main index © Jeff Matthews
2002-2012
Naples Miscellany 25 (early Oct through
early Nov 2009)
As noted elsewhere (see portal on Underground
Naples), Naples is honeycombed with hundreds
of manmade tunnels and caves. There are also a lot
of simple unplanned holes in the ground in the form
of cave-ins and sink-holes. These often occur
beneath the streets and buildings at higher
elevations. The city is largely built on a hill, and
you can only dig and put up so many new buildings
and lay down so many new miles of track for subway
lines before the hill starts to sag and crumble in
protest. Four such holes opened last week along the
street called Vico San Carlo alle Mortelle just
below the major road of Corso Vittorio Emanuele II
in the Chiaia section of Naples. Five buildings were
evacuated, causing the displacement of 297 persons.
One of the sink-holes opened within the
church of San
Carlo alle Mortelle (photo, right). There
were no injuries, perhaps due to the fact that the
cave-ins happened in the middle of the night when
people were inside and asleep. The road, itself,
bears heavy traffic in the morning and afternoon
rush hours. Well, bore
traffic; the street has been closed.
- Identical acronyms are confusing. I happily report
that ANCEM (Associazione
Napoli Capitale Europea della Musica/Association
Naples Music Capital of Europe) will continue its
concert season until Christmas with five concerts in
the centrally located Palatina Chapel of the Maschio Angioino instead
of in the Mostra d'Oltremare
(Overseas fair Grounds) in Fuorigrotta. I also
report that I didn't know what the acronym ANCEM
stood for. The first expansion I came across was Associazione Nazionale
Contro gli Errori Medici--National
Association Against Medical Errors. I thought, hmmmm, Music Against
Medical Malpractice! That sounded just
weird enough to interest me. Alas...
- It's one thing on the streets, but a number of
Neapolitan hospitals (!) report the presence of
itinerant vendors wandering the corridors and
peddling everything from sandwiches to coffee to
newspapers and—particularly egregious—cigarettes to
patients in the ward for respiratory ailments! That
case came to light yesterday when the private
rent-a-cops that guard these
institutions busted a kindly 64-year-old gentleman
and found hundreds of packs of black-market (no tax
stamps) lung-busters in his 24-hour bag.
- In a city
already awash with ongoing major construction of
underground train tracks and surface stations to go
with them, someone at city hall has seriously
proposed the construction of a suspension cable lift
(as in chairs or cabins that you ride up to the tops
of mountains!) that would connect the National
Archaeological Museum at the bottom with the museum
at Capodimonte at the top. That ride would climb
about a mile and be suspended along the way by a
series of massive pillars built in the Sanità section of the
city. Residents along the proposed route are against
the idea, and skeptics at city hall recall a similar
experience many years ago: When the Mostra d'Oltremare (Overseas
Fair Grounds) opened in the 1930s, it was at one end
of a spectacular suspension lift that ran above
Fuorigrotta and to a station high up on the scenic
Posillipo ridge. It was a great ride, but fell
victim to urbanization. The lift was closed in 1961
to permit buildings to go up around the suspension
pillars, themselves The buildings went up very fast,
well before anyone could figure out what to do with
the pillars. The pillars are still there! Some windows in
the upper floors of nearby buildings open directly
onto these concrete mastodons. The pillars cannot be
removed without the use of explosives, so it's safer
(and uglier) to leave them in
place. The same thing would surely happen with this
new one to Capodimonte, say critics.
When
the cops crack down on street vendors who have set
up small stalls around the city, the vendors are
usually illegal and fly-by-night; that is, they'll
open again tomorrow at another location. This time,
however, the vendors are legitimately in business;
they are the owners of the many Christmas shops
along via San Gregorio
Armeno that deal in the trappings of
the presepe,
the manger display so iconic of Christmas in Naples.
Most of the vendors have for many years used outside
stalls and tables in front of their shops to display
their wares. Someone decided that the stalls were
not in keeping with paragraph something-or-other of
subsection blah-blah of the Uniform Code of Manger
Displays (or something) and they have all been
removed. The street is now as clean as a whistle.
That means no tourists, either, for—lo and behold
(seems to fit, here)—people like the
outside displays! They like to wander up the street and
browse and shop! A group of shop owners is now
presenting their case to the appropriate
administrative numskull responsible for this
disaster. Verily, I say unto you, the displays will
be back for the Christmas rush. (Believe it or not,
it is gearing up already.) update below
- CRESME stands for Centro
ricerche economiche sociali di mercato per
l'edilizia e il territorio [Center for
social and economic research on construction and
real estate]. It has just released an eye-opening
report (for those whose eyes were for some reason
still closed to these problems): the province of
Naples (of which the city of Naples is the capital),
one of the five provinces in the Campania region of
Italy, is at great risk in case of of earthquake or
flood. In case of earthquake, 1,651 school buildings
and 33 hospitals in the province are at significant
risk. In case of flood, 354 schools and 4 hospitals
are at risk. The report comes on the heels of the
recent flood disaster in Messina at the beginning of
October and is not that far removed in time (1998)
from the Sarno floods in the province of Naples that
killed 137 persons.
Logo of the 1st
IAC,
held in Paris in 1950
Word
comes that Naples will host the 63rd International
Astronautical Congress in 2012. (Indeed, people have
been thinking about space travel for quite a while;
the first congress was in Paris in 1950. That
single-stage rocket ship in the logo on the right
looks suspiciously like a V-2!) That might help to
make up for the loss to Barcelona in the bid for the
2007 America's Cup regatta. It has even encouraged
the Naples City Parenting Persons to reach for the
stars in another way: they have announced a plan to
be one of the Italian cities that will bid for the
2020 summer Olympic Games. Stay tuned.
