FACULTY-LED PROGRAMS · TURIN - DESIGN, SLOW FOOD & CONTEMPORARY ART
Faculty-led in Turin - the elegant Northern alternative.
Turin is our city hub for design, Slow Food, architecture, automotive heritage, and contemporary art. Our campus is a modern three-storey building on Via Saluzzo, 60, a few minutes from Parco del Valentino: 10 classrooms, a language lab, a library, an Aula Magna, and indoor relaxation areas. Turin sits between the Alps and the Langhe, with the architecture of Vienna, the food traditions of Piedmont, and two strong universities (Politecnico di Torino, IED Torino) - and almost none of the tourist-driven distortion of Florence or Milan.
Turin runs on a city-model like Milan - different from our Florence and Mantua campus model. Faculty teach at our campus on Via Saluzzo; the cohort is housed in vetted external accommodation (homestays, shared student flats, studios, partner B&Bs) within a 20-minute commute from the campus. There is no on-campus meal plan, but the city is the spiritual capital of Slow Food and offers some of the most affordable, high-quality dining in Italy. The visiting faculty member retains full academic authority - syllabus, instruction, assessment, grading - while our partner desk handles housing logistics, ground transport, cultural programming, design and gastronomy site visits, and approval-ready documentation.
Looking at other cities? See Faculty-led in Florence (campus model · primary hub) · Faculty-led in Mantua ("Deep Italy" campus model) · Faculty-led in Milan (business / fashion city-model) · Faculty-led overview (all four campuses).
How a faculty-led program works with us
Your faculty leads the academic vision. The visiting faculty member designs the academic content, teaches the discipline-specific course, sets the assessment criteria, and grades the students. We are not co-instructors and we do not interfere with the academic plan - the credits belong to your institution. We deliver everything around it. Classroom and study space, on-campus or affiliated housing, ground transport, field-study logistics, Italian language instruction at the appropriate level (where part of the design), student services on site, cultural programming, and integration with our resident operations team. Approval-ready documentation. See the Academic Approval Pack - the structured documentation set we issue to support your institution's curriculum approval, risk-management review, insurance review, and study-abroad office sign-off. Single partner desk - one contact. You work with one named partner-desk lead for the full lifecycle of the program - pre-departure planning, on-site delivery, and post-program reporting. No vendor stack to manage, no fragmented communication.
Three phases of program support
Our partner desk operates across the full lifecycle of a faculty-led program - from initial scoping to post-program reporting. The structure mirrors the standard expectations of U.S. study-abroad offices and accreditation reviewers.
Pre-departure. Academic Approval Pack tailored to your institution, syllabus integration with our facilities, faculty briefing, draft program calendar, risk-management documentation, health-and-safety brief, housing inventory and allocation plan, pre-departure orientation materials for students, visa documentation guidance, advanced cultural-immersion planning. On-site delivery. Arrival reception, airport transport coordination, check-in at on-campus or affiliated housing, on-site welcome and orientation, classroom and lab access, daily operations support, weekly cultural programming, faculty office space, 24-hour emergency contact, ongoing health-and-safety oversight, mid-program review. Re-entry & reporting. End-of-program student debrief, attendance and participation records issued in the format your registrar expects, faculty feedback session, post-program report to the home institution, transcript-friendly documentation where required, partnership-renewal conversation for future cohorts. Continuous accountability. Each program is reviewed against the original academic and operational plan agreed at scoping. Variance is documented and shared with the home institution - together with proposed mitigations. We treat post-program reporting as the seal of the partnership, not as paperwork.
Program types we have run or can run
2-4 week summer programs. Intensive faculty-taught programs around a single discipline - Italian civilisation, art history, architecture, design, food studies, contemporary politics, fashion, music. Cohort housing on or near campus; full cultural programming included. Semester abroad with Italian language component. A full 12-16 week semester where your faculty teaches the core discipline course and we deliver concurrent Italian language instruction at the appropriate CEFR level. Optional integration with our long-term study-visa documentation framework. Pre-semester language intensive + main program. Students arrive 2-4 weeks before the main faculty-led semester for an intensive Italian course, then the discipline-specific program begins. The most common pattern for "Italian + discipline" cohorts targeting B1/B2 proficiency by mid-semester. Custom short courses (1-2 weeks). Executive-education cohorts, MBA short courses, professional-development groups, alumni programs. Compressed, high-density academic content, custom-scheduled around home-institution calendars. Full academic year. For institutions wanting a continuous study-abroad presence in Italy: a year-long program with cohort rotation between fall and spring semesters, optional summer continuity. Hybrid & rotation models. Cohorts that move between two or more of our four cities during a single program - for example, Florence (heritage) + Milan (contemporary Italy) - or that combine on-site weeks with online pre-departure preparation.
