Piazza De Ferrari

Situated in the heart of the city between the historical and the modern center, Piazza De Ferrari is renowned for its fountain, which was restored in recent years along with a major restyling of the square.

View of the east side of Piazza De Ferrari, towards Via XX Settembre and Via Dante

Piazza De Ferrari is the main square of Genoa.

Today next to Piazza De Ferrari are numerous office buildings, headquarters of banks, insurances and other private companies, making of this district the financial and business centre of Genoa, so that the Genoese popularly refer to it as the "City" of Genoa.

At the end of the 19th century Genoa was the main financial centre of Italy along with Milan, and Piazza De Ferrari was the place where many institutions were established, like the stock exchange, the Credito Italiano,[1] the branch offices of the Bank of Italy, founded in 1893.

Historical palaces

An old postcard of Piazza De Ferrari

Next to the square are several historical palaces and buildings.

Public transport

An underground station of the Genoa Metro opened at Piazza De Ferrari on 4 February 2005.[2] The square is also served by the Genoa trolleybus system – by route 30 since 1997 and by route 20 since 2008.

gollark: The machine code for them is excessively complex too, now, but I suppose you mostly write Haskell and whatnot which is then compiled to that.
gollark: They have ridiculously complex manufacturing processes because the transistors are on the scale of a few hundred atoms, it's crazy.
gollark: Also, with your processor comment, you are kind of underselling the complexity involved. It's not separate transistors, they're all just made on large bits of silicon together and wired up. Billions of them per processor.
gollark: In the case of games, which are basically just *information*, though, you can both use it because it can be copied (assuming no DRM meddling).
gollark: Quantum electrodynamics is still an important field of study.

References

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