Recently on Cyclingnews.com
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Bayern Rundfahrt Photo ©: Schaaf
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EICMA show
Milan, Italy, September 16-19, 2005
The family that rides together
Photo ©: Tim Maloney
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Balestra
Photo ©: Tim Maloney
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Ernesto Colnago
Photo ©: Tim Maloney
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Lever house meets bucky balls
Photo ©: Tim Maloney
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Le Belle E Le Brutte: 63rd Milano Bike Show
By Tim Maloney, European Editor
The 63rd International Cycle Exhibition, also known as the Milano Bike
Show didn't start off in Milano this year, but in a huge new trade show
and exhibition center just Northwest of the Lombard capital in the grimy
industrial burg of Rho. The new fairgrounds on reclaimed industrial ground
were officially inaugurated by Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi amid
great fanfare. The cavernous new Fiera Milano, designed by renowned Italian
architect Massimiliano Fuksass launches its first official trade exposition
with EICMA but the place seems (and is) unfinished, with poor signage
and a general unpreparedness for the onslaught of cycling fans, consumers,
lookie-loos and wannabes jamming the aisles.
Spread over 21,032 square meters and three pavilions of floor space,
unlike most trade shows, EICMA is a show that celebrates the bicycle in
a country where cycling is not only a beloved sport but a daily transportation
activity for many. In fact, the bicycle may be the only way to save many
of Italian cities from the choking traffic congestion that has paralysed
many city centers on the Italian peninsula over the last few decades.
That's why plenty of Italian politicians were lurking near the TV cameras
as EICMA began on Friday, such as Minister for the Environment, Altero
Matteoli; the Governor of Regione Lombardia, Roberto Formaigoni and Milan's
Mayor Albertini. Unlike the old Milano bike show back in the good old
days that ran every November in the old Fiera Milano in the middle of
town (this writer has been attending the Milano show for almost twenty
years), where for Italian cycling aficionados it was like Christmas and
Happy Birthday with all the new goodies, this year's EICMA had little
new that hadn't already been seen at the Eurobike show at the beginning
of the month. In fact, many Italian industry insiders confided to Cyclingnews
that they were convinced that EICMA would become a "national" show for
Italy more than the important international appointment it has always
been.
Bucking that trend were two of Italy's most important innovators, Ernesto
Colnago and Andrea Pesenti. Colnago unveiled two new versions of his Colnago
for Ferrari range, the CF4 and CF5, while Pesenti was back collaborating
with the San Patrignano Community at San Vito Pergine, a residential drug
treatment center in the mountains above Trento, with activities such as
berry cultivation and high-end bicycle workshop where Pesenti has helped
recovering addicts for over a decade. The San Patrignano Community was
founded in 1978 by Vincenzo Muccioli and operates cutting-edge educational
training programs like San Vito Pergine where recovering addicts learn
and utilise valuable skills in creating world-class items. Pesenti's unique
Balestra was created for and auctioned at a black-tie charity gala for
the San Patrignano Foundation at New York's Guggenheim Museum in June.
So despite the invasion of cheap Asian bicycles and the steady reduction
of Italian market share in their cherished high-end market share by cycle
colossi like Trek and Giant, the 63rd edition of EICMA can be proud of
at least one thing. Italian Bicycles are still le piu belle!
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Show coverage
| Date | Details | Coverage | Part 1 | September 19 | Colnago, FSA, Continental, Limar, Oval Concepts, Paolo Savoldelli, Fiorvanti | Coverage | Part 2 | September 21 | Shimano, Lightweight, LAS, Fizik | Coverage | Part 3 | September 22 | Vittoria, Sportful, DT Swiss, Assos, Carrera & more | Coverage | Part 4 | September 23 | Bianchi, De Rosa, Deda, Momo, Kuota | Coverage | Part 5 | September 25 | Kuota, DMT, Campagnolo, Pezzo, Colnago, Pinarello, Bergamo, Wilier, M.O.st, Opera, Pegoretti, Pantani | Coverage | Part 6 | September 26 | Ritchey, Pesenti, De Marchi, Corratec | Coverage |
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