The small church of Lingotto, built in 1686 a few meters from the Cascina, was dedicated to John the Baptist and subsequently destroyed by the aerial bombings of 4 June 1944 during World War II, then replaced by the current Immacolata Concezione e San Giovanni Battista, consecrated in 1978.
[3] In 1765, the area passed to Count Carlo Pietro Avenati of the Rebaudengo di Mondovì branch, under the protection of the Savoy.
[4] In 1788, the cemetery was annexed to the small Lingotto church, on the south side of the current via Passo Buole, where the Parco Di Vittorio [it] municipal park now stands.
The district was completed only in 1922; industry quickly transformed the village, making it go from a rural place to a working-class neighborhood.
From 1922 to 1936, the presence of Fiat Lingotto, before the birth of the Mirafiori plant, brought rapid economic development throughout the area.