What we coordinate on the ground
Beyond classroom delivery, the partner desk coordinates the full operational footprint of the program. The list below is what is included as standard; further services are available on request and scoped at program design.
Arrival & logistics. Airport transfer coordination · arrival reception · check-in at on-campus or affiliated housing · local SIM and connectivity guidance · public-transport orientation · welcome kit. Housing. Cohort housing in our on-campus residences (Florence, Mantua) or in vetted partner accommodations (Milan, Turin) · faculty housing options · meal-plan integration · housekeeping and maintenance coordination. Visa & immigration administration. Consulate-grade enrolment certificates · syllabus and program-hour documentation for visa applications · post-arrival residence-permit support · liaison with consulates and Questura when required. Risk management & safety. Comprehensive risk-management documentation · health-and-safety brief · emergency response protocol · 24-hour emergency contact · liaison with U.S. State Department travel advisories where required. Health insurance & healthcare. Coordination of medical-insurance documentation meeting Italian consulate and university requirements · local healthcare orientation · medico di base guidance for longer programs. Academic operations. Classroom and lab scheduling · IT and AV setup · library and study-room access · printing and reprographic support · attendance recording · grade-submission handover to home institution.
Optional academic enrichments
Beyond the faculty-taught core course, programs can be enriched with discipline-aligned additional learning experiences, designed by your faculty together with our partner desk.
Guest lectures & conferences. Local academics, industry professionals, cultural-institution curators delivering targeted lectures aligned with the faculty's syllabus. Joint sessions with Italian university partners where relevant. Field trips & site visits. Discipline-aligned visits - museums, archaeological sites, corporate sites, design studios, regional excursions (Siena, Pisa, Bologna, Rome, the Langhe wine region, Verona, Cremona). Logistics, transport, and entry-fee coordination handled by us. Internships & service learning. Credit-bearing or co-curricular placements with local Italian organisations - cultural institutions, NGOs, design studios, small enterprises, schools - scoped against the academic objectives of the program. Conversation partners & teaching placements. One-to-one or small-group conversation-partner pairings with Italian university students for language-component cohorts · teaching-assistant placements in local schools where relevant to the academic plan. Experiential & community engagement. Hands-on workshops, studio practice, laboratory work, volunteering with local cultural and social organisations · structured community-engagement activities scoped to the discipline. Cultural-immersion calendar. Weekly evening and weekend programming - cinema, opera (La Scala, Teatro Comunale), regional cuisine, walking tours, food-and-wine excursions, sport - designed for the cohort's interests and level of Italian.
Disciplines we have hosted - or can host
Our four campuses, together with our network of academic and cultural partners, support a wide range of disciplinary frames. Below: the disciplines we have worked with most often, mapped to the campus where the surrounding city offers the strongest field environment. Other disciplines welcome on request - we have run programs from environmental policy to opera studies.
Humanities & cultural studies. Italian civilisation · art history · architecture · Renaissance studies · museum studies · classical & medieval studies · religious studies · history of science · heritage conservation. Primary hub: Florence · also Mantua. Languages & linguistics. Italian language (A1 → C2) · sociolinguistics · translation & interpreting · pedagogy of L2 · comparative literature · Italian cinema studies. All four campuses; primary hubs: Florence and Milan. Business, management & finance. International business · management · entrepreneurship · finance · marketing · luxury & fashion management · sustainability strategy · Italian economic history. Primary hub: Milan. Design, fashion & communication. Fashion design · industrial & product design · graphic design · advertising · media studies · digital communication · visual culture. Primary hubs: Milan and Turin. Food, agriculture & territory. Italian food studies · Slow Food · wine & sommelier studies · food anthropology · sustainable agriculture · regional terroirs · culinary history. Primary hub: Turin · also Mantua. Social sciences & contemporary Italy. Political science · contemporary Italian politics · sociology · migration studies · European studies · public policy · gender studies · urban studies. Primary hubs: Milan and Turin. Arts, music & performance. Music history & opera studies · performance studies · theatre · creative writing · contemporary art (gallery scene, Castello di Rivoli, Fondazione Sandretto). All four campuses, scoped to discipline focus. Other / interdisciplinary. Engineering site visits · automotive history · environmental policy · health-systems comparison · gerontology · architecture of historic preservation · service learning & community engagement. Scoped per program.
