The Museo Nazionale dell'Automobile di Torino (National Automobile Museum), known as MAUTO, is an automobile museum in Turin, Italy, founded by Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia. The museum has a collection of almost 200 cars[2] among eighty automobile brands representing eight countries (Italy, France, Great Britain, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, United States of America, Poland).[3] The museum is situated in a building dating from 1960, and it has three floors. After restructuring in 2011 the museum is open again, and its exhibition area has been expanded from 11,000 square metres (120,000 sq ft) to 19,000 square metres (200,000 sq ft).[4] The museum also has its own library, documentation centre, bookshop and auditorium.[5]
Established | 3 November 1960[1] |
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Location | Corso Unità d'Italia 40, Turin, Italy |
Coordinates | 45°01′55″N 7°40′17″E / 45.0318545°N 7.6713941°E |
Type | Automobile museum |
Collections | Cars and automibiles |
Director | Mariella Mengozzi |
Website | www |
Collection
editThe museum's collection includes the first Italian cars, a Bernardi from 1896 and a Fiat from 1899, a Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost from 1914, and racing cars by Ferrari and Alfa Romeo. Also included are for instance an 1893 Benz Victoria, an 1894 Peugeot, a 1904 Oldsmobile, the 1907 Itala from the Peking to Paris race, a 1913 De Dion-Bouton, a 1916 Ford T and the 1929 Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A that starred in Sunset Boulevard.
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Reproduction of Cugnot's vehicle
Documentation Centre
editThe Documentation Centre collects historical data sheets, photographs, documents, sales brochures, construction diagrams, and everything related to cars that they were able to collect over the years. The collection consists of photographs by tens of thousands of prints in black and white and it works in conjunction with the Ministry for Cultural Heritage.
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Interior
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Exterior
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Detail
Library
editThe museum's library holds about 7,000 texts, most of them out of print and hard to find. It is divided into seven sections (history of locomotion, history of brands, racing, technology, biographies, economy, and others). Most of the volumes date back to the first phases of the automotive industry, from the beginning until the 1950s.
References
edit- ^ Griglià, Remo (3 November 1960). "Dal landò al vapore alla Fiat Turbina". Stampa Sera (in Italian). p. 9. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
Se Firenze, a buon diritto, aduna nei suoi musei le più alte espressioni artistiche del Rinascimento italiano, è logico e giusto che a Torino sia sorto il Museo dell'Automobile inaugurato stamane.
- ^ "Museum history". Retrieved 2011-01-22.
- ^ "Museo dell' Automobile Turin". bella-torino.com. Retrieved 2008-04-02.
- ^ "Museo automobile di Torino vince il premio IN/ARCH-ANCE". Archived from the original on 2013-10-17. Retrieved 2012-01-22.
- ^ "Car museums in Italy". consar0.startlogic.com. Retrieved 2008-04-02.