Author(s): Shirley Dongwei Chen
Olivetti is a major force in 20th-century social reform, design culture, and urban planning with long lasting impacts. Incorporating manufacturing plants, social services, and housing into comprehensive campuses, the Olivetti company towns hold important pedagogical value for today’s design education. This paper examines Olivetti’s attempts to achieve social, cultural, and spatial reform through the design and planning of its company towns, Ivrea and Massa. These towns were part of Adriano Olivetti’s Comunità vision, which sought to integrate manufacturing facilities with social services, housing, and recreational spaces to promote worker well-being. While the Olivetti model succeeded in providing employees with access to healthcare, education, and leisure—often remembered fondly by former workers—its ambitious social reforms were constrained by the capitalist structures it operated within. Critics like Reyner Banham and Umberto Eco highlight the contradictions within Olivetti’s approach. Mechanization and the parcelization of work, designed to optimize productivity, ultimately led to increased worker alienation—an issue prevalent across post-war Italy’s industrial landscape. By analyzing the successes and failures of Ivrea and Massa, this paper explores how Olivetti’s social and architectural legacies inform current discussions around labor, urban planning, and social welfare. In doing so, the study contributes to contemporary conversations and future studies on Architectures as sites of social reform.
https://doi.org/10.35483/ACSA.AM.113.38
Volume Editors
Sara Jensen Carr & Rubén García Rubio
ISBN
978-1-944214-48-7
Study Architecture
ProPEL
