Lagrange: Operating Italy's First Publicly-Accessible Quantum Computer for Research and Education
Paolo Viviani, Fabrizio Bertone, Giacomo Vitali, Emanuele Dri, Federico Stirano, Giuseppe Caragnano, Francesco Lubrano, Antonino Nespola, Olivier Terzo, Matteo Cocuzza, Bartolomeo Montrucchio, Giovanna Turvani, Gianluca Bertaina, Marco Coisson, Davide Calonico, Fabrizio Pirri

TL;DR
Lagrange is Italy's first fully operational public quantum computer, with a custom middleware enabling access, management, and fairness for researchers, students, and the public over nine months.
Contribution
Development of a modular middleware layer for managing access and usage policies on a publicly accessible quantum computer in Italy.
Findings
Processed over 240,000 quantum jobs in nine months
Achieved greater than 98% uptime since September 2025
Students use the machine regularly for lectures and exams
Abstract
We describe the design, implementation, and nine-month operational experience of the software management stack for Lagrange, an IQM Spark five-qubit superconducting quantum computer jointly acquired by LINKS Foundation, Politecnico di Torino and the Italian National Institute of Metrological Research (INRiM), and managed by LINKS. Lagrange is, to our knowledge, the first quantum computer in Italy that is fully operational and accessible to students and researchers from multiple institutions under formal service agreements, and to the general public under commercial agreements. When installed in mid-2025, the IQM Spark hardware was delivered by the vendor with authentication only: no billing, project management or fair usage enforcement were provided. We developed a modular middleware layer that filled that gap without modifying any vendor client software, by intercepting API calls…
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