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THE
ORIGINS
Piaggio was founded in Genoa in 1884 by twenty-year-old Rinaldo Piaggio.
The first activity of Rinaldo's factory was luxury ship fitting. But
by the end of the century, Piaggio was also producing rail carriages,
goods vans, luxury coaches and engines, trams and special truck bodies.
World War I brought a new diversification that was to distinguish Piaggio
activities for many decades. The company started producing aeroplanes
and seaplanes. At the same time, new plants were springing up. In 1917
Piaggio bought a new plant in Pisa, and four years later it took over
a small plant in Pontedera which first became the centre of aeronautical
production (propellers, engines and complete aircraft) and then, after
World War II, witnessed the birth of the iconic Vespa.
FROM AERONAUTICS TO INDIVIDUAL MOBILITY: THE TRANSFORMATION OF 1946
The war, a radical watershed for the entire Italian economy, was equally
important for Piaggio. The Pontedera plant built the state-of-the-art
four-engine P 108 equipped with a 1,500-bhp Piaggio engine in passenger
and bomber versions. However Piaggio’s aeronautical plants in
Tuscany (Pontedera and Pisa) were important military targets and on
August 31, 1943 they were razed to the ground by Allied bombers, after
the retreating Germans had already mined the pillars of the buildings
and irrevocably damaged the plants. To rebuild the Pontedera plants,
Enrico Piaggio asked the Allies, who then occupied part of the grounds
and of the buildings still standing, to arrange for the machinery transferred
to Germany and Biella in northern Italy to be brought back. This was
done rapidly and Armando and Enrico Piaggio then began the process of
rebuilding. The hardest task went to Enrico, who was responsible for
the destroyed plants of Pontedera and Pisa.
Enrico Piaggio’s decision to enter the light mobility business
was based on economic assessments and sociological considerations. It
took shape thanks to the successful co-operation of the aeronautical
engineer and inventor Corradino D’Ascanio (1891-1981).
THE
BIRTH OF A LEGEND
The Vespa (which means “wasp” in Italian) was the result
of Enrico Piaggio’s determination to create a low cost product
for the masses. As the war drew to a close, Enrico studied every possible
solution to get production in his plants going again. A motor scooter
was produced, based on a small motorcycle made for parachutists. The
prototype, known as the MP5, was nicknamed “Paperino” (the
Italian name for Donald Duck) because of its strange shape, but Enrico
Piaggio did not like it, and he asked Corradino D’Ascanio to redesign
it.
But the aeronautical designer did not like motorcycles. He found them
uncomfortable and bulky, with wheels that were difficult to change after
a puncture. Worse still, the drive chain made them dirty. However, his
aeronautical experience found the answer to every problem. To eliminate
the chain he imagined a vehicle with a stress-bearing body and direct
mesh; to make it easier to ride, he put the gear lever on the handlebar;
to make tyre changing easier he designed not a fork, but a supporting
arm similar to an aircraft carriage. Finally, he designed a body that
would protect the driver so that he would not get dirty or disheveled.
Decades before the spread of ergonomic studies, the riding position
of the Vespa was designed to let you sit comfortably and safely, not
balanced dangerously as on a high-wheel motorcycle.
Corradino D’Ascanio only needed a few days to refine his idea
and prepare the first drawings of the Vespa, first produced in Pontedera
in April 1946. It got its name from Enrico Piaggio himself who, looking
at the MP 6 prototype with its wide central part where the rider sat
and the narrow “waist”, exclaimed, “It looks like
a wasp!” And so the Vespa was born.
On April 23, 1946 Piaggio & C. S.p.A. filed a patent with the Central
Patents Office for inventions, models and brand names at the Ministry
of Industry and Commerce in Florence, for “a motor cycle with
a rational complex of organs and elements with body combined with the
mudguards and bonnet covering all the mechanical parts”. In a
short space of time the Vespa was presented to the public, provoking
contrasting reactions. However, Enrico Piaggio did not hesitate to start
mass production of two thousand units of the first Vespa 98 cc. The
new vehicle made its society debut at Rome’s elegant Golf Club,
in the presence of U.S. General Stone who represented the Allied military
government. Italians saw the Vespa for the first time in the pages of
Motor (March 24, 1946) and on the black and white cover of La Moto on
April 15, 1946.
FIRST VESPA PATENT
On April 23, 1946 Piaggio & C. S.p.A. filed a patent with the Central
Patents Office for inventions, models and brand names at the Ministry
of Industry and Commerce in Florence, for "a motor cycle with a
rational complex of organs and elements with body combined with the
mudguards and bonnet covering all the mechanical parts". In a short
space of time the Vespa was presented to the public, provoking contrasting
reactions. However, Enrico Piaggio did not hesitate to start mass production
of two thousand units of the first Vespa 98 cc. The new vehicle made
its society debut at Rome's elegant Golf Club, in the presence of U.S.
General Stone who represented the Allied military government. Italians
saw the Vespa for the first time in the pages of Motor (March 24, 1946)
and on the black and white cover of La Moto on April 15, 1946.
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