- An infamous scene from Francesco Rosi's 1963 film
Le mani sulla
città [Hands on the City] shows a
bunch of corrupt politicians and land speculators
feasting on a cake model of the Bay of Naples,
devouring everything in sight. It happens in real
life, too! In Giugliano, near Naples, 38 people are
under investigation—judges, contractors and possibly
some real bona fide criminals—for having thrown up
98 housing units and a hotel along
an historic section of the famed Appian Way. It was
all to be part of Parco
l'Obelisco, a planned tourist village. Investigation continues, bank
accounts have been seized and all of the housing has
been sequestered. Round up the usual suspects.
- By law, throughout Europe all public buildings and
most private buildings where the public might gather
(cinemas, for example) now have to provide access
for the handicapped. I haven't
counted the number of wheelchair ramps in European
major cities, but I take note of them in Naples. The
local papers report that a young man, Emmanuel, can
now go to high school like any other kid after only
one year and nine months of hassle to get one
elevator that works and to build one wheelchair
ramp, items that are legally required in the first
place. This is not some outback one-room school
house; it's a major high school (S. Maria di
Costantinopoli) near Piazza Dante in the
heart of the city.
- Via San Gregorio
Armeno. That was quick. The city hall has
caved in (not literally, although that, too, is
possible). In the dispute over the presence of
outdoor stalls and stands to display Christmas wares
(above) the shop owners have won.
- Heavy traffic on the Rome-Naples autostrada the
other night caused film star Sophia Loren to miss
her son Carlo Ponti's debut as conductor of the San
Carlo orchestra, in concert at the RAI auditorium in
Fuori Grotta near Naples. The show must go on and it
did: a little-known work by the young Puccini—Capriccio sinfonico;
Brahms' Symphony #2; and the Schumann A minor cello
concerto, featuring American cellist, Alisa
Weilerstein.
- The southernmost of the three major tunnels (i.e., the one
nearest Sorrento) on the road along the Sorrentine
peninsula has just closed (late October) and will
remain closed until March 31, 2010. Work is underway
to link the Vico Equense-Seiano tunnel to the new
Scrajo-Pozzano tunnel. All of this will eventually
create a five-kilometer by-pass around the crowded
bathing establishments along the coast and
facilitate traffic on the Sorrentine coast road. In
the meantime, however, the first weekend of closure
was a disaster for anyone in any semblance of a
hurry; traffic has to be rerouted through the local
coastal town of Vico Equense (which the now closed tunnel by-passed), leaving drivers
inching along for hours through the narrow streets
of the town and leaving residents of that town awash
in a sea of traffic. It gets better; this year won't
do it—look forward to another closure next October
sometime.
- The Naples football (soccer) team is currently
mired in the middle of the A-League (still better
than the B-League!) With nine games under their
belt, they have won 4, lost 4 and tied one, an
identical record as Genoa; thus, the two teams are
tied for 10th place (out of 20 teams).
(Glass-half-full optimists note that the two teams
are also tied for 9th place.)
- Yesterday, Sunday, November 1, was All-Saints Day.
People generally go to the various cemeteries in
town to visit their dearly departed. You drive there
and try to find a place to park and try to find some
flowers along the way. The throng is incredible. It
got so bad yesterday that the police had to step in.
They ticketed 79 illegal car park attendants and
actually arrested one of them who was charging
people five euros to "watch their car." The cops
also confiscated 3500 bouquets of flowers from
itinerant vendors in the area. (This is vaguely
related to the general entry on the "flower people" of
Naples.) What do the cops do with 3500 bouquets of
flowers? Distribute them to churches, according to
this morning's paper.
You
don't need Bernoulli's Principle to know which way
the wind is blowin'. Recent letters to the editor in
the papers have complained about Capodichino airport
and planes landing from the south-west, over the
heavily-populated Vomero section of Naples. It's
dangerous and it's noisy, they say, and flights come
in until one in the morning. True, true and true.
They didn't use to do that and the airport
authorities don't care about real people, they say.
Wrong and wrong. The physics of flight require
planes to take off and land into the wind; it
increases relative air-speed over the wings,
providing more lift, which is just what you want
when you are trying to maneuver a giant tin can
through the two most dangerous stages of
flight—take-offs and landings. The run-way at the
Naples airport runs exactly NE to SW. Most of the
time, the prevailing wind blows in from the sea—that
is, from the SW; thus, planes usually take off into
that wind and climb out steep over the city to avoid
disturbing the folks below as much as possible. They
then land from the NW over the less populated areas
of Naples to the north-west of the airport. But—recent
winds have been from the north and north-west,
requiring take-offs in the other direction, which
bother no one, but landings in from the sea over the
city can indeed be disturbing. The angle of descent
on final approach has to be a gentle as possible for
the good folks in the cabin; thus, you have flights
coming in low over the city. Some day the winds will
change and things will be back to normal.
The
Royal Apartments in the Royal
Palace in Naples are always a pleasure to
wander through. I was pleased to see some big-time
restoration going on: there is a workshop on the
history and restoration of tapestry set up. Also,
there is somewhat of a permanent workshop on the restoration of art
and furnishings as part of a degree program for
students of Suor Orsola
university. I was fortunate to catch a few of
them at work. They were in the midst of a one-year
hands-on practicum as part of a degree in Conservazione dei beni
mobili e artistici. When I was there, they
were working on the restoration
of a number of large, ornate doors. Most of the
students are young women intent on pursuing a career
in art restoration.
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