Destination One: Florence
Florence forges a creative path to recovery and sustainability.
Florence forges a creative path to recovery and sustainability.
The Tuscan capital, Florence, sits amid the second-largest wine-producing region in Italy, surrounded by vineyards brimming with heritage vines and worldcaliber grapes. Pausing beneath the tawny evening sky — a glass of Chianti within reach — while listening to the river lap against the walls that hold it in place as it flows beneath the Ponte Vecchio is a singularly seductive experience.
Though wine-based tourism is significant, more than vino keeps Florence afloat. Prior to last year, more than 12 million visitors each year entered the city to drink in the staggered lines of terra-cotta roofs and elegant steeples and to immerse themselves in art, culinary offerings, history and culture. The city also enjoys a reputation as a popular location for destination weddings.
Expanding train service offers a route between the city and Florence Toscana Airport, and further infrastructure development includes a new terminal and runway — all changes that will increase the city’s overall attraction for foreign investment in MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions).
Yet concerns have been growing for years that the city is being loved to death — at the very least to the detriment of its citizens. Efforts have been made over the past several years to address the overcrowding and to prevent the historic city center from becoming too expensive and unlivable for Firenze’s residents. Several streets were
closed off to cars and buses, reducing the amount of noise and air pollution. The municipality publishes a list of tour operators and guides committed to decentralizing the flow of visitors, diversifying the tourist experience and protecting the work and the lifestyle of its citizens.
Hand in hand with efforts to boost sustainable tourism is a wide spectrum of initiatives and programs to bring 21st-century technology and green policies to this historic city. Florence is part of CITYFIED, an EU program which seeks to enhance energy efficiency in cities and provide a high quality of life to their residents, with the ultimate goal of creating near-zero energy districts. In Florence’s Novoli district, a test case, projects include boosting solar energy and thermal storage. LED lighting installations improve road safety and reduce energy consumption, saving the city more than €2 million on its annual electric bill. Additionally, “smart” lampposts serve as environmental and acoustic monitors and provide free Wifi and video surveillance. And throughout the city, drinking fountains offer chilled water, plain or sparkling, to encourage the use of reusable water bottles.
In the transportation sector, recently added tramlines helped reduce carbon emissions by an estimated 14,000 tonnes per year, and electric mobility continues to expand with a growing network of EV charging stations. Electric carts, scooters, tricycles and two-person minicars