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17 Oct 14:40

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy

by Christopher Jobson

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

Man Spends 40 Years Building Giant Kinetic Carnival Rides to Advertise Family Restaurant in Italy kinetic Italy documentary carnival advertising
Courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià

On June 15, 1969 in Battaglia, Italy a man named Bruno bought a few jugs of wine, some sausages and a few other items and set up a tiny food stand underneath a tree to see if anyone would show up. By the end of the day he had sold almost everything and the family restaurant, Ai Pioppi, was born. The next month he had a chance encounter with a blacksmith who didn’t have time to make a few hooks for some chains. Bruno decided he would learn to weld himself and enjoyed it so much he began to dream up small rides he could build to entice new customers to Ai Pioppi. It turned out to be brilliantly successful.

Now forty years later, the forest around the restaurant is packed with swings, multi-story slides, seesaws, gyroscopes, tilt-a-whirls, and bizarre kinetic roller-coasters for adults and children. In this artfully filmed 10-minute documentary by a team over at Fabrica, we get the chance to meet Bruno, see many of his rides in action, and learn a bit about his philosophy on existence and death.

For this post I also included a few photos courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià who visited Ai Pioppi in 2011 with several friends. You can see many more shots here and here.

The next time I’m in Italy I think this is at the top of my list.