Room 2
The second room is dedicated to the transformation of Istituto Sclavo: from a small family-run laboratory to a genuine company, which over time established itself at international level. The dozens of products launched, the advertising communications and the expansion of the industrial citadel are all proof of this. This space also looks at the story that connects Siena with Albert Sabin, whose chose to entrust the production of his polio vaccine to the Sclavo.
Room 2 seeks to underline the important contribution of microscopy to our understanding of pathogens and the development of vaccines as a result. Thanks to increasingly powerful tools scientists have been able to observe the most infinitesimal of objects with increasing clarity and identify bacteria, viruses and even single molecules with the most recent microscopy techniques.
On one side of the table visitors will find three stations where they can observe the slides which, once placed on the multimedia table, will show how we have been able to get an increasingly better view of pathogens over the years thanks to modernisation.
The slides are also the focal point of an interactive game: questions on viruses and bacteria will appear on the monitor and visitors will have to identify the correct answer, which will be accompanied by a short explanation. On the other side of the table is a graphic which explains the concept of “infinitesimal”, comparing the dimensions of a cell with those of a city in order to convey the resolution capacity of modern microscopes.