Orvieto, Italy, has become the Cittaslow’s international headquarters and its showcase town. – AFP
Italy’s Cittaslow movement gathers speed internationally.
 EVEN as city living booms around the world, the Slow City movement 
directed by an intrepid Italian is gaining a global following with a 
back-to-basics campaign to make small towns the new place to be.
 From his hometown of Orvieto – a hilltop medieval gem surrounded by 
castles and vineyards in central Umbria – Pier Giorgio Oliveti has 
helped expand Cittaslow to 28 countries including South Korea, Turkey 
and the United States.
 ”Cittaslow is about appreciating what we are and what we have, 
without being self-destructive and depleting values, money and 
resources,” Oliveti told AFP.
 ”It is an antidote against negative globalisation,” the bushy-bearded former journalist said.
 Founded in 1999 by a Tuscan mayor eager to extend the healthy living
 philosophy of Italy’s Slow Food movement to urban life, Cittaslow 
currently boasts 183 members, with another dozen applications for 
membership pending.
 The movement’s symbol – derived from that of the Slow Food movement –
 embodies their philosophy: a snail carrying a town built on its shell.
 Would-be candidates must have fewer than 50,000 inhabitants and city
 halls have to respect strict criteria like promoting organic and urban 
farming and introducing food appreciation classes in schools.
 Orvieto, one of the first towns to sign up 15 years ago, has become 
the movement’s international headquarters and its showcase town.
 Small family-run trattorias dish out locally-sourced wine and 
delicacies – another requirement for Cittaslow towns – and farmers hawk 
their wares at the market, which also serves as the community’s lively 
social hub.
 The town hosts a family-friendly jazz festival and locals such as 
fireman Luciano Sabottini pride themselves on offering such a relaxing 
atmosphere to tourists that “those who come from Rome or Milan leave 
again mellowed out”.
 Pollution levels are low: visitors park in large underground 
carparks, masked from sight behind earthy walls which blend into the 
rockface, and take escalators installed in old aqueduct tunnels up to 
the pedestrianised centre.
 Schoolchildren are walked to school every day in groups by parent 
volunteers in an initiative dubbed “PiediBus” (FootBus) in a procession 
through town streets.
 Mayor Antonio Concina says running a Slow City is “neither difficult nor odd”.
 ”It’s not a matter of stopping progress to allow a town to respect the slow rules. They can go hand in hand.”
Challenging times
 But Cittaslow’s message of environmentally-friendly, human-sized 
policies to improve urban life is being challenged by an economic crisis
 in Italy that has pushed unemployment to record-high levels.
 Orvieto has not been spared: according to a report by town assembly 
members, “entire sectors have closed”, with 153 businesses shutting shop
 in the past four years and unemployment at 35.4% – far higher than the 
national average.
 ”We’re are fighting to keep our heads above water. Orvieto was once 
full of carpenter workshops, there was one on every street. I think 
we’re the only ones left,” said Gaia Ricetti, whose family has worked 
wood for seven generations.
 The large, 18th-century Michelangeli workshop hidden down a cobbled 
street in the centre of Orvieto is abuzz with electronic saws – the 
sound of industry Concina says he would be keen to hear more of, slow 
city or not.
 ”Not having large-scale industries does hamper economic 
development,” and multinationals like coffee chain Starbucks “would mean
 work, a living economy”, although Concina said he would definitely 
prefer not to have any Starbucks around.
 Oliveti believes the Cittaslow philosophy can be used to the same 
end, by “privileging a community’s qualities, such as craftmanship, 
technology or tourism, and using them as a key to overcome the economic 
crisis”.
 Orvieto prides itself on its remaining traditional artisans, 
printers and potters, working in old laboratories dotted around the town
 centre.
 ”We have clients from Italy and abroad, but no plans to move away to
 expand the business. It’s not about money, it’s about living a tranquil
 life,” said ceramics maker Walter Ambrosini, as he put freshly-crafted 
cups into a kiln.
 Despite the crisis, Ricetti agreed: “We would not be able to produce
 the same quality of product without the slow component. We weather our 
wood for five years before working it and Orvieto gives us the time and 
space to do so.”
 While the movement is currently limited to small towns, Oliveti said
 he hopes to persuade larger cities from Barcelona to Seoul to adopt 
some of the movement’s ideas and generate “islands of Cittaslow culture”
 in the bustle. – AFP Relaxnews
 
 
 
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