Proposals for a Fellini Museum in Rimini date back to the mid-1990s, shortly after Fellini's death. The
Casa Museo Fellini, a temporary museum dedicated to Fellini, operated from November 2009 to December 2010 and was managed by the
Fondazione Federico Fellini. the eventual opening of the museum would be described as "filling a void". The
Fondazione Federico Fellini, which conserved Fellini's work since 1995, was dissolved in 2015. Its assets – which included Fellini's Book of Dreams, along with hundreds of Fellini's drawings and numerous photos, some of which were unpublished – were acquired by the city council, with the aim of preserving the collection and embracing the city's cinematic heritage and influential role in Fellini's filmmaking. In December 2016, the
Italian culture ministry allocated an initial €9 million in funding for the Fellini Museum in its
Grandi Progetti Beni Culturali 2017-2018 (Major Cultural Heritage Projects) plan. Construction of the museum began in 2018, with €12 million total in funding allocated; its opening was planned for 2020, the centennial of Fellini's birth. and planned alongside the renovation of the Fulgor Palace, a former cinema frequented by Fellini located in Rimini's historic town center, which underwent renovation from 2013 to 2018. The museum's opening was delayed due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in Italy. The museum's opening was celebrated as part of a larger cultural redevelopment project in Rimini. == References ==