All the way back in January, I noted a plan to install a giant mirror so that sun would shine into the village square of the tiny village of Viganella, located deep in a valley in the Italian Alps. It seems that the village gets no direct sunlight for three months out of the year. Well, it seems the plan is actually coming to fruition.
A VILLAGE in the foothills of the Italian Alps that sees no sun for nearly three months a year is to brighten its winters by using a giant mirror to reflect sunshine onto its main square.
This week, the 197 mostly elderly inhabitants of Viganella, which is buried in the narrow Antrona valley, north of Turin, will gather for the arrival of a tailor-made sheet of steel 26ft wide and 16ft high. It will be flown by helicopter to a designated spot on the mountainside.
The mayor, Pierfranco Midali, who is spearheading the project, is confident that the hamlet will no longer have to suffer from a complete absence of direct sunlight for 83 days a year, from November 11 to February 2.
Midali, a train driver, first set the ball rolling with a throwaway comment seven years ago after he commissioned a sundial for the bare facade of the parish church.
“I told Giacomo Bonzani, the architect who made the sundial, not to bother with November 11 to February 2, to leave it unfinished so people would understand there is no light then,” Midali recalled.
“Then I told him that if he could bring me a project to bring the sun to Viganella, I would back it to the hilt,” he said.
The plan was at first greeted with disbelief by many locals and the local council, who argued that it would never work. “I was a bit sceptical at first,” admitted Franco, owner of the Cafe Bar delle Alpi. “But now I’m all for it. It’s freezing here and we have to keep the light on all the time.”
As I said when I first reported this, you could just move. But still, this is the first thing I thought of when I saw the story.




How about the prospect of putting a solar array into geosynchronous orbit over Viganella. It could both reflect sunlight and collect electricity from outside the atmosphere to run the alignment equipment. Heck, some bright engineer might invent a way to transmit excess electrical power down to the village. Now, that would be a 21st Century solution to dark winter days.
Another neat game to
wastewhile away my time.