BRESCIA.- Stefano Boeri Architetti unveils the Gate of Hope at the Nerio Fischione Penitentiary in Brescia, as part of Porte della Speranza (Gates of Hope), an international project that brings art, education, and opportunities for renewal to prison communities in Italy and abroad.
Porte della Speranza is an ongoing artistic, educational, and social programme that will unfold through 2026, involving ten prisons in Italy and Portugal. The project, promoted by the Gravissimum Educationis Foundation of the Holy Sees Dicastery for Culture and Education, the initiative is developed with the Italian Ministry of Justice Department of Penitentiary Administration, the Jubilee Committee for Culture and Education, Rampello & Partners, and with the support of Fondazione Cariplo, invites leading figures from contemporary culture to create a series of artistic gates in close relation with specific penitentiary institutions and their surrounding cities.
Installed at or near prison entrances, these works become symbols of passage and regeneration, addressed both to people in detention and to the wider public. Following the first Gate of Hope by architect Michele De Lucchi at San Vittore prison in Milan, the programme continues with interventions in Brescia and, subsequently, with projects involving prisons in Lecce, Rome, Venice, Palermo, Naples, Reggio Calabria, and two institutions in Portugal. Each project grows out of listening to inmates and prison communities, in collaboration with prison administrations.
Stefano Boeri Architetti project: a threshold between prison and city
The project by Stefano Boeri Architetti has been realised in the city of Brescia, at the Nerio Fischione Penitentiary, one of Italys most overcrowded prisons, located close to the historic centre. The Gate of Hope is conceived not as a barrier but as a civic threshold, designed to redefine the relationship between the institution and the urban community. Developed through dialogue with inmates and staff, the project addresses employment as a key driver of dignity, opportunity, and social reintegration
Inside the prison panopticon, the gate becomes a permanent interface dedicated to work, education, and vocational training. One wooden door leaf is transformed into a large digital display, continuously updating job offers, training programs, internships, and collaborations proposed by local companies and social cooperatives operating both inside and outside the penitentiary system.
A twin gate is installed in Piazzale Arnaldo, one of Brescias most vibrant public squares, creating a visible link between the prison and the city. Facing the urban space, this door shares employment opportunities and information about the prison system, from detention conditions and overcrowding to the daily, often invisible work of prison officers, healthcare professionals, volunteers, businesses, and inmates involved in cultural and artistic initiatives.
Although physically separate, the two gates each made of two wooden leaves measuring 3 meters by 1.5 meters function as a single architectural and civic device, activating a two-way flow between city and prison. Within the framework of penitentiary regulations, they introduce a concrete and symbolic infrastructure of hope, turning architecture into an instrument of awareness, responsibility, and social inclusion.
Architect Stefano Boeri commented: «I believe I am not mistaken in saying that in prison the word Hope is called Work. A serious prospect of (re)integration into the labour market and professional training is, for an inmate, among the most compelling reasons to imagine life beyond prisontruly the only ones capable of offering the hope of returning to a social life that is not just an interval between two periods of detention, but a real perspective of living, studying, training, and professional activity. The Gate of Hope in Brescia will host a digital noticeboard at the heart of the prison, representing, alongside information about job opportunities, the pulse of the citys social generosity. Yet the same door will also open onto Piazzale Arnaldo, in the vibrant heart of the city, from where the opportunities for reintegration into social life emerge. There are two doors, but the Gate of Hope is one».