Italian submarine Enrico Toti, submarine
Enrico Toti is an attack submarine at the Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia in Milan, Italy, built to serve during a period of heightened naval activity. The long, sturdy hull is coated in dark paint and shows a sleek shape designed for underwater travel, with hatches and small windows along the deck.
The submarine was built for the Italian Navy during the 20th century and served for many years in patrols and maneuvers. It played an important role in maritime exercises for coastal defense and information gathering.
Named after a war hero who died in the First World War, this submarine carries a name symbolizing courage and sacrifice. Visitors see the narrow sleeping bunks and shared spaces where the crew lived and worked in tight conditions, often for weeks without daylight.
The submarine is accessible during museum hours, and guided tours explain how it dives, stays hidden, and surfaces. Comfortable shoes are recommended, as the corridors are narrow and you should plan enough time to see other exhibits as well.
The metal walls are several centimeters thick and divided into many compartments, keeping the crew safe even during emergencies. The submarine could remain submerged for days and stored supplies in special sections.
Location: Milano
Inception: January 1, 1968
Reference: S506
Website: https://museoscienza.org/toti
GPS coordinates: 45.46169,9.17112
Latest update: December 5, 2025 13:58
These preserved submarines open their hatches to visitors who want to see where sailors lived and fought beneath the ocean surface. From World War II patrol boats that hunted across the Pacific to the first nuclear-powered vessel that changed naval history forever, each submarine reveals the cramped reality of underwater service. You walk through narrow steel corridors, peer into bunks stacked three high, and stand where officers once studied charts and gave orders in near silence. The collection includes vessels from harbors across the United States and around the world, each one a working museum where the instruments, torpedo tubes, and engine rooms remain as they were during active duty. Some of these submarines sank enemy warships and rescued Allied prisoners during the Second World War. Others served through the Cold War, carrying crews on patrols that lasted weeks without seeing daylight. A few pushed the limits of technology, proving that nuclear reactors could power a vessel across thousands of miles and even under the polar ice. Whether docked in a busy port or resting beside a quiet lake, these submarines bring you face to face with the men who descended into the deep, closed the hatch, and did their work in spaces smaller than a city bus.
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