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Lake Como isn’t only about elegant villas and romantic gardens: beneath its glittering waters lies a story shaped by working hands, spinning rooms and looms, and the women and men who wove the very fabric of Lario’s identity. In Bellano there’s a corner where, once upon a time, the sound of waves mingled with the steady rhythm of machinery. This is the area of the former Cantoni Cotton Mill—quiet and atmospheric today, yet for more than a century it was the beating heart of work and everyday life in the village. Anyone who grew up here still remembers the white smoke rising from the chimneys, the sirens marking the start and end of shifts, and the voices of the women workers blending with the lake’s hush.
Bellano’s industrial story begins in the 19th century, when the Cantoni family—Lombardy textile entrepreneurs with mills in Castellanza and Legnano—chose this lakeside village to open one of the area’s first cotton mills.
The abundant water of the Pioverna stream was ideal for powering the machinery and supplying energy to the turbines—one detail that transformed Bellano from a small community of fishermen and craftspeople into a lively industrial centre on Lake Como.
At its peak, the Cantoni Cotton Mill employed hundreds of people—mostly women—coming not only from Bellano, but also from Dervio, Varenna, Vendrogno and the villages of the Valsassina.
💬 Grandmothers still tell it like this: “At the mill, it wasn’t just a job—it was a family. Everyone knew each other; we sang together, we grew up together.”
For the people of Bellano, the mill wasn’t only a factory: it was a school of life. Those who worked there learned discipline, precision and solidarity.
They say the “Cantoni girls” always had hands that smelled of cotton and the lake, and that in the evening, when the shift ended, the street filled with laughter and chatter. Many still recall the end of year company parties, productivity prizes and football matches between departments. The work was hard, but it carried dignity.
🕰️ “When the seven o’clock siren sounded, even those who didn’t work there knew Bellano was waking up.”
The Cantoni Cotton Mill building—recognisable today by its large arched windows and red brick walls—is one of the finest examples of industrial archaeology on the Lario. After the factory closed in the 1970s, it fell silent for years, like a sleeping giant at the edge of the village.
Today, there are numerous regeneration initiatives. The Cotton Mill has become a symbol of the area’s working class memory. Many visitors photograph it without realising how much life it once held—how many hands worked behind those windows.
The Cantoni Cotton Mill no longer produces, but it still tells stories. Walking along Via Taceno, with brick walls beside you and the mountains mirrored in the lake, you can almost hear the distant echo of the looms. Bellano has reinvented itself through tourism and culture, without losing sight of its industrial roots. Every stone of that mill still speaks of working hands, singing voices, and a time when lake and factory lived in perfect harmony.
💬 “Cantoni was the heart beating to the rhythm of the Pioverna. Today it still beats—inside the memories of those who lived it.”
The Cantoni Cotton Mill in Bellano is now at the centre of a major historical and cultural regeneration project promoted by the Municipality and the Superintendency.
The goal is to transform the former industrial area into a multifunctional hub that brings together:
The project also includes restoring the original façades and preserving the hydroelectric turbines—symbols of the area’s earliest sustainable energy.
💬 “We don’t want to erase the past,” explains a resident, “we want to let it live in a new way.”
Continuing north, just 5 km from Bellano, you reach Dervio—another village with a past deeply linked to the textile industry. Here, along the Varrone stream, stood the Dervio Linen Mill, founded in the 19th century and active until the mid 20th century.
The mill specialised in processing flax and hemp—valuable fibres that demanded skilled hands and great patience. Today, the walls of the old spinning rooms, the turbines and the memory of an era remain, when the whole village moved to the rhythm of the machines.
The journey ends in Como, a world capital of silk. Housed in an elegant 20th century industrial building, the Silk Museum tells the story of Como’s silk craft through original machines and historical documents.
Among reels, Jacquard looms, vintage garments and contemporary textile projects, you’ll discover how silk thread became a global symbol of Italian elegance.
📍 Where: Via Castelnuovo 9, Como
🌐 Website: www.museosetacomo.com
Want to round off the day with local flavours? Dove mangiare a Varenna e Bellano: ristoranti e trattorie
It is a former 19th century textile mill in Bellano that became one of the main industrial hubs of Lake Como.
In the second half of the 19th century, during the Cantoni family’s expansion in the cotton industry.
Cotton yarns and fabrics exported across Italy and into Europe.
The building can be viewed from the outside; some areas open for exhibitions, events or special heritage days dedicated to industrial archaeology.
For more than a century it was the village’s main source of work and identity, leaving a deep mark on local history.
You can reach Bellano by train (the Milan–Tirano line), by car (SS36, Bellano exit), or by boat via Lake Como’s ferry services.
Lake Como isn’t only about romance—it’s also about ingenuity, hard work and renewal. Old spinning mills, now restored, host artists’ studios, libraries and cultural spaces: a way to give new life to the area’s roots.
And while the lake reflects its sunsets, the walls of former cotton and linen mills still tell, in silence, the heartbeat of history. Bringing working places back to life means honouring those who shaped the modern face of the lake, while imagining a more sustainable and shared future. And so, between Bellano’s restored turbines, Dervio’s green paths and the halls of the Silk Museum, the thread of time keeps weaving its pattern—linking past, present and future, always mirrored in the waters of the Lario.
“Once we spun cotton. Today we spin ideas.”
And for your stay, I recommend basing yourself in Bellano in an apartment at Villa Vista Lago.