Horizon 2034 – New Cities, New Developments
West Turin Area

A Western Gateway to Europe — Built for Long-Term Partnership

The West Turin Area is the western industrial and logistics gateway of Italy: eleven municipalities operating as a single, coordinated territory at the meeting point of the Mediterranean and the Central European markets.

For international investors seeking a stable, well-governed, and strategically located base in the European Union, this part of the Turin metropolitan area offers a combination that is rare in Europe — industrial depth, corridor-grade infrastructure, integrated public governance, and more than two decades of uninterrupted institutional partnership.

In a European landscape that increasingly rewards integrated and well-coordinated territories, the West Turin Area stands out as a model of cooperative governance — a territory that speaks with one voice, plans with one strategy, and delivers with one technical structure.
11 Municipalities as one
25+ Years of uninterrupted partnership
450M EU single market consumers
Institutional architecture

A Single Counterpart for Eleven Municipalities

In 2001, eleven municipalities along the western axis of Turin established Zona Ovest di Torino S.r.l. as their joint development agency. Twenty-five years later, that founding decision continues to define the area's competitive advantage.

International investors engage with a single technical structure that coordinates planning, permitting dialogue, funding, site identification, and project implementation across the entire territory. This delivers shorter timelines, predictable procedures, coordinated technical responses, and a stable institutional relationship that endures across electoral cycles.

For partners accustomed to evaluating long-horizon investments, this institutional continuity — stability sustained over twenty-five years — is the foundation on which everything else is built. Industrial investments are decade-long commitments; the public counterpart must be capable of matching that horizon.

Continuity
Stable institutional relationship enduring across successive local administrations and electoral cycles.
Competence
Sustained capacity in strategic planning, project design, multi-source funding, procurement, and complex implementation.
Clarity of decision-making
One voice, one strategy, one technical structure — what international capital values most in a public partner.
Operational reliability
The same technical capacity that delivers public projects is available to support private investment journeys.
Strategic location

The Western Gateway of Italy

The West Turin Area sits at one of Europe's most strategic crossroads — at the intersection of the Mediterranean and Genoa–Rotterdam Rhine-Alpine TEN-T corridors, with direct reach to France, Switzerland, Germany, and global shipping routes via Genoa. In the center of the West Turin Area, there is a major intermodal logistics hub, S.I.TO

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Port of Genoa
Italy's principal Mediterranean gateway reached in under 2 hours — direct maritime routes to Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa.
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France, Switzerland & Germany
Fréjus and Mont Blanc corridors provide direct access within half a day's drive, easily reached by freight within a single working shift.
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Turin–Caselle International Airport
20 minutes away, with direct connections to major European hubs. Aeritalia Airport for private aviation located within the territory in Collegno.
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High-Speed Rail
Turin to Milan in under 1 hour, to Paris in under 5 hours. Full TEN-T core corridor integration — Mediterranean and Genoa–Rotterdam axes.
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Central European Markets
Principal Central European markets within a day's transit. Alpine corridors lead to Switzerland, southern Germany, and the manufacturing belt.
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TEN-T Corridor Network
Fully integrated into the EU's core TEN-T network. Mediterranean corridor as primary axis, connecting Spain–France–Hungary; Rhine-Alpine nearby.
Industrial ecosystem

An Industrial Base Ready for the Next Cycle

The West Turin Area is part of the historic Turin industrial ecosystem — the home of Italian automotive engineering, advanced mechanical manufacturing, and a workforce shaped by generations of high-precision industry. Today this heritage is evolving rapidly toward electric mobility, advanced manufacturing, and clean technologies.

For international industrial investors — particularly those seeking to establish a European production base to serve the EU single market of 450 million consumers — the area offers four converging advantages that combine rare and difficult to replicate.

