Chartres, France
Illiers-Combray Station
This French train station is located in a town renamed after the famed writer Marcel Proust's fictional name for the village.
Milan, Italy | C.1870
Porta Genova opened in 1870 as Porta Ticinese, named for the medieval gate that once marked the city’s southern edge.Porta Genova opened in 1870 as Porta Ticinese, named for the medieval gate that once marked the city’s southern edge. It later took the name of a different gate entirely: the Spanish-era Porta Genova, which had pointed travelers toward the Ligurian coast for centuries before the walls came down. The station inherited the geography, if not the stonework.
For 155 years, it served as Milan’s connection to Genoa and the sea. It also, less glamorously, severed its own neighborhood in two. The railway tracks cut straight through the Navigli district, and residents on either side made do until World War I, when an iron pedestrian bridge was installed to reunite them. Locals called it la scaletta, the little staircase, and proceeded to love it more than any other piece of infrastructure in the area.
The station sat at an unusually layered intersection: above it, a working railway; nearby, the navigli canals that had made Milan an unlikely inland port since the twelfth century. Artists and designers arrived later, drawn by the affordable industrial spaces that railyards tend to leave behind. In December 2025, regional train service ended for the last time. The platforms went quiet. La scaletta remained.
45.453216, 9.1701011
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