 Galileo published Siderius Nuncius (Starry Messenger), a 24-page booklet that documented his observations. Unlike scientific treatises of the day that tended to be voluminous and written in baroque prose, Galileo’s remarkable treatise was highly readable. It started an intellectual fever that spread contagiously across Europe.

It was all heresy to the Catholic Church, and Galileo was persecuted by the Inquisition for his views. It took almost four centuries, but in 2000, Pope John Paul II formally apologized for the trial of Galileo.

Today, Galileo’s intellectual heirs continue to expand our horizons. There have been huge improvements in the science of telescopes. State-of-the-art, Earth-based telescopes are now mammoth structures, with mirrors that exceed 30 feet across — devices that would have been completely unimaginable to Galileo and his immediate successors. Some of our clearest views of space have come from the Hubble Space Telescope, a technological wonder that continues to provide one of the clearest views into the universe.

We know now that universe is about 13.7 billion years old and contains billions and billions of stars and galaxies. We live an insignificant corner of the Milky Way galaxy, orbiting a rather ordinary star. Our view of the cosmos has both expanded, and at the same time we have lost the special place once accorded to us.

And we may be getting ready for a discovery as dramatic as the fact the Earth is not the center of the universe: that life exists elsewhere. The list of extra-solar planets has been growing. There are currently about 360 such exoplanets known. Many scientists believe that life is not unique to Earth, and the processes that gave rise to life on our planet are common in the universe.

Kepler, a NASA space telescope named after Johannes Kepler that was launched in March, is currently looking for Earth-like planets that have suitable conditions to support life. On Aug. 6th, NASA announced that Kepler is working very well, and has found a exoplanet within 10 days of starting work. (This planet is too hot for life as we know it.) And just last week, we learned that the amino acid glycine — a key building block of life — had been found in a comet, strengthening the case for extraterrestrial life. While we do not know whether extraterrestrial life will ever be found, if it is found, it will only extend the revolution that Galileo started 400 years ago.

by: www.nytimes.com

Aerial photos of Altinum

Aerial photos show Altinum, city precursor to Venice

altinum_veniceVenice, the floating city, owes a curious debt to Attila the Hun. “The Scourge of God” sent the Venetians fleeing in A.D. 452 from their city, Altinum, to found Venice deep in the marshes on the edge of the Adriatic.

Now archaeologists have mapped the lost city, detailed in the current journal Science. “We have a rather unique opportunity of finding an abandoned Roman city,” study lead author Paoli Mozzi of Italy’s Padua University tells Science. “Now we can really start to make some kinds of reasoning about the way the city lived.”

A combination of drought and aerial photography in July 2007 conspired to reveal the location of Altinum.

Infrared photography, which reveals heat given off from the ground, showed how drought affected corn and soybean crops growing over the site, in turn revealing the streets, buildings and even the large canal that once ran through the middle of the city, suggesting Altinum was a mini-Venice before Venice.

“Altinum was one of the most important cities in northern Italy,” says classicist Kathleen Coleman of Harvard, who was not part of the discovery team, “because of its strategic position as a hub where routes over the Alps, around the top of the Adriatic and down the eastern seaboard intersected.”

Archaeologists will consider targeted excavations of the important sites from the maps, Mozzi suggests.

by: www.usatoday.com

‘Lost’ city near Venice

Scientists map ‘lost’ city of Altinum near Venice, Italy

attila_the_hunEver heard of Altinum? Probably not, as it’s been a “lost city” near Venice, Italy, for centuries.

But now scientists have mapped and photographed this lost city, according to USA Today.  The city sits beneath what is now open countryside, the Telegraph reported.

Altinum was once a thriving city, but Attila the Hun sent its residents fleeing in 452 A.D.  These residents founded Venice.  Altinum was then ‘lost’ for centuries.

“The right constellation of circumstances — a site that has not been settled since Late Antiquity, and a severe drought — have combined to enable these particularly illuminating photographs to be taken and interpreted,” Harvard classicist Kathleen Coleman told USA Today.

“Altinum was one of the most important cities in northern Italy because of its strategic position as a hub where routes over the Alps, around the top of the Adriatic, and down the eastern seaboard intersected,” she added.

The ruins include palaces, temples, theaters and more, “showing Altinum was once a wealthy and thriving city,” according to the Telegraph.

by www.nydailynews.com