Sample weekly schedule - a day in the life in Turin
Illustrative schedule for a 14-week faculty-led semester in Turin with an Italian language component, delivered at our campus on Via Saluzzo. The visiting faculty member teaches the discipline-specific course at the campus; our team delivers the Italian language module and the Turin-specific cultural, design and gastronomy programming around it.
Monday - Friday morning. 09:30 - 11:00 · Faculty-taught course (visiting faculty, classroom 1 - campus on Via Saluzzo)
11:00 - 11:15 · Coffee break at a partner caffè in the San Salvario district
11:15 - 12:45 · Italian language class (CEFR-level group, classroom 2) Afternoons (varies by day). Mon & Wed: independent study in the campus library and Aula Magna · faculty office hours · study sessions in indoor relaxation areas
Tue: guest lecture or curatorial visit - Castello di Rivoli, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, GAM, Museo Egizio, Mole Antonelliana / Museo Nazionale del Cinema, Pinacoteca Agnelli (every 2 weeks)
Thu: language lab session · conversation-partner pairings with Politecnico / Università di Torino students
Fri: design or gastronomy field trip - historic Slow Food cafés, automotive heritage (Fiat Lingotto, Museo dell'Automobile), Eataly headquarters, design studios in San Salvario & Vanchiglia (scheduled per syllabus) Evenings (optional). Weekly: aperitivo in San Salvario or Vanchiglia (Turin's signature evening ritual) with the cohort in Italian
Bi-weekly: cultural-programming event - Teatro Regio (opera), Cinema Massimo (lingua italiana), contemporary art opening, Salone del Libro side events in season
Monthly: Piedmontese regional dinner with cohort and faculty (agnolotti, vitello tonnato, bagna cauda, Barolo) Weekends. Saturday: optional day-trip - Langhe wine region (Alba, Barolo, Barbaresco), the Italian Alps (Sestriere, Bardonecchia), Cuneo, Asti, Sacra di San Michele, Liguria coast (Genoa & Cinque Terre with longer day)
Sunday: free for independent travel and rest. Mid-program break trip (3 nights to Milan, the French Alps, or the Italian Riviera) once per semester.
This is an illustrative Turin schedule. The final calendar is co-designed with the visiting faculty during scoping to align with the home institution's credit-hour requirements and the discipline-specific learning outcomes.
Pricing model
Faculty-led programs are quoted on a per-cohort basis, scoped against the institutional requirements agreed during partnership development. We do not publish flat per-student price lists because cohort size, length, discipline, language component, housing model, field-trip scope, and faculty-residence needs all affect the package. The structure below describes what is included and how the model works; concrete pricing is shared in a detailed worksheet during scoping.
Standard inclusions (all programs). Cohort housing in our on-campus residences or vetted partner accommodations · meal plan where applicable · classroom and lab space · Italian language instruction (where part of design) · faculty workspace and office support · airport transfer coordination · welcome kit · 24-hour emergency contact · ongoing student-services support · Academic Approval Pack and risk-management documentation · post-program report. Optional add-ons (scoped per program). Guest lectures from local academics or curators · day-trips beyond the standard 2-per-semester baseline · multi-day break trips (Rome, Amalfi, the Alps) · internship placements · service-learning partnerships · conversation-partner pairings with Italian university students · faculty fam-trip visit in advance · custom recruitment-support materials. Models we operate. All-inclusive per cohort - single invoice covers everything in the standard inclusions plus agreed add-ons. Per-student rate - flat fee per enrolled student, useful when cohort sizes are uncertain. Hybrid academic + à la carte - discounted academic-only core with optional services billed separately. Choice negotiated at MOU signing. Payment terms. Payment terms align with U.S. institutional fiscal-year schedules · typical structure: 25% deposit at MOU signing, 50% at 60 days before arrival, 25% at program close · invoices issued in EUR with USD reference rate · wire transfer or institutional payment methods accepted · final reconciliation 30 days post-program.
