Disneyland for foodies: Italy to open gastronomic theme park

Fishmongers present Mediterranean fresh sea catch at a stand during a press tour at FICO Eataly World agri-food park in Bologna on November 9. FICO Eataly World, said to be the world’s biggest agri-food park, will open to the public on November 15. (AFP)
Updated 10 November 2017
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Disneyland for foodies: Italy to open gastronomic theme park

BOLOGNA, Italy: A gastronomic theme park designed as a celebration of Italy’s field-to-fork food culture opens next week with backers aiming to pull in six million visitors a year.
Dubbed a ‘Disneyland for foodies’ and billed as the biggest venture of its kind in the world, FICO Eataly World is located on the outskirts of Bologna.
It is the brainchild of Oscar Farinetti, the entrepreneur behind Eataly, a global network of upmarket Italian food halls that has taken New York and a string of other major cities around the world by storm in recent years.
Spread over ten hectares (25 acres), the park, which will operate as a conference venue as well as a tourist attraction, will be run by a partnership of Eataly and Italian retail group Coop.
The venue has been financed by a consortium of private investors and the local authorities in a city famed for its rich cuisine but off Italy’s main tourist track.
The FICO of the park’s name comes from the acronym for Fabbrica Italiana Contadina (Italian Farming Factory). Fico is also the Italian word for a fig, and a popular slang term for ‘cool’.
The multiple meaning is in keeping with Farinetti’s multi-faceted vision of a venue that will allow visitors to take part in activity workshops ranging from food photography to gelato-making via the basics of truffle hunting.
A fifth of the park, assembled in what was the city’s wholesale fruit and vegetable market, is outdoors with some 200 animals and 2,000 species of plant life due to be on show.
“Education is fundamental to the whole thing. But it is also about having fun, eating, shopping,” Farinetti said in an interview ahead of Wednesday’s opening.
The park is also about celebrating the culinary and farming crafts that lie behind many of Italy’s most famous gastronomic products, and the bio-diversity of a country that stretches from Mediterranean islands within sight of Africa to snow-capped Alpine peaks.

Visitors can explore that diversity via more than 40 eateries and a similar number of learn-how-its-done displays by specialist producers of everything from rare-breed beef to liquorice sweets.
As the opening date nears, Farinetti says he is caught between rampant enthusiasm at seeing a dream realized, and “total panic.”
“This for me is quite normal. I’m terrified that people won’t come in the numbers we expect. You can’t help but feel panicked when you start something like this.”
Park CEO Tiziana Primori said the target was to be drawing six million visitors a year by 2020, with the business plan envisaging a third coming from the local area, a third from the rest of Italy and a final tranche of around two million from abroad.
Asked if that target is realistic, Farinetti responds with a broad smile. “No, it’s utopian, but every project I have been involved with has been utopian. The whole world is realistic, I prefer utopia. I don’t know if we will make it but we’ll give it our all.”
Underpinning that ebullience is the success enjoyed by almost all of the Eataly stores that have been opened from Copenhagen to Sao Paolo.
“At the moment there is an absolutely crazy interest in Italian food from the citizens of the world, for pasta, for pizza, for our simple cuisine,” said Farinetti.
That, he says, is down to the ease in which dishes tasted in Italy or in restaurants can be reproduced in domestic kitchens.
“You can buy half a kilo of pasta, some extra virgin olive oil and San Marzano tomatoes and go home and make what you had. And it is very digestible and light.”
Among those backing Farinetti’s vision is Antonio Capaldo, owner of the Feudi San Gregorio wine company and one of dozens of entrepreneurs involved in the project.
Capaldo has teamed up with a seafood wholesaler to create a fish-based fast-food eatery at the park, which will showcase his expanding company’s white and sparkling wines.
“We know all the complications but there is a great thirst for Italian culture around the world, and that, combined with Oscar’s track record, is why we are betting on this being a success,” he said.


Where Are We Going Today: NAC Winter Garden

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Updated 28 December 2025
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Where Are We Going Today: NAC Winter Garden

  • The menu leans on familiar NAC dishes with a seasonal touch

RIYADH: As the sun sets behind the date palms of Wadi Hanifa and the air cools, NAC Winter Garden welcomes diners with soft lighting, the scent of wood smoke, and the glow of outdoor heaters.

Set within Aseel Resort in Diriyah, a short drive from central Riyadh, this seasonal extension of the NAC brand is designed to make the most of the city’s winter months.

It promises outdoor dining, a relaxed atmosphere, and a sense of escape, and, in many ways, it delivers. Unlike NAC’s main branch in Laysen Valley, which operates as a traditional brasserie, the Winter Garden presents a looser, more atmospheric format, positioned somewhere between a cafe and a restaurant. 

The menu leans on familiar NAC dishes with a seasonal touch. Popcorn chicken arrived hot and crisp, complemented by a spicy mayo that added warmth without overpowering the dish.

A rigatoni in pink sauce was comforting and reasonably balanced, though it lacked the kind of memorable detail that makes a dish worth returning for. The standout was a halloumi dish drizzled with honey and sriracha, offering a satisfying mix of sweet, salty, and mild heat with contrasting textures. 

Prices fall in the mid-to-high range for Riyadh. Portions are reasonable, but not all dishes feel like strong value. 

Service was polite but occasionally slow, with noticeable gaps between ordering and delivery. The setting itself was thoroughly arranged, with greenery, warm lighting, and a sense of distance from the bustle of the city.

Within Riyadh’s evolving dining scene, NAC Winter Garden feels like an experiment in seasonal, outdoor dining. It adds interest to the winter landscape and offers a pleasant evening out, but more consistent execution in both the kitchen and service would help it stand out in an increasingly competitive market.