Turin

It is not talked about as much as it should be, but books inform us that it has entered history as Italy’s first capital city. This is what Turin is like: elegant, wealthy and urbanized, which knows how to keep a low profile despite its noteworthy naturalistic backdrop: the Alps surround the city and guard it at the edges, as does the Mole Antonelliana in the center. Baroque adorns the wide squares and avenues of a city with just the right balance of industrialization and history.

Near Piazza della Repubblica, where the covered market of “Porta Palazzo” stands, the eponymous parking lot in Turin consists of a spacious multi-story, within walking distance of the Royal Gardens, the Sabauda Gallery and the Royal Museums, not to mention the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist and the Shrine of the Consolata.

The “Corso Stati Uniti” parking lot is located in an almost residential area of the city and has two underground levels. The Turin Polytechnic University and the “Galileo Ferraris” state scientific high school are located near the parking lot.

Not far from the Central Market, below the elegant Emanuele Filiberto Square, the eponymous underground parking lot is born. The infrastructure in question is spread over two levels, intended for public (floor -1) and private (floor -2), respectively. Inside the graceful parking lot, Roman remains have been found, which can be seen by accessing from the staircase body of the square above.