Rione Alto
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Rione Alto is a district of
Naples Naples (; it, Napoli ; nap, Napule ), from grc, Νεάπολις, Neápolis, lit=new city. is the regional capital of Campania and the third-largest city of Italy, after Rome and Milan, with a population of 909,048 within the city's adminis ...
, built at the turn of the 1960s and 70s in the
Arenella Arenella is a quarter of Naples, southern Italy. It is on the Vomero hill above the city and was, 300 meters in elevation. Many years ago was considered a place to go to "get away from it all". It is near to the main hospital section of the city, ...
district, near the hospital area.


Etymology and history

It owes its name to the fact that it is located in the highest (in Italian, ''alto'') part of the
Vomero Vomero () is a bustling hilltop district of metropolitan Naples, Italy — comprising approximately and a population of 48,000. Vomero is noted for its central square, Piazza Vanvitelli; the ancient Petraio, its earliest path up and down t ...
hill, a very sparsely populated rural area until the mid-twentieth century, built in an imposing way only in the sixties, when the spaces in Vomero ran out, the restriction of inability to build around the Giovanni Pascale hospital was circumvented, thus making possible one of the most profitable speculative interventions in the urban history of Naples, determined by the very high increase in value acquired by the building areas of the Rione Alto. The entrepreneur and engineer Corrado Ferlaino talked about the construction of the
neighborhood A neighbourhood (British English, Irish English, Australian English and Canadian English) or neighborhood (American English; see spelling differences) is a geographically localised community within a larger city, town, suburb or rural area, ...
in an interview:


Urban planning

The structure of the Rione Alto is mainly made up of a network of rather narrow streets, resulting from the small spaces left free between the various buildings, built without any order. The two main streets of the district, via Jannelli and via San Giacomo dei Capri, have remained the same in length, width and route compared to their conditions in the past centuries, when they were only used for goats and agricultural carts. In particular, via Jannelli is heavily trafficked because it connects the Rione Alto to the
Camaldoli Camaldoli () is a ''frazione'' of the ''comune'' of Poppi, in Tuscany, Italy. It is mostly known as the ancestral seat of the Camaldolese monastic order, originated in the eponymous hermitage, which can still be visited. The name was derived from ...
junction of the Naples ring road. The Rione Alto was one of the first areas to be served by the new ''Collinare Metro'' (later Line 1) with the Rione Alto station, which allowed easy mobility towards the center of
Vomero Vomero () is a bustling hilltop district of metropolitan Naples, Italy — comprising approximately and a population of 48,000. Vomero is noted for its central square, Piazza Vanvitelli; the ancient Petraio, its earliest path up and down t ...
.


Architecture

Being an area of recent urbanization, the Rione Alto has few pre-existing buildings, however all strongly altered by the profound changes that took place in the last thirty years of the twentieth century. Added to this is the lack of real social gathering centers (squares, gardens) due to the excesses of speculative construction, so much so that the subsequent construction of the Rione Alto station of Line 1 of the underground, as there are no further spaces useful for the purpose, has resulted in a significant narrowing of the roadway (necessarily occupied by the relative entrances and descents, as well as by the station well) of Via Pasquale del Torto and part of via Giulio Palermo, which also entailed substantial variations to the viability of the entire ward with the establishment of one-way streets in various streets.


Cappella Cangiani

In the area of Largo dei Cangiani there was in the past a small agricultural settlement around the Cappella Cangiani, a small church containing an icon of
Santa Maria di Costantinopoli The Church of Santa Maria di Costantinopoli is a 16th-century Roman Catholic church located on the street of the same name in Naples, Italy, and located a block north of the Academy of Fine Arts of Naples. History Its name is allied to the cult ...
, built at the end of the sixteenth century by the Cangiano family, who had considerable possessions in those parts. At the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, after a restoration of the church, a larger church was built near it, which became an autonomous parish (Parrocchia di Santa Maria di Costantinopoli in Cappella Cangiani) from 1925, restored in 1951. Between in 1969 and 1976, as a consequence of the demographic explosion of
Vomero Vomero () is a bustling hilltop district of metropolitan Naples, Italy — comprising approximately and a population of 48,000. Vomero is noted for its central square, Piazza Vanvitelli; the ancient Petraio, its earliest path up and down t ...
Alto, the current new church was built on a project by the neapolitan Alberto Izzo, with an airy new layout, in which ancient testimonies are well absorbed.


Commemorative statues

In 1999 a statue dedicated to the famous neapolitan comic actor
Antonio De Curtis Antonio is a masculine given name of Etruscan origin deriving from the root name Antonius. It is a common name among Romance language-speaking populations as well as the Balkans and Lusophone Africa. It has been among the top 400 most popular mal ...
(professionally known as ''Totò'') was placed in an open space in via Freud, inaugurated for the occasion by his daughter Liliana De Curtis, and the area, pedestrianized and repaved, was called Piazzetta Totò however, although it became known to the resident population of the area, it was never made official by the Municipality of Naples). The statue, smeared several times by vandals with writings and paints (on one occasion the face was even painted black), found greater protection in 2008 following the affixing of a fence to the entire flowerbed in which it is located. Other important places are the small gardens on the first stretch of via Domenico Fontana, dedicated to the neapolitan actress
Tina Pica Tina Pica (31 March 1884 – 15 August 1968) was an Italian supporting actress who played character roles on stage. Her film debut came in 1935 with ''The Three-Cornered Hat''. In the 1950s, she became a celebrity thanks to her role as Caramel ...
, who died in solitude and almost forgotten in the house of one of her nephews located in nearby via Bernardo Cavallino in 1968.


Villas and significant structures

Of architectural significance is the residential building located in via San Giacomo dei Capri and designed by Aldo Loris Rossi, with distinctive Wrightian and Lecorbusian models. In the bridge area under Via Fontana, some of the villas of the old Via Montedonzelli still survive ( Casina Russo, Villa Donzelli,
Villa Paradiso The Villa Paradiso (or Paradisio) is a large villa in Nice, France built at the start of the 20th century by the architect Constantin Scala. During World War II (1939–45) it was used by the Académie française for its Prix de Rome scholars. The ...
). Instead, the large Villa Rota was destroyed to make way for the ''Il Poggio'' park. Also in Via San Giacomo dei Capri, in addition to modest rural houses, there were once some villas (Villa Tammaro, the Villa of the lawyer and Minister of the King, Pasquale Grippo, Villa Clemenza and Villa Pellerano, Villa Tafuri, Villa Giordano, Villa Valentino), only some of which survived including, precisely, Villa Valentino recently restored by the lawyer Valentino. It was built in 1889 by
Commendatore Commendatore (singular), Commendatori (plural), is an Italian word originating from the latin phrase In commendam and meaning "Commander". It may refer to: Position, rank, title * Commander (order) ( it, Commendatore), the title of honour "Command ...
Giovanni Valentino as a holiday home; the arrival of the family was, in fact, announced by the affixing, by the servants, of two white porcelain greyhounds on the Tower of the Villa. During
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposin ...
the cellars were used as a shelter during the bombings. In the upper part of the street there is still a dilapidated nineteenth-century chapel.


Notes

{{Commons, Rione Alto, Rione Alto Rioni of Naples