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Immigrants by country of origin as of 2023. Italy is home to a large population of migrants from Eastern Europe and North Africa. Senegalese workers at the Potato festival in Vimercate in 2015 data analysis of foreign people who live in Italy since 2022 Foreign citizens in Italy - 2022
Milan is also home to Italy's oldest American football team: Rhinos Milano, who have won five Italian Super Bowls. The team plays at the Velodromo Vigorelli , with a capacity of 8,000. Another American football team that use the same venue is the Seamen Milano , who joined the professional European League of Football in 2023.
The Prefecture, Milan (Italian: Palazzo della Prefettura di Milano, transl. Palace of the Prefecture of Milan), also known as Palazzo Diotti, is a historic neoclassical building which has been the location of the office of the Prefect of Milan since 1859. The building is situated at 31, Corso Monforte in the city. [1]
View a machine-translated version of the Italian article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
The Zone 6 of Milan, since 2016 officially Municipality 6 of Milan, (in Italian: Zona 6 di Milano, Municipio 6 di Milano) is one of the 9 administrative divisions of Milan, Italy. [ 1 ] It was officially created as an administrative subdivision during the 1980s.
Since early 1960s in Milan operated many spontaneous citizens' committees in different areas of the city. In 1968 the City Council divided for the first time the territory of the comune into 20 administrative areas, called zone (singular: zona) for administrative purposes and to increase decentralization.
The Milano Centrale railway station, the most important railway station in Milan and one of the most important railway nodes in Italy, is located in the zone. As a consequence of the development of the railway system, in the early 20th century the Milanese north-east quickly changed from a rural area to a mostly industrial city outskirt ...
Gratosoglio (Italian: [ɡratoˈsɔʎʎo]; Milanese: Grattasoeuj [ɡrataˈsøj]) [1] is a district of the city of Milan, Italy, part of the Zone 5 administrative division. It is located at southernmost end of the city, bordering on the comune of Rozzano, and it is traversed by the Lambro river.