Genoa Expo '92

L'Esposizione Internazionale Specializzata Genova '92 - Colombo '92 (in English International Exhibition Genoa '92 - Colombo '92) or more informally Expo 1992, held in Genoa, Italy from 15 May to 15 August 1992. The theme was "Christopher Columbus, The Ship and the Sea", and the Expo was timed to celebrate the 500 years since the Discovery of America by the Genoese sailor Christopher Columbus. Because of the theme, the expo was also known as Colombiadi. It was a specialized Exhibition with 54 countries represented. Total visitors were 694,800.[1] The exposition ran at the same time as the larger and longer duration Seville Expo '92, a Universal Exposition, held in the city from whose port (on the Guadalquivir) Columbus had sailed in 1492. The expo's logo was a "500" number with the Genoa's flag; the mascot was a cat dressed like Christopher Columbus called "Gatto Cristoforo"

1992 Genoa
Overview
BIE-classSpecialized exposition
NameChristopher Columbus, The Ship and the Sea
Area6 hectares
Visitors694,800
MascotGatto Cristoforo
Participant(s)
Countries54
Location
Country Italy
CityGenoa
VenuePorto Antico
Timeline
Opening15 May 1992
Closure15 August 1992
Specialized expositions
PreviousExpo 91 in Plovdiv
NextTaejŏn Expo '93 in Taejŏn
Universal
PreviousExpo '70 in Osaka
NextExpo 2000 in Hanover
Simultaneous
UniversalSeville Expo '92
Horticultural (AIPH)Floriade 1992

Exposition

The International Exposition of Genoa '92 was held at the Porto Antico and allowed the entire redesign of the area, designed by the architect Renzo Piano. The aquarium hosted the sea's pavilion and the ship "Italia" hosted the ship's pavilion. Other important places were "Piazza delle Feste", a covered square, the "Magazzini del Cotone" an old port structure which now host the conference centre, "Porta Siberia" an historical port's fortress and the "Palazzina Millo".

Participants

54 countries attended the event officially (three unofficially) and, initially, it was announced that the Expo reached about 1.7 million visitors, of 3,000,000 provided,[2] but the count was later revised in only about 800,000 visitors. In the fall of 1992 it was discovered that the actual visitors were less than what was announced at first, and that the Ente Colombo, who ran the event, had collected only 13 billion compared to 45 billion planned. Because of the false news circulated and the lack of success of the event, the Mayor Romano Merlo, who was also president of Colombo, resigned and was replaced by Deputy Mayor Claudio Burlando.

The guest of honor was the Government of the Bahamas, where Christopher Columbus first landed in the Americas on the island of Guanahani. Sculptures called "Obelisk" by Alessandro Matta and "Dolphin" by Bruno Elisei were displayed nn the Bahamian hall, in homage to the Columbus.[3]

Participating Countries
Asia
 China South Korea Japan Israel
Africa
 Cameroon Egypt Morocco Senegal
 Tunisia
Europe
 Bulgaria CIS Croatia France
 Germany Greece Hungary Czech Republic
 Denmark France Italy Malta
 Monaco Poland Portugal Romania
 Spain  Switzerland  Vatican City
Americas
 Argentina Bahamas Bolivia Brazil
 Chile Colombia Costa Rica Cuba
 Dominica El Salvador Ecuador Guatemala
 Haiti Honduras Mexico Nicaragua
 Panama Paraguay Peru Uruguay
 United States Venezuela
Organizations
European Union

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-08-16. Retrieved 2012-02-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Menti' sull' Expo: sindaco dimissionario, articolo de Il Corriere della Sera, del 22 ottobre 1992
  3. (cat. uff. "Cristoforo Colombo la Nave e il Mare" ed. Ente Colombo "92, - cat. del Pad. ed. San Salvador Development the Bahamas, Commissario Generale delle Bahamas dott. Roberto Savio). (Genova 1992, catalogo Espo "Cristoforo Colombo: la nave e il mare" - Catalogo Padiglione Bahamas " San Salvador development committee the Bahamas"


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