Mole Antonelliana Turin 2026: The 167m Neoclassical Tower That Was Supposed to Be a Synagogue, Became a Cinema Museum, and Is the Most Architecturally Improbable Building in Italy
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Mole Antonelliana (Via Montebello 20, Turin — the 167.5m neoclassical tower that dominates the Turin skyline from every approach direction, visible from the ring of Alpine peaks that surrounds the city on three sides, and whose specific spire — the needle-thin tapering pinnacle that rises above the main dome structure in the specific Antonelli style that no other architect in Italian history attempted at this scale) is the most architecturally improbable building in Italy: the tower was designed by Alessandro Antonelli (1798-1888 — the Piedmontese architect whose specific obsession with vertical height pushed masonry construction to its structural limits, producing in the Mole Antonelliana the highest masonry structure ever built in Italy and one of the highest in the world at the time of its completion in 1889) not as a civic monument but as a synagogue — the Jewish community of Turin commissioned the building from Antonelli in 1863, intending it as their new temple. The costs and the scale exceeded the community's capacity; the building was sold to the Municipality of Turin in 1877, when only the lower sections were complete; and Antonelli continued the construction (financed by the city) to heights and proportions that the original synagogue commission had never envisioned.
Mole Antonelliana: Building, Museum, and Lift
The Museo Nazionale del Cinema
The Museo Nazionale del Cinema (the cinema museum occupying the complete interior of the Mole Antonelliana — open Tuesday-Friday and Sunday 9:00-20:00, Saturday 9:00-23:00 (late opening), Monday closed; admission approximately €15 for the museum + panoramic lift combination): the museum (organized in the specific vertical format that the Mole Antonelliana's internal cylinder space creates — the visitor begins at the ground floor and ascends through the exhibition levels that circle the central atrium, reaching the panoramic terrace at 85m via the panoramic lift) is the most inventive cinema museum in Europe, using the Mole's internal architecture as the exhibition structure: the central atrium (the space visible from floor level to the dome above, approximately 60m of vertical height visible from the centre of the ground floor) has the specific cinema lair quality of a space designed for projection and atmosphere. The exhibition (the history of cinema from the pre-cinema visual technologies through the current digital production, with the specific emphasis on the Italian cinema heritage and the specific objects — the original Lumière projector, the Fellini archive material, the Chaplin collection) is organized both chronologically and thematically through the ascending levels.
The Panoramic Lift and Turin View
The Mole Antonelliana panoramic lift (the exterior glass capsule lift that ascends the exterior of the dome and the pinnacle to the 85m observation terrace — the specific enclosed glass capsule that gives the lift its specific vertiginous character, visible from the street as a small glass box ascending the face of the Mole): the 85m observation terrace (the specific Turin view — the Po plain to the east and south, the Alps to the north and west with Monte Rosa, the Gran Paradiso, and the Mont Blanc visible on clear days as the Alpine arc that frames the city). The lift is included in the museum ticket and operates continuously during opening hours.
Q&A: Mole Antonelliana
Is the Mole Antonelliana visit worth it without specific interest in cinema?
Yes — for two specific reasons: the panoramic Turin view (the Alpine arc visible from 85m is one of the most dramatic urban mountain panoramas in Europe) and the specific Antonelli architecture (the internal Mole space — the view upward from the ground floor through the 60m internal cylinder to the dome above, and the experience of the panoramic lift on the exterior of the dome) is the most specifically unusual architectural experience available in northern Italy. The cinema museum content (excellent if you are interested in cinema; reasonably interesting even if you are not) is the third reason rather than the first.
Internal Links
- Torino 2 Giorni: Mole, Egizio e Aperitivo
- Cinema Italiano: Cinecittà e il Museo del Cinema
- Mole Antonelliana: Orari e Biglietti 2026
- Fotografare la Mole Antonelliana: Angoli e Luce
- Torino in Inverno: La Mole e le Alpi Innevate
- Architettura Ottocentesca Italia: L'Antonelli
- Musei Torino: Egizio, Mole e Palazzo Reale