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Metropoliz

Coordinates: 41°53′40″N 12°35′44″E / 41.89431°N 12.59550°E / 41.89431; 12.59550
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Metropoliz
Refer to caption
Entrance
Karte
General information
StatusSquatted
TypeFactory
AddressVia Prenestina 913
Town or cityRome
CountryItaly
Coordinates41°53′40″N 12°35′44″E / 41.89431°N 12.59550°E / 41.89431; 12.59550
Opened2009 (squatted)

Metropoliz is a former salami factory on the eastern periphery of Rome, squatted in 2009. It is the first large squat in Rome where Romani people live alongside other ethnic groups. In 2012, a museum opened on the site which has become a recognised contemporary art gallery.

Occupation

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The derelict salami factory owned by Salini Impregilo was squatted in 2009 by one hundred people from Blocchi Precari Metropolitani (BPM), a group focused on housing activism, and Popica, an association promoting the rights of Romani people.[1] The Romani squatters had already been living together in a squat called Casilino 700 and joined Metropoliz following its eviction. Metropoliz became the first large squat in Rome where Romani lived together with other ethnic groups, mainly Italian, Moroccan and Peruvian. The Romani lived in a space evicted by the police in 2012, whereupon most of the families moved into the main building.[2]

Fabrizio Boni and Giorgio de Finis made a film called Space Metropoliz with some of the residents and afterwards in 2012, de Finis proposed to set up an art gallery.[1] This is called Museo dell'altro e dell'altrove metropolitano (Museum of the Other and the Elsewhere) or MAAM. It opens only on Saturdays and has become a successful, free to enter contemporary art gallery.[3] The MAAM supports the squat politically by bringing engagement from people who would otherwise not enter it.[1]

As of 2017, around two hundred squatters of various nationalities live at the complex.[3] After negotiations, the city council has announced that if the squat is evicted the residents will be rehoused.[2] For the Romani this was the first time they had been offered social housing, since the usual state policy towards Romani informal settlements would be relocation into official camps.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Aureli, Andrea; Mudu, Pierpaolo (2017). "Squatting: Reappropriating democracy from the state" (PDF). Interface. 9 (1): 497–521.
  2. ^ a b Maestri, Gaja (11 January 2019). Temporary camps, enduring segregation: The contentious politics of Roma and migrant housing. Cham, Switzerland. pp. 226–229. ISBN 9783030037369.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ a b Pisker, Lidija (11 October 2017). "From salami to art: How migrants helped turn Rome factory into a gallery". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  4. ^ Maestri, Gaja (2017). "The Stigmatisation of the Roma in Italy and France: Extensive Territorial Stigma and Ways of Coping With It". In Kirkness, Paul; Tijé-Dra, Andreas (eds.). Negative neighbourhood reputation and place attachment : the production and contestation of territorial stigma. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 55. ISBN 9781317089537.