DOI: 10.3390/heritage9060244 ISSN: 2571-9408

The Invisible Hydraulic Heritage of Bologna: Strategies for the Promotion and Interpretation of Its Urban Canals

Álvaro Gil-Plana, Patricia Hernández-Lamas, Beatriz Cabau-Anchuelo, Jorge Bernabéu-Larena

The city of Bologna (Italy) boasts an outstanding hydraulic heritage linked to the development of the silk industry, embodied in an extensive and valuable canal network. These public works, such as the Canale di Reno and the Canale Navile, were fundamental to the urban and economic shaping of the city from the Middle Ages onwards; however, many were concealed or dismantled from the 19th century. This article analyses recent heritage engagement and dissemination strategies regarding Bologna’s historic canals and proposes new tools to overcome their spatial fragmentation and enhance their interpretation as a continuous network. The methodology combines analysis, fieldwork or valorisation of the hydraulic system, proposing two complementary promotion actions: the design of a mobile application and the development of a straightforward urban intervention consisting of linear pavement marking of the underground canals layout. The proposed operational hypotheses suggest that integrating digital resources with on-site signage brings invisible heritage to light, improves the spatial understanding of the hydraulic system, and fosters both community and tourist engagement. The study concludes that these strategies reinforce the territorial understanding and social awareness of civil engineering heritage, offering a transferable approach for the outreach of hydraulic networks.

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