Past Turin programs & representative cohorts
Faculty-led programs we have delivered in Turin with U.S. partner institutions span the design, food and contemporary-Italy disciplines below. Specific institutional names and references are shared during partnership development on a confidential basis - contact the partner desk for a Turin reference list aligned with your discipline.
Slow Food & sustainability summer. 4-week summer programme for a West Coast university, 24 students. Faculty-taught food studies + Slow Food field visits in the Langhe + wine-cellar studies (Barolo, Barbaresco) + service learning with a local food cooperative + visits to Eataly headquarters and the Salone del Gusto pavilions. Industrial design & automotive heritage. 3-week summer programme for a U.S. school of industrial design, 16 students. Faculty-taught Italian industrial design (Olivetti, Pininfarina, Bertone, Italdesign) + visits to Fiat Lingotto, Museo dell'Automobile, Pinacoteca Agnelli + design studios in San Salvario and Vanchiglia. Contemporary art & curatorial studies. 5-week summer programme for a U.S. graduate program in curatorial studies, 14 students. Faculty-taught contemporary Italian art + visits to Castello di Rivoli, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, GAM, OGR + studio visits with Turin-based contemporary artists. Architecture & urban regeneration semester. 14-week semester for a U.S. school of architecture, 18 students. Faculty-taught urban regeneration through Turin's post-industrial transformation + visits to Lingotto, OGR, Combo, Murazzi + joint sessions with Politecnico di Torino faculty (where partnership allows). Slow Food summer-intensive certificate. 6-week summer-intensive certificate programme for a U.S. culinary school cohort, 20 students. Faculty-taught and locally-led food anthropology + practical workshops at Università di Scienze Gastronomiche (Pollenzo) + supplier visits across the Langhe and Roero. Italian language total-immersion summer. 3-week Italian language intensive in Turin for a cohort of 18 students before their main Florence or Milan semester. Turin chosen because of its smaller English-speaking expat scene than Milan - students arrive at their main programme at a measurably stronger oral level.
Programs above are representative and anonymised. References, transcripts of partnership scope, and direct contacts at past partner institutions are available under standard confidentiality terms - request via the partner desk.
What our partners say
Selected feedback from visiting faculty and study-abroad office directors at past partner institutions. Full reference list and direct contacts available on request.
"Turin gave us access to a Slow Food field network and design studios I genuinely could not have organised at scale on my own. The partner desk's local relationships translated into hands-on weeks for my cohort, not tourist visits - the difference matters when you are running a graduate-credit programme."
- Visiting faculty director, Slow Food & sustainability summer programme, Turin
"What surprised us was the operational depth. We had run faculty-led programs in Italy before with other providers, and what made Accademia di Italiano different was the single-point-of-contact model. One named partner-desk lead from scoping to post-program report - no fragmented vendor stack."
- Director of Study Abroad, partner institution, multi-year semester relationship
"Turin worked for us because it gave my industrial-design students a real Italian city without Milan's price tag. Studios were accessible, faculty were available, and the cohort built actual relationships with local Italian peers - not the curated study-abroad bubble we had elsewhere."
- Visiting faculty, Industrial Design & Automotive Heritage summer programme, Turin
"The Academic Approval Pack made the curriculum-committee review at our institution unusually smooth. Documentation was already framed in the language our reviewers needed - risk management, learning outcomes, credit alignment. We approved the partnership in a single committee cycle."
- Associate Provost, partner liberal-arts college, semester program
How to start a partnership - timeline
The typical path from a first conversation to an arriving cohort. Concrete dates are negotiated to align with your institution's curriculum-approval and admissions cycles; the steps below are the standard sequence.
