“The ideal city within the city.” This was the promise of Zunino Real Estate, marketing a dream: a gateway to modern life on the outskirts of Milan, along a grand promenade boulevard. A new urban landscape of manicured green spaces and pedestrian avenues, where residents could relax in cafés and children could play safely under their mothers’ watchful eyes. Yet Santa Giulia–Montecity, rather than becoming a model of the ideal city, has remained an ideal type—virtual rather than real. Today, the neighborhood survives mainly in the project of its renowned architect, Norman Foster. Like avatars, architectural renderings emerge from the parallel world of the internet to underscore a paradox: virtually created images that take on a semblance of reality when photographed and circulated. These surreal representations blend with images captured in the “real” city, becoming both imaginaries and imagined projections of an urban future—the same future reflected in the suspended gazes of those who actually live in Milan Montecity. Far from being merely a symbolic opposition between reality and fiction, the enclosed social documentary forms an essential part of this work, which ultimately addresses yet another troubled real estate and financial scandal in Milan’s recent history.
La città ideale nella città.” Questo era lo slogan di Zunino Real Estate, che vendeva un sogno: l’accesso a una vita moderna nella periferia di Milano, lungo un grande boulevard pedonale. Un nuovo paesaggio urbano fatto di aree verdi curate e viali pedonali, dove rilassarsi nei caffè e dove le madri potessero passeggiare con i figli in sicurezza. Eppure Santa Giulia–Montecity, più che un modello di città ideale, è rimasta un tipo ideale—virtuale più che reale. Oggi il quartiere vive soprattutto nel progetto del suo celebre architetto, Norman Foster. Come avatar, i rendering architettonici emergono dal mondo parallelo di internet per evidenziare un paradosso: immagini virtuali che acquisiscono una parvenza di realtà quando vengono fotografate e diffuse. Rappresentazioni surreali che si intrecciano con le immagini della città “reale”, diventando al tempo stesso immaginari e proiezioni immaginate di un futuro urbano—lo stesso futuro che si riflette negli sguardi sospesi di chi vive realmente a Milano Montecity. Ben oltre una semplice contrapposizione simbolica tra realtà e finzione, il documentario sociale allegato costituisce una parte fondamentale di questo lavoro, che affronta ancora una volta uno scandalo immobiliare e finanziario nella storia recente di Milano.
MILANO MONTECITY. The suspended city (Film)
Lidia Katia Consiglia Manzo
;
2010-01-01
Abstract
“The ideal city within the city.” This was the promise of Zunino Real Estate, marketing a dream: a gateway to modern life on the outskirts of Milan, along a grand promenade boulevard. A new urban landscape of manicured green spaces and pedestrian avenues, where residents could relax in cafés and children could play safely under their mothers’ watchful eyes. Yet Santa Giulia–Montecity, rather than becoming a model of the ideal city, has remained an ideal type—virtual rather than real. Today, the neighborhood survives mainly in the project of its renowned architect, Norman Foster. Like avatars, architectural renderings emerge from the parallel world of the internet to underscore a paradox: virtually created images that take on a semblance of reality when photographed and circulated. These surreal representations blend with images captured in the “real” city, becoming both imaginaries and imagined projections of an urban future—the same future reflected in the suspended gazes of those who actually live in Milan Montecity. Far from being merely a symbolic opposition between reality and fiction, the enclosed social documentary forms an essential part of this work, which ultimately addresses yet another troubled real estate and financial scandal in Milan’s recent history.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

