Historical Archive, Museum, Library and Italgas Emeroteca
The Historical Archive, Museum, Library and Emeroteca of Italgas preserves two centuries of documentation on the history of gas distribution in Italy, housed in the company’s historic Turin headquarters. Founded alongside Italgas itself — one of Europe’s oldest gas utilities, established in Turin in 1837 — the complex constitutes a unique industrial heritage institution that traces the transformation of urban energy infrastructure from the 19th century to the present day.
At a glance
- Type
- Industrial heritage archive, museum, and library
- Period
- Founded 1837 (Italgas); archive and museum developed over the 19th–21st centuries
- Style
- Mixed — historic corporate premises with modern exhibition installations
- Location
- Turin, Piedmont, Italy (45.0772° N, 7.6925° E)
Overview
The Italgas institutional complex in Turin brings together four distinct but interconnected heritage functions: a historical archive holding corporate records and technical documents, a museum of gas industry artefacts and installations, a library of sector publications, and an emeroteca (periodical archive) of gas-industry journals and newspapers. Together they form one of Italy’s most complete industrial memory institutions dedicated to a single utility sector. The collection spans the full arc of Italian urban gas history, from the first coal-gas street lamps of the Risorgimento era to modern natural-gas distribution networks.
History
Italgas (Società Italiana per il Gas) was established in Turin in 1837, making it one of the first gas companies in Italy and among the oldest surviving gas utilities in Europe. Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries the company expanded gas distribution across northern Italian cities, accumulating a vast body of technical plans, administrative correspondence, and engineering drawings. As corporate memory became a heritage asset, Italgas formalised its archival and museum functions over the latter 20th century, eventually integrating them into a publicly accessible cultural institution in its historic Turin premises. The emeroteca documents the evolution of trade press in the Italian gas sector across more than 150 years of publishing.
What you see
Visitors encounter original gas meters, pressure-regulation equipment, early street-lamp fixtures, and engineering models drawn from more than 180 years of company operations. The library holds rare printed volumes on gas technology and chemistry dating from the 19th century, while the emeroteca preserves bound runs of specialist periodicals. The archive contains technical drawings, urban concession maps, and company statutes that document the physical expansion of gas networks across Italian cities. Display installations contextualise each artefact within the broader social and urban history of energy infrastructure in Italy.
Cultural significance
As a repository of industrial heritage, the Italgas complex is exceptional in Italy for the depth and continuity of its documentation: no comparable archive covers the full history of a single Italian utility from pre-Unification origins to the present. The collections are a primary source for researchers of urban history, economic history, and the history of technology in 19th- and 20th-century Italy. Italgas has been active in making the archive accessible to scholars and in promoting public awareness of industrial heritage as a component of urban cultural identity.
Practical information
- Address
- Largo Regio Parco 9, 10152 Torino TO, Italy
- Access
- The archive and library are primarily accessible to accredited researchers; museum visits may be arranged through Italgas institutional relations. Check the official Italgas website for current access procedures.
- Admission
- Check official website for current admission policy
Getting there
The Italgas complex is located in the Regio Parco district of Turin. By public transport, take bus lines serving Lungo Dora or the tram network from Turin Porta Nuova railway station. The nearest major landmark is the Parco del Valentino, roughly 3 km south. Ample street parking is available in the surrounding industrial quarter. Turin is directly connected by high-speed rail to Milan (1 hr) and to the national Frecciarossa network.
Sources & resources
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