Garibaldi and Parco Sempione

Parco Sempione and Garibaldi are two neighbouring districts, quite distinct in history and atmosphere. Parco Sempione encompasses wealthy West Milan with Castle Sforza as its nucleus. Garibaldi is in fact three incrementally industrial yet increasingly fashionable districts stacked northwards on top of each other and connected by Corso Garibaldi – Brera, Corso Como and Isola.

Within the park itself (Milan’s largest and most important, designed by Alemagna in the 19th century) are La Triennale, the 1930s fascist-style design museum, and Torre Branca, Milan’s mini-answer to the Eiffel Tower; latched onto the east side is the Arena, the Napoleonic amphitheatre. Hip new bars are cropping up around the park as well as the newly gentrified Chinatown (Italy’s largest). A prime spot is by the Arco della Pace, which was designed by Cagnola and erected between 1801 and 1814 for Napoleon and dedicated to peace in 1815 after Napoleon’s fall. Further out west is the San Siro football stadium and La Fiera, the vast exhibition halls that host Milan’s world-famous furniture fair each year (although plans to move it elsewhere are under way). And along Via Magenta to the southwest is Leonardo da Vinci’s ghostly Last Supper fresco in a Renaissance church refectory, and numerous aristocratic houses such as Palazzo degli Atellani where musicians and artists including Da Vinci were received as guests, and Palazzo Arese Litta, the 17th-century family residence of the Areses and then the Littas. More noble mansions stand along the tree-lined boulevards between Corso Magenta and Parco Sempione. To the east of Parco Sempione is the Cimitero Monumentale, the graveyard preserved for Milan’s richest inhabitants.

In between Parco Sempione and the centro storico is Brera, a charming historic quarter containing the Pinocateca di Brera (Milan’s most important art gallery) and all the artsy crowds that flock to it. A well-preserved labyrinth of windy cobbled streets with hidden palazzos and art galleries, bars, restaurants and cafés entice a large tourist crowd. The Milanese prefer to hang out in Corso Como, a short pedestrianised street that starts at the grand neo-classical arch of Porta Garibaldi and finishes at Garibaldi Station. This is Club Central, with eight clubs and plenty of warm-up bars and pizzerias. Since fashion muse Carla Sozzani opened her lifestyle concept store here, other fashion boutiques have followed suit, and by day it’s also a select, high-end retail zone.

North of the station is Isola. Its name, ‘island’, originates from its enclave status since it is hemmed in by Garibaldi’s railway; its residents think of it as a small town inside a larger town and share an endearing community spirit. Life here is far removed from the ways of the centre – while it previously has not been refined or safe, it’s always been bohemian. Isola is unique in Milan for having more relaxed planning regulations and gentrification is fast changing its industrial landscape. The last five years have seen Isola becoming more friendly and trendy, a move that is set to continue with the arrival of the Città della Moda in 2010 – a fashion city complete with catwalk, museum, school, library etc. Isola’s nightlife (centered around Via Borsieri and including two semi-legal egalitarian squats) is attracting the liberal types that previously characterized Navigli.
 


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