
Saturday, May 22, 2010 0 comments
"Albergo diffuso"- "Scattered Hotel"
Concept Saves Historic Italian Villages
Numerous historically
important villages in Italy, were dying a slow death, with unlikely salvation,
unless tourism could be lured.
But since conventional Hotels were
not economically feasible, the Concept of "Scattered Hotel" is taking hold,
where rooms in individual homes are scattered throughout different buildings
within the town but overseen by one manager. A traditional breakfast might
be served at a local cafe or in the kitchen of one of the local houses,
or delivered to your room. Call it a B & B village.
Saving Towns by Filling Rooms in
Italy
The New York Times; By Gisela Williams;
May 23, 2010
ONE spring afternoon in the early
1980s Giancarlo Dall’Ara, an Italian hotel marketing consultant, was wandering
the streets of a tiny village near Maranzanis, in Friuli, a rural mountainous
region in the northeast corner of Italy.
There was an eerie, dreamlike feeling
to the remote town. Many of its two dozen or so houses had been destroyed
by a devastating earthquake that shook the region in 1976. Although a few
elderly residents had remained, many of the homes were boarded up and abandoned.
Mr. Dall’Ara was in Friuli on behalf
of the region, brainstorming ways to bring the local villages back to life
through tourism, but the area around Maranzanis was an unlikely spot for
a hotel. Though he believed that the area and its wild landscape had some
potential, he left somewhat discouraged by its poverty and general sense
of emptiness. Yet a seed was planted.
This tiny town is just one of hundreds
of historic villages in Italy in disrepair. Many of them have been abandoned
by the younger generation moving to the cities to start careers or to live
a more modern lifestyle. And while wealthy Italians and expatriates are
willing to finance the renovation and revival of hamlets in Tuscany, many
semi-abandoned towns are in less traveled regions like Friuli and Abruzzo.
Mr. Dall’Ara was convinced that there
must be an organized and sustainable way to save some of these places through
tourism. Over several years, the simple but ingenious concept of the albergo
diffuso was born.
"Albergo diffuso" translates literally
as "scattered hotel". The principle is that rooms, decorated in a
consistently authentic and local style, are scattered throughout different
buildings within the town but overseen by one manager. A traditional breakfast
might be served at a local cafe or in the kitchen of one of the local houses,
or delivered to your room. Call it a B & B village.
Like a holiday apartment, an "albergo
diffuso" allows travelers to imbed themselves in village life, but the
bonus is that it offers the basic services of a hotel. There is a reception
or central area to report to " sometimes a cafe, other times a shop " where
a manager is available to help with questions, recommendations or bookings.
The week in 2008 that Barbara Saks,
an Australian, stayed at Trullidea (39-080-432-3860; trullidea.it), a Puglian
"albergo diffuso" made up of traditional white limestone dwellings with
conical roofs, where rates start at 66 euros, or $8.25 at $1.25 to the
euro, was a revelation. "The concept of the albergo diffuso is ideal for
independent travelers like us where we can do our own thing but if we need
advice we can ask at the office," Ms. Saks wrote in an e-mail message.
"We loved living next door to locals with their dogs and their washing
lines. Scenes from life!"
And "alberghi diffusi" don’t just
provide travelers a door into a traditional way of life, but are also healthy
for the host villages. “Reconverting an existing room into a hotel room
is far more sustainable than building a new hotel,” Hitesh Mehta, an eco-resort
consultant and author of a forthcoming book, “Authentic Ecolodges,” wrote
in an e-mail message.
Mr. Dall’Ara, now the president of
the National Association of Alberghi Diffusi, added that the projects also
act as a "driver of development" in their villages, because the managers
are encouraged to source all the products used in the village from local
producers. And "if a local marmalade producer doesn’t exist, the owner
needs to organize one."
There are now more than 40 official
alberghi diffusi in Italy and over 100 more in the works, according to
Mr. Dall’Ara. He added that the concept has started to pop up in other
countries as well, a trend that he expects will continue. "It’s a very
good idea for countries like Spain or Croatia that also have empty rooms
in historic areas, that need engines for development without impact," he
said. ...
“We strongly believe that this is
what the new traveler wants: contact with the local population and the
authentic experience of living within this community," ...He added that
keeping the village alive was important for the residents too. "We have
to preserve those traces of the past so that the new generation understands
where they come from."
One of the "alberghi diffusi" that
is up and running can be found in the poetically aged hilltop town of Santo
Stefano di Sessanio, in the Italian region of Abruzzo. In 1999, when the
Italian entrepreneur Daniele Kihlgren visited, only about 120 residents
remained. Some of the houses "all made from stone"
had collapsed, and others had no roofs, but Mr. Kihlgren realized that
the fortified medieval hamlet could be a dramatic spot for an "albergo
diffuso".
Mr. Kihlgren wasn’t driven solely
to protect the town’s buildings " the fastidious renovation took about
five years and several million euros. He believed that creating an albergo
diffuso, which he called Sextantio (39-0862-89-9112; sextantio.it: 220
euros for two), could help preserve local traditions.
“Some of the mountain villages in
Abruzzo are so remote that some of the old ways are still preserved", he
said. "Television only came to some of these places in the ’60s. Until
World War II many people here only spoke a local dialect". That sense of
isolation and tradition could be a draw for the project. "The people who
remain here are the last generation to still use traditional cooking and
building methods". he continued. "They remember the old folk stories and
songs".
Nicholas Turner, a managing director
at the Rockefeller Foundation in New York, spent a night at Sextantio with
his family in early August of last year. What he most appreciated about
the project, he said, was that it "so effectively honors and makes use
of all that the environment and history has to offer" renovating
existing structures, serving local cuisine, using products of the region,
and employing residents"
On a cool spring morning a year after
Sextantio opened, Emanuela Di Felice, the albergo’s housekeeper and cook,
prepared coffee while her son, Giovanni Pacifico, spoke about growing up
in Abruzzo. "Only 50 years ago when a child died of sickness, people here
believed it to be caused by a witch". he said. "That’s why there are so
many arches in Santo Stefano. A mother would take their baby under the
seven arches and dance around a fire as a way to protect their child."
Mrs. Di Felice, a youthful grandmother,
doesn’t speak more than a few words of English, but she makes superb venison
ragù and her breakfasts are legendary: a spread of homemade bread,
jams and local cakes laid out on hand-crocheted lace place mats on a well-worn
wood table. And though rooms at Sextantio feature Philippe Starck-designed
sinks and modern beds, there’s usually a fire going in the old stone hearth
of the small breakfast room whose ceiling is black from centuries of cooking
fires.
“Sometimes the stone is talking".
said Antonella Guido, the owner of Trullidea in Puglia. "Just imagine how
many people have walked inside these rooms before you."
http://travel.nytimes.com/2010/05/23/travel/23journeys.html
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