High Factory and Francesco Rossi Wool Mill
The High Factory — known in Italian as the Fabbrica Alta — is a monumental 19th-century wool mill complex in Schio, in the province of Vicenza, Veneto. Built by the textile entrepreneur Alessandro Rossi between 1859 and 1862, it was among the largest industrial structures in Italy at the time of its construction and a flagship of the country’s early industrial revolution. Today it stands as one of the most significant examples of Italian industrial archaeology and a symbol of Schio’s identity as the “Manchester of Italy.”
At a glance
- Type
- Industrial wool mill complex (Fabbrica Alta)
- Period
- Built 1859–1862; mid-19th century
- Style
- Italian industrial architecture; neo-Gothic brick detailing
- Location
- Schio, Province of Vicenza, Veneto, Italy
- Coordinates
- 45.7152° N, 11.3524° E
Overview
Schio’s Fabbrica Alta (High Factory) was built by Alessandro Rossi, one of Italy’s pioneering industrial capitalists, to house mechanised wool spinning and weaving operations powered by steam and water. The complex, named for its imposing five-storey brick elevation, stood as a physical manifesto of industrial modernity in a predominantly agricultural country. It gave Schio the nickname “the Manchester of Italy,” drawing comparisons with England’s industrial textile centres.
History
The Rossi family had operated wool production in Schio since the early 19th century, but it was Alessandro Rossi who transformed the enterprise into an industrial giant. Construction of the Fabbrica Alta began in 1859 and was completed in 1862, housing hundreds of workers under one roof in a model that mixed paternalistic social provision — including worker housing, a school, and a church — with mass production. Rossi was later elected a senator of the Kingdom of Italy and became a major advocate of protectionist trade policy. After the decline of the textile industry in the 20th century, the factory gradually closed, and efforts toward its conservation and adaptive reuse have been ongoing since the 1990s.
What you see
The Fabbrica Alta presents a long, multi-storey brick facade distinguished by its regular rhythm of arched windows and a roofline that was once visible across the entire Schio plain. The surrounding neighbourhood — the Quartiere Nuovo built by Rossi for his workers — retains rows of terraced housing, a neoclassical church, and public gardens that together form a rare intact industrial village. The interior spaces, though no longer in textile production, preserve their vast open floors and iron structural elements.
Cultural significance
The Fabbrica Alta is recognised as a landmark of Italian industrial archaeology and is protected under national heritage legislation. It represents a critical chapter in Italy’s transition from a rural to an industrial economy and embodies an early paternalistic model of industrial social planning that prefigured the welfare state. The complex is a key reference point for the history of the Italian labour movement and early industrial capitalism.
Practical information
- Address
- Via Pasubio, Schio, 36015, Province of Vicenza, Veneto, Italy
- Opening hours
- The exterior and surrounding Quartiere Nuovo are freely accessible; check local cultural institutions for interior access and guided tours
- Admission
- Exterior free; guided tours may be arranged through local associations
Getting there
Schio is served by regional bus lines from Vicenza (approximately 25 km south), with the bus terminus in the town centre a short walk from the Fabbrica Alta. By car, take the SR46 northbound from Vicenza toward Schio. There is no direct rail connection to Schio, but the Vicenza–Schio bus service runs frequently throughout the day.
