In Italy’s agricultural heartlands, a fresh dialogue between history and present emerges, where ancient wine landscapes meet contemporary design thinking. Far from being static or purely aesthetic, these spaces challenge us to reconsider our role within the environment and our relationships with one another. They prompt reflection and a shift in values, revealing the landscape as an evolving entity that shapes – and is shaped by – our actions. In Wine Culture and Landscape , Francesca Muzzillo e Fosca Tortelli show how architecture, archaeology, and agriculture unite to preserve cultural identity while reimagining our future connection with the land. Design is considered as an ongoing dialogue with the land, one that adheres to its temporal rhythms, recognizes its historical strata, and anticipates its future trajectories.