Electric vehicles Advanced manufacturing Mobility technologies Mechatronics Clean energy systems Design-driven production Aerospace Circular economy
Skilled industrial workforce Embedded in one of Italy's most innovation-intensive regional systems and continuously renewed through dedicated training programmes.
Available sites & brownfield areas Industrial sites and reconvertible brownfield areas supported by integrated permitting dialogue across all eleven municipalities.
Politecnico di Torino One of Europe's leading engineering schools, with strong international partnerships and a particular reputation in automotive, mechanical, and aerospace engineering.
City of Science and Environment (2027) The new Scientific Hub of the University of Turin, operational in Grugliasco from 2027, on the border with Turin.
EU single market access Stable, well-regulated, EU-internal production base providing certainty in trade conditions and full regulatory alignment.
Proven delivery

A Track Record of Delivery

For investors, this matters beyond the individual projects. It demonstrates a public partner that consistently wins competitive funding, manages complex implementation, and delivers measurable results — exactly the operational reliability international capital looks for.

€60M+ Mobilised in 2023–2025
€10M
PITE — Innovation & Ecological Transition
Two public research centres dedicated to industrial innovation and the green transition, financed by the Italian Ministry of Enterprises. A permanent platform for collaboration between firms, research institutions, and public authorities.
€19M
Integrated Urban Regeneration Programme
Eight projects upgrading public spaces, buildings, and urban infrastructure under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan, combining functional renewal with energy efficiency and accessibility.
€10M
Metropolitan Synergies — West Turin
Hybrid infrastructure for culture, education, and human capital development, co-funded by the European Union and the Piedmont Region.
€14M
Integrated Cycling Network
A coherent territorial mobility system connecting all eleven municipalities, supporting modal shift and improving everyday connectivity between residential areas, workplaces, and services.
€5M
Horizon Europe "Sleeping Beauty" (2024)
Ecological and cultural revitalisation of the historically significant La Certosa urban park in Collegno.
€10M
Horizon Europe "PROTECT" (2025)
Urban climate resilience and heatwave mitigation infrastructure, positioning the area among European territories actively building adaptive capacity.
Quality of place

An Environment Designed for People

The West Turin Area is not only a place to invest. It is a place to live. The territory combines proximity to Turin — a UNESCO Creative City and one of Italy's most refined cultural capitals — with the green and historical landscapes of the Susa Valley and the Royal Residences of the House of Savoy, recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage site, several of which are located within the West Turin Area itself, including the magnificent Reggia di Venaria.

For long-term industrial investments, this matters concretely. The ability to attract and retain qualified personnel — both local and expatriate — is increasingly a determinant of operational success.

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International & bilingual schoolsHigh-quality international schools in the Turin metropolitan area, supporting the smooth relocation of expatriate families.
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Dense cultural offeringMuseums, theatres, music, and a year-round events calendar in a city internationally known for cinema, contemporary art, and design.
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Healthcare & public servicesAmong the best in Italy, with a cost of living significantly more accessible than other major European industrial hubs.
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Outstanding natural surroundingsAlps for winter sports and summer hiking within 1 hour, Mediterranean coast within 2, and the Langhe UNESCO wine region at the doorstep.
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UNESCO World HeritageRoyal Residences of the House of Savoy — including the Reggia di Venaria — located within the territory itself.
Our commitment

A Long-Term Partner

The West Turin Area approaches international partnerships in the same spirit that has guided its eleven municipalities for twenty-five years: cooperation as a method, continuity as a value, and shared success as the only sustainable outcome.

For more than twenty-five years, this has been the operating principle of the West Turin Area. Today it is also our invitation to international partners ready to build something lasting on the western gateway of Europe.

Stable institutional counterpart Capable of accompanying projects across years and electoral cycles, with continuity guaranteed by the joint development agency structure.
Transparent & predictable environment Anchored in EU and Italian legal frameworks, reinforced by twenty-five years of consistent local governance and EU-compliant procedures.
Coordinated site identification & permitting Channelled through a single development agency with intimate knowledge of all eleven municipalities and their planning frameworks.
Genuine long-term commitment The kind of partnerships that produce mutual value for decades — with the patience and reliability that meaningful industrial investments require.
 
Strategic Masterplan

HORIZON 2034
New Cities, New Developments

Directions for a resilient, attractive, and cohesive Western metropolitan Turin, fully integrated into metropolitan and European dynamics.

