This is the first paper of a series that will present data and scientific
results from the WINGS project, a wide-field, multiwavelength imaging and
spectroscopic survey of galaxies in 77 nearby clusters. The sample was
extracted from the ROSAT catalogs with constraints on the redshift
(0.0420). The global goal of
the WINGS project is the systematic study of the local cosmic variance of the
cluster population and of the properties of cluster galaxies as a function of
cluster properties and local environment. This data collection will allow to
define a local 'Zero-Point' reference against which to gauge the cosmic
evolution when compared to more distant clusters. The core of the project
consists of wide-field optical imaging of the selected clusters in the B and V
bands. We have also completed a multi-fiber, medium resolution spectroscopic
survey for 51 of the clusters in the master sample. In addition, a NIR (JK)
survey of ~50 clusters and an H_alpha + UV survey of some 10 clusters are
presently ongoing, while a very-wide-field optical survey has also been
programmed. In this paper we briefly outline the global objectives and the main
characteristics of the WINGS project. Moreover, the observing strategy and the
data reduction of the optical imaging survey (WINGS-OPT) are presented. We have
achieved a photometric accuracy of ~0.025mag, reaching completeness to V~23.5.
Field size and resolution (FWHM) span the absolute intervals (1.6-2.7)Mpc and
(0.7-1.7)kpc, respectively, depending on the redshift and on the seeing. This
allows the planned studies to get a valuable description of the local
properties of clusters and galaxies in clusters.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures, Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic