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  Museo del Patrimonio Industriale
  Via della Beverara 123
  40131   Bologna

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Introduction

The Industrial Heritage Museum

History of the Industrial Heritage Museum

Six centuries of manufacturing history

The idea of a museum

The Aldini Valeriani Laboratory

Birth of the Museum

The Development of the Museum

The building and its context

The Galotti Furnace

The Restoration of the Furnace

Expositive spaces

The Exhibition Spaces

The Hoffmann Oven

The Aldini Valeriani Section

Bologna of Water and Silk

Bologna Capital of Packaging

Bologna City of Mechanical Culture

The Historical Collections

The Machinery

Models

Virtual Tour

Virtual Tour

The Navile Canal

The Navile Canal

Mission of the Museum

(Missione del Museo)

  The Industrial Heritage Museum documents, displays and disseminates the economic-productive history of the city and its territory from the late Middle Ages to the Contemporary Age. Its activity is focused on the study, documentation and dissemination of the production history of Bologna and its territory, from the fourteenth century to today, referring to men, companies, technologies, professional training, techniques, technological innovations. and product.

The Seat of the Museum

(La Sede del Museo)

  The Industrial Heritage Museum of Bologna is housed in the evocative renovated buildings of the Galotti Furnace, a brick kiln from the second half of the nineteenth century, on the outskirts, in an area characterized in the last century by the presence of rice piles and other hydraulic factories , of furnaces, of the first power plant of the city, as well as of the Navile Canal, used for the transport of goods until the second postwar period.

The Bolognese Museum System

(Il Sistema Musei Bolognesi)

  The Industrial Heritage Museum is part of the Bologna Museums Institution of the Municipality of Bologna and is the hub of the Industrial Heritage and Technical Culture area. The Museum is part of the Bologna Musei Institution, which manages and coordinates the activities of the municipal museums: Archaeological Civic Museum, Medieval Civic Museum, Municipal Art Collections, Davia Bargellini Museum, Industrial Heritage Museum, Museum and Library of the Risorgimento, International Museum and Music Library, MAMbo - Museum of Modern Art, Morandi Museum, Casa Morandi, Villa delle Rose, Museum for the Memory of Ustica.

Mechanics, Electromechanics and Mechatronics

(Meccanica, Elettromeccanica e Meccatronica)

  Mechanics first, then electromechanics and mechatronics became the new components of the sector, supported by a system of medium and small companies capable of creating highly competitive solutions and products on the large international market. This transformation was made possible by the presence of local institutions - technical education models, local banks, associations of entrepreneurs and producers, planning and government bodies of the territory - necessary and indispensable for the new development. Within the section it is possible to deepen the dynamics underlying the development of the packaging and engine sectors and observe how widespread mechanical production also manifests itself in the presence of a multitude of small workshops able to supply high quality products.

Inside a Furnace

(Dentro a una Fornace)

  The scientific project of the Museum has its roots in the studies of Luigi Dal Pane first, Carlo Poni and Alberto Guenzi then, on the long-term industrial identity of Bologna: a European capital of the proto silk industry that after a dramatic and irreversible decline in the end of the eighteenth century, in the following century it created the conditions for a new development model based on training and innovation. In this process, a strategic role was played by technical training through the Aldini Valeriani Institute, the school that trained generations of artisans, technicians, foremen, entrepreneurs, who were themselves protagonists of the industrial development of Bologna in the twentieth century.

The idea of a museum

(L'idea di un museo)

  Until the end of the 1970s there was a lack of studies, research and scientific references on the intertwining between technical school and industrial development of the territory. The exhibition Machines School Industry from trade to worker professionalism was dedicated to the theme (ex Borsa 1980 room) commissioned by the Municipal Administration which had managed the Aldini Valeriani for over 150 years, and which should be considered the starting point of the Museum's experience. On that occasion, the elements that made Aldini unique in the Italian panorama were explored.

The Aldini Valeriani Institute

(L'Istituto Aldini Valeriani)

  The appreciation of the scientific world and the public success of the exhibition induced the Municipal Administration not to waste this experience by creating an Aldini-Valeriani Aldini Museum-laboratory located inside the Aldini Valeriani Institute. The aim was to continue the work of dissemination and museographic experimentation and to promote an innovative educational activity immediately appreciated by the school community. New exhibition languages were identified, resorting to the contamination between traditional installations, use of audiovisual supports, construction of models and functioning equipment. The most innovative intervention was the production of large-sized functioning models of the production apparatuses that had characterized the ancient silk factory of the 14th-18th centuries. His participation in national exhibitions such as the XVII Triennale di Milano dedicated to “The place of work. From manual skills to remote control "in 1986, The culture of machines in 1989 at the Lingotto in Milan, The seductions of craftsmanship, at the Rome Fair 1990

The link with the city's economic context

(Il legame con il tessuto economico cittadino)

  The strong link between the city and technical training, the common identity of the former Aldinians, who once graduated, felt the need to continue to keep alive the ties born in the classrooms; the memories of the protagonists, archive materials and photographs; finally the study of the historical collections of machines, of the productive equipments, of the laboratory instruments. Thus a precise picture of the technological development path of the Bolognese industry emerged and an articulated reflection on the modernization strategy that the Municipality had implemented through professional training policies.

Birth of the Industrial Heritage Museum

(Nascita del Museo del Patrimonio Industriale)

  On February 1, 1994, the Making Automatic Machines exhibition was inaugurated. History and actuality of a 1920-1990 production sector which marked a further stage in the development process of the Museum. The cultural project extended not only to professional training, but also to its action in the economic dynamics of the territory and more generally in the productive identity of the Bolognese area. The consolidated museographic methodologies were extended to the most recent dynamics of industrial society, seeking links and relationships with companies, entrepreneurs and technicians who were protagonists of local production development. In 1998, having assumed the name of “Museum of Industrial Heritage”, the Museum moved to the current site of the Galotti brick kiln, which was renovated, effectively doubling the exhibition area. Thanks to the construction of a solid network of relations with the industrial world, the Friends of the Museum of Industrial Heritage Association was established, which today has the membership of over sixty companies. The Association is an essential operational support for the Museum, playing a role of connection between the world of production and development and that of promoting these themes.

The Current Set-up

(L'Assetto Attuale)

  The current set up of the Museum has been consolidated with progressive in-depth actions and additions to the collections starting with the Product exhibition in Bologna. An industrial identity with five centuries of history which in year 2000 reorganized 70% of the exhibition spaces. The numerous research paths activated have given rise to as many in-depth exhibitions, from time to time dedicated to automation, precision mechanics to biomedical, to the events of historic companies in the area. The methodology based on interdisciplinarity, the use of different sources of narration based on the stories of the protagonists is reflected in the installations, in which machines, functioning models, video and IT structures return information, suggest insights and invite you to find the various threads of development industrial district of Bologna.

The Galotti Furnace

(La Fornace Galotti)

  Built in 1887, the Galotti “Battiferro” furnace was at the time the largest brick production plant in Bologna, equipped with a 16-chamber Hoffmann kiln, in operation all year round with 250 workers. Its activity ceased in 1966. It constitutes one of the most significant examples in Italy of the recovery of an industrial plant for museum purposes.

The Restoration of the Galotti Furnace

(Il Restauro della Fornace Galotti)

  Seat of the Museum of Industrial Heritage, it houses the permanent exhibition spaces for a total of about 3,000 m2 in the oven, recovered with conservation criteria, and in the overlying rooms once used as dryers. The room for temporary exhibitions, the Archive-Library and the offices are located in an adjacent building.

Description of the Exhibition Spaces

(Descrizione degli Spazi Espositivi)

  Divided into five sections, the permanent exhibition covers approximately 3,500 m² over three floors and six paths. On the ground floor, in the Hoffmann oven, the collections of scientific instruments, models and machinery belonging to the Aldini-Valeriani Institution are kept. Around the oven, there is the section dedicated to the Galotti furnace and the production of bricks and a second one focused on the packaging sector. The second floor illustrates five centuries of Bolognese production excellence, from the ancient silk production that exploited a sophisticated water distribution network for the motive power, to the twentieth-century mechanical and mechatronic production. Finally, in the intermediate plan, data, information and examples of new innovative discoveries are provided.

The Hoffmann Oven

(Il Forno Hoffmann)

  On the ground floor, in the portico surrounding the Hoffmann kiln, the history of the Galotti kiln is outlined and in general the industrial production of bricks, which began in the second half of the nineteenth century with this type of continuous cycle kiln. Models, interactive stations, a video, casts and related ornamental artifacts document the manufacturing processes and types of products.

The Access Portico

(Il Portico di Accesso)

  In the entrance portico there are molds dating back to the early decades of the twentieth century, coming from the Società Laterizi di Imola (Laterizi Company of Imola), and the ornamental terracotta artefacts made thanks to them: decorative or structural elements for buildings; pantiles, tiles and chimney pots for roofs and covered; vases and jars, including large ones. Some photographic images of buildings and stately palaces in Bologna and Imola testify to the widespread use, in the past, of these ornamental terracotta products.

The Production of Bricks

(La Produzione di Mattoni)

  The Galotti "Battiferro" furnace began production in 1887 in an area, along the Navile, rich in excellent quality clay. The plant was equipped with a 16-chamber Hoffmann kiln whose original project the owner, Celeste Galotti made some innovative changes: smoke outlets placed on the external walls, a conformation of the vault particularly suitable for firing flat tiles; use of straw paper in place of the heavy iron dividers between one cooking chamber and another. 250 workers were employed throughout the year. The activity ended in 1966.

1980s: The acquisition from the Municipality of Bologna

(Anni '80: L'acquisizione del Comune di Bologna)

  In the 1980s the Municipality of Bologna acquired the building and surrounding land from the Galotti company, thus carrying out a complex conservation intervention - limited to the oven - and restructuring. A part of the complex has housed the Industrial Heritage Museum since 1997. The construction details of the ring tunnel of the furnace, the access to the smoke chamber, the set-ups with models and explanatory devices on video and on panels allow the visitor to understand the original use of the spaces inside the furnace and the different phases processing, from the extraction of the raw material to the cooking of the products.

The Aldini Valeriani Section

(La Sezione Aldini Valeriani)

  Inside the Hoffmann kiln, on the ground floor, there are models, machines, technical-scientific instruments from the Aldini-Valeriani collections, the oldest technical school in the city, which allow you to walk through the main technological stages of the Industrial Revolution, documenting the deep links with the industrialization of Bologna, in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. An original journey along the main technological stages of the Industrial Revolution in Bologna, documenting the deep links with its industrial development between the 19th and early 20th centuries. At the end of the eighteenth century in Bologna the irreversible collapse of the silk factory opened a profound crisis of deindustrialisation. To revive the fortunes of the city, some intellectuals and personalities from the economic and production world tried to introduce innovations in accordance with local and international changes. Among these distinguished Luigi Valeriani (1758-1828), professor of public economics at the University of Bologna, and Giovanni Aldini (1762-1834), experimental physicist at the University of Bologna and nephew of Luigi Galvani. In their wills they entrusted the Municipality of Bologna with resources and indications to start technical education courses, believing this to be the most effective means of updating workers and production systems to the new industrial reality. The Aldini-Valeriani Institution that the Municipal Administration established, paved the way towards forms of teaching destined to profoundly mark the modern industrialization of the city. Within this exhibition section it is possible to observe the evolution of the teaching methodologies of the Aldini-Valeriani institution in parallel with the urban modernization and the progressive economic development of the city with the birth of the first mechanical companies such as Calzoni, De Morsier, Le Officine Meccaniche ( Mechanical Workshops) of Castel Maggiore

Introduction

(Introduzione)

  The first section, "Bologna of water and silk", is dedicated to the Bolognese silk factory of the 14th-18th centuries, capable of exporting tons of yarns and veils every year. This supremacy, based on the high technology of the silk mill, is displayed with sets, exhibits, models, audiovisuals, models of functioning systems; among these, a Bolognese silk mill reconstructed in 1: 2 scale, a complex mechanical apparatus consisting of a spinning-twisting machine moved by a water wheel, combined with a winding machine.

The Bolognese Silk Mill

(Il Mulino da Seta Bolognese)

  The focal point of the section is the working model in 1: 2 scale of a Bolognese silk mill, rebuilt by the Museum to recover the memory of this extraordinary machine that was lost in the nineteenth century. At the moment of maximum expansion of the silk industry in Bologna there were more than 100 machines in operation which represented the highest point of European technology before the Industrial Revolution.

The Processing of Silk

(La Lavorazione della Seta)

  The silk processing took place inside the walls and the whole process was managed by merchants-entrepreneurs. The negotiations for the purchase of cocoons took place in the current Piazza Galvani. There were different production methods used in the other phases of the manufacturing cycle: there were factories for the reeling of the thread; the factory system in silk mills; the home weaving work done by hundreds of women; the artisan workshop for the finishing of the product.

The Model of the Bolognese Silk Mill

(Il Modello del Mulino da Seta Bolognese)

  The model, on a scale of 1: 2, represents the Bolognese silk mill consisting of a high cylinder in which the spinning wheel and the twisting machine are located (laterally connected to a vertical cassette wheel by means of a pin gear) and the mechanical winder. An electric motor is connected to the horizontal shaft of the wheel which activates the model which in turn transmits the movement to the entire silk mill. Above the wheel, a small wooden slide simulates the outlet of the channel (chiavica) that actually fed the wheel

The Bolognese Canals System

(Il Sistema dei Canali Bolognesi)

  Parallel to the organization of the silk factory, the section shows the unique characteristics of the artificial hydraulic system that the city was endowed with since the 12th century. The system was made up of locks (on the Reno river and on the Savena torrent), canals (of Reno, Savena, Moline and Navile) and sewers, underground pipes that distributed the water network in many areas of the city. The availability of water resources, combined with the high technology achieved by the silk mills, allowed a city, without significant natural waterways or an outlet to the sea, to play a leading role in the panorama of proto-industry. European and major international trade for over four centuries.

The Navile Canal

(Il Canale Navile)

  Downstream of the system, a canal port and the Navile canal allowed goods and passengers to reach the Po and Venice. This system, perfected and managed over the centuries with great foresight by the city government, remained functional to the needs of the city until the early twentieth century.

Introduction

(Introduzione)

  Section dedicated to packaging, dosing and packaging machines with examples of Bolognese production from the 1940s-1970s. These prototypes, working and exhibited on the ground floor of the Museum, in the portico of the Hoffmann oven, are integrated with videos and explanatory equipment. They document the main product and process innovations that have allowed the affirmation of this important production sector. Also on the ground floor, in the external porch of the oven, there is a collection of machines from the 1940s-1960s (ACMA, CAM, Carle & Montanari, Corazza, Cassoli, IMA, MG2, GD, Zanasi) which marked the birth and the development of the Bolognese sector for the dosing, packaging and packaging of products. Six of them are functional, with videos and explanatory devices that illustrate their characteristics, product and process innovations.

Bologna Leader of the Packaging Sector

(Bologna Leader del Comparto Packaging)

  Bologna has long been an international leader in the packaging sector which has taken on the characteristics of an industrial district with flexible specialization since the Second World War. The Bolognese machines have established themselves for their great ability to respond quickly and continuously to customer needs. The formation of the sector took place within a broader industrial development process that made use of the presence of two important mechanical companies - ACMA and SASIB - which between the 1920s and 1930s began to produce a wide range of packaging machines for the pharmaceutical and food sector, the other to experiment with solutions for the packaging of cigarettes and their packaging. The widespread presence of qualified and multipurpose craft activities (intended to carry out a wide range of work on order) and the spread of mechanical culture - through the Aldini-Valeriani Technical Institute - have allowed many technicians and designers, in the 1940s- ' 70, to become entrepreneurs by contributing to the formation of today's industrial packaging district.

Introduction

(Introduzione)

  The second section of the "Produced in Bologna" exhibition is dedicated to the modern city of mechanical and electromechanical culture, in which iconic products (Zamboni-Troncon tortellini machine, 1911; ACMA 713 for packaging the Idrolitina, 1927; FBM Gabbiano motorcycle, 1956; Maserati racing car; SSR Ducati Manens condensers, 1925), guide the paths of knowledge of the modern production organization of the city and its industrial district. There are companies such as Calzoni, Minganti and Morara (machine tools); ACMA, GD and SASIB (automatic machines); Carpigiani (ice cream machines); Maccaferri (gabions); again GD, Minarelli and Ducati (motorcycles and engines); CIAP, Marzocchi and Verlicchi (gears, suspensions and frames); Bonfiglioli (gearmotors); Marposs (control systems); Mortara-Rangoni (medical equipment); Bologna Municipal Gas Workshop (lighting and heating services).

The Mechanical and Electromechanical Industry

(L'Industria Meccanica ed Elettromeccanica)

  Today Bologna is characterized as a real capital of the mechanical and electromechanical industry. The district of manufacturers of packaging machines and that relating to engines contribute to affirming our area on a global level as regards advanced industrialization. The cases / products analyzed aim at complex systems of knowledge such as the organization of the production network, the way technicians and entrepreneurs operate, the action of innovation and the economic system that supports them, the dissemination of skills and the affirmation of competitive quality and ability.

The Collections

(Le Collezioni)

  The Collections are made up of more than 1000 pieces of composite nature and origin: machines, models, models, apparatus and scientific instruments, interactive exhibits. The objects have been filed and are available in a database on the IBC Emilia-Romagna site.

The Aldini Cabinet of Applied Physics and Chemistry

(Il Gabinetto Aldini di Fisica e Chimica Applicata)

  Composed of technical-scientific instruments and models from the Aldini Cabinet of Applied Physics and Chemistry (1863-1876) directed by Sebastiano Zavaglia (1824-1876) and created to update school teaching intended, in particular, for the workers of local industries, according to the will and testamentary legacies of the physicist Giovanni Aldini. The devices document sectors of physics: mechanics, optics, acoustics, electricity; use of energy sources: hydraulics, steam, electricity; important technological applications: illuminating gas, telegraphy, electroplating. The nucleus consists of 362 pieces built in the Cabinet itself or purchased from important Italian and foreign builders: Longoni, Dall'Acqua, Ginori, Pizzorno, Clair, Salleron, Secretan, Lenoir.

The Giovanni Aldini Collection

(La Collezione Giovanni Aldini)

  Composed of the technical-scientific devices of the Bolognese experimental physicist Giovanni Aldini (1762-1834) left with a will to the Municipality of Bologna together with his income to carry out forms of teaching in applied mechanical and chemical physics. The collection included 538 objects, some built by important mechanics and physicists of the time: Megale, Bate, Geiser, Grindel, Pagani, Ludovisi. Alongside instruments for experiments on electricity, chemistry, mechanics, steam and geodesy there were measuring devices, models of production plants and machines, other technical innovations of the time. Having lost its original unity to adapt to the uses of teaching, the Aldini collection has come down to us greatly reduced; currently there are 16 objects recognized as certainly belonging to it.

The Aldini Valeriani Institutes

(Gli Istituti Aldini Valeriani)

  Composed of workshop equipment and laboratory equipment of the technical schools that the Municipality of Bologna established with the legacies of Giovanni Aldini and Luigi Valeriani: - Institute for Arts and Crafts (1878-1913) - Industrial School (1913-1932) - Institute Technical-Industrial (1932-1970) The typology of the pieces includes: tools, machines, work tools, equipment from the various specialization workshops, demonstration equipment sold to the Museum following the renovation of the school equipment.

The Bolognese Technical Schools

(Le Scuole Tecniche Bolognesi)

  Composed of the technical-scientific instrumentation and models of the Bolognese Technical Schools (1844-1860), established by the Municipality of Bologna, with the bequests of the experimental physicist Giovanni Aldini (Mechanical Physics and Chemistry Applied to the Arts) and of the economist Luigi Valeriani (Drawing Applied to the Arts). The core of 30 preserved pieces includes: models of machines (mills), motors (water wheels and turbines), work tools (gauges and watchmaker tools), movement transmission components, apparatus demonstrating the balance of forces and the most important simple machines. Mainly known local artisans have been involved in their construction: Amadori, Teodorani, Veronesi, Poluzzi and the Officina Meccanica (Mechanical Workshop) of Castel Maggiore.

The Automatic Machine District

(Il Distretto della Macchina Automatica)

  Collection of products made by some subcontracting firms in the Bolognese area, the backbone of the great packaging and motor engineering districts. Thanks to many small companies able to make single parts or components available for larger ones that offer a finished product on the market, it has been possible to develop the particular district model that has characterized the Emilia area. The Museum shows some examples, from Minarelli engines to Verlicchi frames, to Marzocchi forks, to Bonfiglioli gearmotors, to Marposs high precision meters.

Electromedical

(Elettromedicale)

  Collection dedicated to the history of the electromedical sector in Bologna, with a particular focus on the entrepreneurial story of the Rangoni family, and the productions of the companies it founded over a century of history. On display electrocardiographs from the 1940s-60s and 1970s, up to the modern smart-cards that allow a normal computer the functionality of an electrocardiograph. Images from company archives and interactive exhibits complete and integrate the collection.

Automatic machines

(Macchine Automatiche)

  Collection of automatic machines for packing, dosing and packaging of the main Bolognese manufacturing companies, 1920-1980s. They only partly belong to the Museum which keeps them for donation, loan or long-term deposit. The original identity of these machines was the guiding concept of the working methodology typically adopted by the Museum: the enhancement of the modern industrial identity of Bologna through historical, documentary and typological research of company paths (from the protagonists to the products). In this way the Museum is permanently connected to the territorial economic fabric, acquiring a role of promoting the image of the Bolognese area through the excellence of leading products on large international markets, innovation applied in different eras to products and production processes, the quality of human resources, the development models implemented.

Motoring

(Motoristica)

  Collection of specimens of motorcycles, components and cars that document the history of motor production in Bologna in the twentieth century. Each year it is renewed with the rotating presence of a car from the Maserati brothers' production.

The Models

(I Modelli)

  The models, many of which are functional, have the task of illustrating workplaces, machines and structures, making their operation and methods of use more immediate. This strategy is taken directly from the study methodologies adopted over time in the Aldini-Valeriani Institute in which dozens of models for use by students were built or purchased, with strong pedagogical intentions.

Concept models

(Plastici)

  The concept models illustrate the productive reality of the city from the Middle Ages to the 19th century, reproducing buildings, complex structures and workplaces on a scale that would otherwise be difficult to represent. Attention was paid, in particular, to the ancient Bolognese silk factory of which all traces have been lost over time

Virtual Tour

(Virtual Tour)

  The Virtual Tour of the Museum allows all web users to have virtual access to the spaces of the Museum and learn about the productive history of the city of Bologna from the late Middle Ages to the 4.0 factory. This technology, developed by the Veronesi Namioka communication studio, uses interactive panoramic photos to be explored with very high resolution images. This allows you to observe objects, models, machines, scientific instruments in a subjective way and to feel immersed in the spaces of the museum. The new experience gives a 360-degree view of the visit path and renews the museum's vocation as a lively, multifunctional and interactive place, frequented by professionals but also by enthusiasts, tourists and children. The choice of enriching the tour with numerous videos and interactive narratives pursues several objectives: to deepen the issues addressed, to provide ideas for educational projects, to leave visitors the choice to subsequently resume the suggestions and themes of the museum.

See the Virtual Tour

(Vedi il Virtual Tour)

The Promenade along the Navile Canal

(La Passeggiata lungo Il Canale Navile)

  The Navile (Al Navélli in Bolognese dialect) is an important canal in the Bolognese plain, both from the hydraulic and historical point of view. It originates from the waters of the Reno Canal, of which it is in fact the continuation to the north of the city. At the exit from the historic center, up to the early twentieth century, stood the port of Bologna which, in the Middle Ages, was one of the major river ports in Italy and which connected Bologna (then equipped with a substantial fleet and an industrial fabric in the textile sector of European caliber and significance) with the Po di Primaro and the sea. From this point (located in correspondence with the current Via del Porto) it changes its name to Canale Navile, taking on a course from south to north; it crosses the Battiferro and crosses the Bolognese plain until it re-enters the Reno near Passo Segni after a journey of about 40 km, of which 5.3 from the Casalecchio Lock to the Bova di Via Lame (Porto exit). It has a regime determined in part by the regulations on the bulkheads of the locks, and in part collects the meteoric waters of Bologna and a portion of the plain, so that its average ordinary flow rates can be estimated in the order of 10 cubic meters per second, the maximum ones can reach 100 cubic meters per second. After the elimination of the Port of Bologna, its use is exclusively for irrigation and reclamation purposes, as it is no longer suitable for navigable use. Sometimes, during floods, it overflows into the countryside

The Support of the Battiferro

(Il Sostegno del Battiferro)

  Originally built in wood, based on a project by Pietro Brambilla, it was then finished in masonry by Vignola in 1548 and modified several times. It is an important hydraulic system that allowed boats coming from the sea to overcome the steep differences in height on the Navile Canal and reach the city. The term "Battiferro" refers to an ancient factory used for the beating of iron and copper. On the right bank there are the remains of a rice pile and a brick kiln, on the left the first hydrothermal power plant in Bologna built in 1901 and the complex of the Galotti furnace now restored as a museum.

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