Can digital innovation revitalize rural communities and preserve cultural heritage at the same time?
This book dives into the transformative power of digitization in rural regionswhere technology isnt just a tool, but a lifeline for local culture, economic resilience, and future development. Born from a unique research collaboration between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Politecnico di Milano, supported by the Roberto Rocca Foundation and MIT Italy, this book brings together cutting-edge data-driven scholarly work on shrinking towns, economic development, and digital innovation.
Together with local authorities, small business owners, and community leaders in Sicily and Lombardy, the project tackled some of the most pressing challenges facing rural Italyfrom population decline to economic stagnationall through the lens of digital transformation. But this story isnt just about Italy. Similar struggles play out in rural communities across Japan, Korea, Spain, the United States, Germany, and beyond.
Amid the global acceleration of digital technologies sparked by the COVID-19 pandemic, this volume offers a bold roadmap for blending innovation with tradition, proposing smart platforms to amplify local voices, promote heritage-based economies, and design collaborative workspaces that anchor rural resilience.
Whether youre a policymaker, urban planner, designer, tech innovator, or heritage advocate, this book offers fresh insights, actionable strategies, and a compelling vision for the future of rural development in the digital age.
Small Towns, Big Visions: Technology and Heritage in Small-Town
Planning.- Heritage and Mobile Radio: A data-driven approach to address
cultural heritage valorization.- A Digital Platform for Italian Small
Businesses.- Revitalize Centuripe: A data toolkit to help identify buildings
across the occupancy spectrum.- A Sport & Heritage Corridor for the
Valtellina Olympics.- New Geographies of Work: South Working to retain and
attract human capital.- Digital Valtellina: A regional plan to revitalize
Italys inner areas through remote work.- The Smart Terrace Trail as
Strategic Regional Project.- Stakeholder Perspectives for Regenerating Inner
Territories.- Small Town Renaissance: A global need, not a local dream.
Giovanna Fossa is Full Professor of Urban Design and Planning, Department of Architecture, Built Environment and Construction Engineering, Politecnico di Milano. She teaches Regional Planning and Regenerative Urban Design at the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering. She has gathered a long international experience (teaching, research and projects) in the fields of urban and territorial regeneration, regional and landscape planning, tourism and production, place making and branding. A special focus is always on cross-disciplinary and cross-border themes. Her collaboration networks include MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning; Yale School of Architecture; SUPSI Department of Environment, Constructions and Design; Regional Plan Association New York; Fundacion Metropoli Madrid. She is member of the Collegio di Milano and ULI Italy Scientific Committees. She is author/co-author of several publications, among them Hybrid Factory Hybrid City (Actar, 2022), Shaping Spaces for ever-changing mobility (TeMA, 2020), The Design of Urban Manufacturing (Routledge, 2020), Planning Talks (Maggioli, 2018), ITATOUR (F. Angeli 2012).
Brent D. Ryan is Vice Provost and Professor of Urban Design and Public Policy in MITs Department of Urban Studies and Planning. His research focuses on the aesthetics and policies of contemporary urban design, particularly with respect to current and pressing issues like deindustrialization and climate change. Professor Ryan has published in numerous journals including the Journal of Urban Design, Urban Design International, Journal of Planning Education and Research, and the Journal of the American Planning Association, which awarded his article "Reading Through A Plan" its best article of 2011. Professor Ryan is co-editor in chief of the Journal of Planning History, published by Sage. He is currently conducting design and planning studies of shrinking cities, rural settlements, and regions in Italy, Japan, and India, and his new book project examines the intersection of tourism, mapping, and travel guides during the 19th and early-to-mid 20th centuries. Professor Ryan holds a B.S. in biology from Yale University, a M. Arch. from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. in urban design and planning from MIT.
Carmelo Ignaccolo is Assistant Professor of Urban Design, Technology & Climate at Rutgers Universitys E. J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy. Professor Ignaccolos work bridges urban design and city planning scholarship through spatial analytics, community-based research, and historical methods. His scholarly research focuses on spatial inequality, environmental vulnerabilities, heritage challenges, and multisensory urbanism. He has published articles in Cities, Magazine on Urbanism, and the Journal of Urban Technology. His digital mapping work has been featured in The New York Times and Bloomberg CityLab and exhibited at Architecture Biennials in Seoul (2019), Shenzhen (2020), and Venice (2023). Before joining Rutgers, Carmelo held research and teaching positions at MIT DUSP and Columbia University GSAPP. Beyond academia, he practiced as an Urban Designer at AECOM in New York City and as an Urban Planner for the United Nations Habitat Programme in Nairobi. He received his Ph.D. in Urban Planning, Design, and Technology from MIT DUSP, his Masters in Architecture and Urban Design from Columbia University GSAPP, and a combined Masters and Bachelors degree in Architecture-Engineering from the University of Catania, Italy.