The new season of the Park and Castle of Masino-Bene Fai (Caravino, TO) offers every Saturday and Sunday, from Feb. 15 to Nov. 23, a special guided tour through the halls of the castle tailored for school-age children and girls (elementary and middle school), in which storytelling is alternated with trivia and moments of interaction.
One can take part in the classic formula offered on Saturday at 3:15 pm or participate in the playful formula on Sunday, at 3:15 pm and 4:30 pm.
Facing out across the wide plain of the Canavese area, Masino Castle stands on a hill opposite the long morainal barrier of the Serra di Ivrea.
The building was erected in the 11th century at the behest of the Valperga family. Its sumptuous interiors, embellished by frescoes and rich furnishings, and its numerous monumental rooms, are testaments to the cultured and refined lifestyle of the proprietors.
From the late 16th century onwards, the Castle was rebuilt in its present form on the ruins of the old fortress, taking on the appearance of a showpiece mansion, nestling in extensive and exquisite grounds, which to this day betray the transformations made in the 18th and 19th centuries.
A majestic boulevard, flanked by limes, runs westwards from the flat ground, coming to an end in the grassy expanse, where you can visit the Maze, a typically organic element that evokes the so-called ''Italian-style'' gardens of the late 18th century.
The edge of the clearing is the starting point for the unique ''Strada dei ventidue giri'', created between 1840 and 1847, designed to facilitate the ascent by stagecoaches. In the ''English-style'' eastern section there are generously proportioned lawns at different heights. The early 19th century saw the construction of a small neo-Gothic temple around which, in spring, 7,000 spiraea come into bloom, embellishing the garden yet further, just as the architect Paolo Pejrone intended. Located on the eastern terrace, between the round tower and the tower of the winds, at the foot of the bastions, the cypress garden retains traces of the geometric and architectural arrangement so typical of what would go on to be referred to as the archetypal ''Italian'' garden.
One can take part in the classic formula offered on Saturday at 3:15 pm or participate in the playful formula on Sunday, at 3:15 pm and 4:30 pm.
Facing out across the wide plain of the Canavese area, Masino Castle stands on a hill opposite the long morainal barrier of the Serra di Ivrea.
The building was erected in the 11th century at the behest of the Valperga family. Its sumptuous interiors, embellished by frescoes and rich furnishings, and its numerous monumental rooms, are testaments to the cultured and refined lifestyle of the proprietors.
From the late 16th century onwards, the Castle was rebuilt in its present form on the ruins of the old fortress, taking on the appearance of a showpiece mansion, nestling in extensive and exquisite grounds, which to this day betray the transformations made in the 18th and 19th centuries.
A majestic boulevard, flanked by limes, runs westwards from the flat ground, coming to an end in the grassy expanse, where you can visit the Maze, a typically organic element that evokes the so-called ''Italian-style'' gardens of the late 18th century.
The edge of the clearing is the starting point for the unique ''Strada dei ventidue giri'', created between 1840 and 1847, designed to facilitate the ascent by stagecoaches. In the ''English-style'' eastern section there are generously proportioned lawns at different heights. The early 19th century saw the construction of a small neo-Gothic temple around which, in spring, 7,000 spiraea come into bloom, embellishing the garden yet further, just as the architect Paolo Pejrone intended. Located on the eastern terrace, between the round tower and the tower of the winds, at the foot of the bastions, the cypress garden retains traces of the geometric and architectural arrangement so typical of what would go on to be referred to as the archetypal ''Italian'' garden.