25+ Years of cooperation
€60M Resources attracted (3 yrs)
8 Strategic axes
2050 Post-carbon horizon

The Document

A qualitative leap for the territory

Western metropolitan Turin is facing a new challenge. After 25 years of inter-municipal cooperation and concrete results, the economic, social, and European context has profoundly changed.

Coordinating projects is no longer enough: a long-term political vision is needed, capable of guiding choices toward 2034 and beyond. This document transforms the Masterplan from a funding tool into a true strategic compass for the next 10–25 years.

It is not an urban plan nor a list of works. It is a shared political framework that reads demography, economy, environment, mobility, and governance in an integrated way.

The diagnosis: key points

An integrated analysis of the demographic, economic, environmental, and infrastructural challenges of the territory.

4.1 — Demography

Managing ageing, not suffering it

The territory will lose 16–17 thousand residents by 2041 without action. Strong ageing trend, growth of elderly living alone and smaller households. Risk of losing attractiveness for young people, families, and skilled workers.

4.2 — Economy

From deindustrialisation to productive quality

Overall employment is holding, but its structure is changing. Traditional manufacturing is declining while advanced services, healthcare, and ICT are growing. Real risk of becoming a "non-productive" territory if regeneration is limited to residential and commercial uses.

4.3 — Culture & Environment

From isolated attractions to a territorial system

Reggia di Venaria Reale, Castello di Rivoli, Parco della Mandria, the Morainic Hill, and the river corridors of the Dora, Stura, and Ceronda — not simply visitor sites, but a strategic cultural and environmental infrastructure.

4.4 — Mobility

Rebalancing daily transport

Over 70% of trips are by car, even for distances under 3 km. Metro, SFM (8 stations planned in the area), and cycling infrastructure are the key levers for rebalancing mobility across the territory.

The political vision

Two time horizons, one shared direction.

2034

A territory that attracts people and businesses, not just retains them

  • A territory integrating production, culture, environment, and welfare
  • Cooperation as a competitive advantage
  • Reduced energy cost-risk for businesses and citizens
  • A "time-oriented city" with shorter distances and proximity services
  • A productive system that grows in quality, not land consumption
  • A community that leaves no one behind
2050

A post-carbon, polycentric, productive and inclusive territory

  • Polycentric urban system
  • Metropolitan hub for production and culture
  • Post-carbon territory
  • Example of place-based development aligned with European policies
  • Recognised in metropolitan and European governance

The 8 strategic axes

Integrated levers — not sectoral — guiding the projects and actions of the Masterplan.

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Urban regeneration & housing

Ensuring the right to housing in changing cities. Affordable housing, student housing, silver housing, and neighbourhood regeneration as levers of attractiveness.

02
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Mobility & connections

More equitable, accessible, and sustainable cities. Metro, SFM, cycling, urban boulevards, sustainable logistics. Fewer cars, more accessibility.

03
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Ecological transition

Energy communities, building efficiency, reduction of costs for businesses and citizens. A resilient and environmentally sustainable territory.

04
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Industrial upgrading & innovation

Western metropolitan Turin innovation district: advanced automotive, aerospace, critical materials, digital, circular economy, logistics, Special Economic Zone (SEZ).

05
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Culture, environment & tourism

Integrated valorisation of flagship assets: Reggia di Venaria Reale, Castello di Rivoli, parks, and river corridors. A metropolitan cultural and tourism ecosystem.

06
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Education, training & youth

University campuses and training centres as territorial engines. ITS programmes, industrial PhDs, and technology transfer to attract and retain talent.

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Social cohesion & local welfare

Community centres, home services, intergenerational policies, and integration of welfare and labour policies to serve a changing population.

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Facing crises & relaunching work

A comprehensive strategy for policies and services. Coordination with trade unions, business associations, Regione Piemonte, and public and private stakeholders.

A work in progress, built together

Discover our projects and find out how the West Turin Area is shaping the future of the territory — one partnership at a time.

Download our presentation