A view of Rialto Bridge in Venice. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri
The merchants of Venice always had an eye for a ducat to
be made in the Rialto, but covering its boutique-lined marble
bridge with ads for blue jeans might seem a commercial step too
far, even for city built on trade.
Yet with public budgets across Italy struggling to maintain
its thousands of historic monuments, that advertising, worth
$6.5 million from Diesel jeans tycoon Renzo Rosso, is
precisely what Venetian city elders say will keep the Rialto
Bridge open across the Grand Canal it has spanned since
Shakespeare's day.
"I hope the campaign will not be invasive," Rosso, a local
celebrity, said on Friday at a presentation of the plan he is
paying for to repair the 400-year-old structure. "Rialto is
the most beautiful bridge in the world and it reflects our
style."
Aware of carping that accompanied the city's move to tender
for commercial sponsors for the project, councillor
Alessandro Maggioni said: "Criticism comes with our job. But
this city can't wait any longer ... Our monuments are falling
to pieces."
Following in the footsteps of a shoe magnate who is paying to
fix up Rome's Colosseum, Rosso - popularly known as Italy's
"Denim King" - will cover the entire, 5-million-euro cost of
restoration of the Rialto Bridge. Work should begin in 2014.
In return, Rosso's company, Only The Brave, may project
advertising images onto the bridge, hold publicity events at
landmark sites such as St. Mark's Square - and will slap its
Diesel brand on Venice's ubiquitous water taxis, the
vaporetti.
Events would be artistic and tasteful, said the 57-year-old
entrepreneur, who cultivates a rock star look. And the work
would only improve a city whose carnival, history, culture
and romantic canals draw millions of tourists a year: "Venice
is beautiful;Venice is unique," he said. "It's a romantic
dream, a love story, and it will be more and more a city of
dreams."
A Renaissance trading empire, Venetian fleets brought home
riches from distant shores that allowed its merchant princes
to turn the lagoon city into an artistic marvel of the age.
But the modern Italian state has hit hard times; deeply in
debt and with an economy that has barely grown for a decade,
governments in Rome are struggling to find cash to maintain
its many treasures.
Locally, Venice is also grappling with the pressure of
tourism on fragile, ageing foundations beneath the waterline.
Seeking mercantile help to restore the cracked and stained
white marble of the elegantly arched Rialto Bridge is one way
of relieving strain on the city coffers, political leaders
argue.
In another such example, Diego Della Valle, chairman of
luxury shoemaker Tod's, is investing 25 million euros to
repair the Colosseum, and wants other business leaders to
follow suit.
That project has not been without hitches, however. Earlier
this year, Della Valle threatened to pull out after questions
over a deal letting him use the 2,000-year-old image in a
logo.
There has been scandal over masonry collapsing at Pompeii,
the lava-preserved Roman town near Naples; and an offer from
a mineral water firm to restore the capital's crumbling but
iconic Trevi Fountain led to political uproar, but so far no
money.
Venice's heritage has benefited from wealthy business people,
including France's Francois Pinault and Italian designer
Miuccia Prada, who have restored historic palaces for their
own use. But maintaining public monuments remains a
difficulty.
For the Rialto Bridge, Venice was not inundated with offers -
Rosso's was the only bid at the tender for advertising
rights.
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