1 · Initial enquiry. You contact the partner desk with a brief outline: institution, faculty leading the program, target dates, cohort size, discipline, language component required, key constraints. We respond within two working days with a first-call invitation. 2 · Intake call. A 45-60 minute call with the partner desk and (where relevant) the academic coordinator from our side. Goal: understand academic vision, institutional context, and operational requirements. We document the call in a structured intake brief shared back to you within five working days. 3 · Site visit / faculty fam trip. The visiting faculty member and (optionally) a study-abroad office representative come to Italy for a 2-4 day campus visit. We host classroom walk-throughs, sample lessons, meetings with our academic team, and a tour of housing options and field-trip destinations. 4 · Scoping document. A detailed scoping document is co-developed: program structure, calendar, syllabus integration, language component design, housing plan, field-trip schedule, risk-management plan, Academic Approval Pack outline, and a draft pricing worksheet. Iterated until both sides are aligned. 5 · MOU signing. Memorandum of Understanding (or equivalent partnership agreement) drafted and signed. Covers academic scope, operational responsibilities, pricing and payment terms, risk allocation, intellectual property, data protection, and exit clauses. Reviewed by both institutions' legal teams. 6 · Operational setup & recruitment. Joint launch of student recruitment at the home campus (information sessions, marketing collateral, application platform). On our side: Academic Approval Pack delivered, housing reservations confirmed, Italian language placement test scheduled, faculty pre-departure pack issued, risk-management protocols finalised. 7 · Arrival & program delivery. Cohort arrives. Three phases of support kick in as described above (pre-departure, on-site, re-entry). Single named partner-desk contact throughout. 8 · Post-program review & renewal. End-of-program debrief, post-program report to the home institution, satisfaction survey results, accounting reconciliation. Partnership-renewal conversation typically within 30-60 days of program close, in time for the next academic cycle.
The Turin campus - facilities at a glance
Our Turin campus is a modern three-storey building at Via Saluzzo, 60 - 10125 Torino, in the San Salvario district, a short walk from Parco del Valentino. Inside: 10 classrooms, a language lab, a library, an Aula Magna, indoor relaxation areas, IT infrastructure, free Wi-Fi. The campus serves as the academic anchor; the surrounding city - Slow Food cafés, design studios, contemporary art venues - is the field classroom.
Turin regional context - field-trip and excursion network
Turin sits between the Italian Alps and the Langhe wine region, with Liguria's coast within a couple of hours by train. The city is the spiritual capital of Slow Food, the historic centre of Italian industrial design (Olivetti, Fiat, Pininfarina), and home to two of the most important contemporary-art institutions in Italy. Programs can integrate excursions to any of the destinations below as standard inclusions or scoped add-ons.
In Turin (day visits). Mole Antonelliana / Museo Nazionale del Cinema · Museo Egizio · Castello di Rivoli · Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo · GAM · Pinacoteca Agnelli · Lingotto · OGR (Officine Grandi Riparazioni) · Combo · Museo dell'Automobile · historic Slow Food cafés (Caffè Al Bicerin, Caffè Mulassano, Baratti & Milano) · Parco del Valentino · Borgo Medievale. Piedmont, Liguria & the Alps (day-trip range). Langhe wine region (Alba, Barolo, Barbaresco) · Cuneo · Asti · Saluzzo · Sacra di San Michele · the Italian Alps (Sestriere, Bardonecchia, Cervinia) · Università di Scienze Gastronomiche in Pollenzo · Liguria coast (Genoa, Cinque Terre with longer day) · French Alps (Chamonix, 2 hrs). Italy beyond Piedmont (weekend / break-trip range). Milan, Florence, Bologna, Venice - accessible within 1.5-3 hours by high-speed rail from Torino Porta Nuova. Standard mid-program break trip: Milan or the Italian Riviera (Portofino, Genoa). Want a different Italian city focus?. For the Florentine campus model (primary hub), see Faculty-led in Florence. For Deep-Italy semesters, see Faculty-led in Mantua. For business and fashion in Milan, see Faculty-led in Milan. Overview: all four campuses.
Talk to the partner desk about a Turin program
Tell us your institution, the faculty member leading the program, target dates, cohort size, the academic frame (course taught? credit hours? language component? internship integration?), and any constraints from your study-abroad office or curriculum committee. We respond with a concrete proposal - usually within two working days - including a draft Academic Approval Pack tailored to your institution's review process.
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