Hung to the Mont-Cenis pass, the village appears as suspended, almost 1500 a.s.l. on Val Cenischia. Historically known as Ferrera, it has always been linked to the transit on the Via Francigena and the Mont-Cenis, was constantly at the center of events and historical enterprises: by the passage of Napoleon, the construction of trinceramenti at high altitude, the dam of the Moncenisio on the construction of the railway alpina of Fell.
To witness and document the past of this village at the service of the hill was born in 2003 the Ecomuseum the Lands at the Border, one of 25 ecomuseums recognized by the Region of Piedmont: it evokes an important past whose testimonies are still visible in the landscape of Ferrera, thanks a visit to the ecomuseum path.
The ancient Town Hall is the starting point for the experiences of the knowledge of the territory and meeting place of the Community with the municipal library, the Documentation Center of the lands at the border and space for conferences and exhibitions. The second floor is entirely dedicated to the theme of the Community through the exhibition of objects that provide a glimpse into the daily life of a recent past tied to the crafts of the mountain: the processing of milk, hay, the banks of the old school, the traditional costume of male and female. A section is also devoted to the fauna and flora that still live in this band of mountain area in the woods that surround the Moncenisio: ibex, wild boars, foxes, hares, squirrels and many other animals in nature find their habitat.
The ecomuseale path of Moncenisio continues through the old mill, the oven and wash, meeting places in the Community and in the christmas season come alive with a historic crib, and continues at the chapel of San Giuseppe (XVIII century) that encloses the precious tables of the Via Crucis made from the most important contemporary artists from Piedmont coordinated by painter Lia Laterza: Tino Aime, Gabriel Girardi, Vinicio Perugia, Fernando Eandi just to name a few.
In April the patronal feast dedicated to San Giorgio Martyr still sees women in traditional costume accompany the procession with the statue of the patron saint (23 April).