Cities of Italy

What to see in Venice: TOP-8 ideas for travelers to Venice. Part I

If you ask the Venetian tourist office what you should definitely see in the city, then you will surely get a long list of museums and attractions that can be avoided in a few days. However, if time is running out, then only part of this list can be called what the bourgeois call “must see”. Therefore, BlogoItaliano will share exactly what it is better to reserve time, no matter how little you have.

Having a few days to explore Venice, you can discover some of its “hidden chips".

№8 Fun streets of the island of Burano

After visiting Murano Islands (see # 5) take a vaporetto and set off for Burano island. The main rule that applies throughout Venice is that the further you move away from the main Venetian islands, the fewer tourists you meet on your way. And Burano in this case is no exception: there are fewer tourists here than on the same Murano.

The main feature of the island of Burano is its colorful houses

The main feature of Burano is its colorful houses. You will probably see them in one of the many guidebooks on Venice, but often without a signature, where, in fact, this beauty is located.

Bright colors give the buildings a frivolous look. Besides the fact that the houses on Burano will be a great background for your photo from Venice, they still miraculously cheer up. Do not believe? Just walk here for half an hour and see for yourself.

No. 7 Elevator to the top of Campanila

You can get an excellent shot with a view of St. Mark's Square not only from St. Mark's Cathedral, but also from Campaniles - The bell tower, which is located here, just "a stone's throw" from the Basilica. Moreover, from Campanila you will see not only the Square, but also the Cathedral, which is already doubly pleasant.

Campanila also offers views of the domes of the Cathedral of St. Mark

In order to "try out" the view, you should buy a ticket for the lift, which will take you to the top of Campanila. In addition to the view, here you can also look at the very bells that you will hear from time to time throughout Venice.

However, if you want to protect your ears from shocks, then it is better to start your tour to the top long before the arrows indicate the onset of a new hour.

# 6 Visit Doge's Palace

Right next to St. Mark's Cathedral is the Doge's Palace - the second most famous landmark in Venice after the Basilica (unless, of course, the city itself is considered a “landmark”).

Although there are several good reasons to pay the rather big cost of the Doge’s Palace excursion (Palazzo Ducale in Italian), perhaps the main thing is the opportunity to go through Bridge of Sighs. You can admire the latter from the outside, without buying an entrance ticket, but the only way to go through it is part of the Doge's Palace tour. For more information about this and other reasons to visit there, see the Doge's Palace article: you should not miss it in Venice.

As part of a tour of the secret routes of Doge's Palace, you can walk along the Bridge of Sighs

By the way Doge's Palace tour (and not only) can be ordered in advance online. We wrote about the advantages of pre-ordering and ways to do this earlier in the article Sights of Venice, where you can buy tickets online. So if your time in Venice is limited, online tickets will help to save not only time, but also nerves.

No. 5 Visit the glass-blowing workshop on the island of Murano

A visit to a glass-blowing workshop in Venice is akin to a fur coat in northern Greece or an excursion to a leather factory in Turkey. So you can imagine what we mean by calling it a somewhat specific tour.

Nevertheless, having been to Venice, it’s really worth a look at the process of making such a famous Murano glass, especially if you have never seen how such masterpieces are created. In addition, it would be nice to somehow diversify your impressions and visit several islands of the Lagoon, and Murano is the closest and one of the simplest from the point of view of organizing a trip.

For centuries, Murano glass has been synonymous with quality.

If you want to avoid a tourist demonstration, then just use the Vaporetto going to Murano (instead of a boat booked by a hotel or a glass shop) and walk along the streets of the island until you find a relatively open studio.

Remember that not all glass-blowing workshops on Murano island serve as a tourist attraction, and therefore you have a good chance to combine business with pleasure, while avoiding someone’s attempts to sell you something.

Continuation: Things to do in Venice: TOP-8 ideas for travelers to Venice. Part II

Popular articles about Venice

Watch the video: Venice in a Day: Hidden Gems & Top Attractions (November 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Cities of Italy, Next Article

Italian pensioner tried to kill a neighbor for a noisy vacuum cleaner
Society

Italian pensioner tried to kill a neighbor for a noisy vacuum cleaner

Carabinieri of the city of Riccione, which is located near Rimini, was detained by a pensioner-killer who decided to “radically” punish his neighbor for cleaning too noisy. A call was received to the local police on duty about an attack on a woman. When the law enforcement officers arrived at the scene, they saw the main “protagonists”: an 85-year-old pensioner and his neighbor, who received lacerated head wounds as a result of a quarrel with an enraged grandfather.
Read More
Study: Italy has the fastest internet
Society

Study: Italy has the fastest internet

Italy boasts the fastest Internet connection in the world, which exceeds the speed of the global web even in such highly developed countries as Germany and England. It is to these conclusions that researchers from the United States came. However, Internet users from the southern regions of the country cannot agree with such statements.
Read More
The Italian made an agreement with her husband and lover
Society

The Italian made an agreement with her husband and lover

A passionate Italian woman living in the south of the country in the city of Casoria, a province in the Napoli region, found a very original solution to all problems when she realized that she found it difficult to choose between her husband, with whom she had been married for more than 10 years, and lover 10 years younger than her. The woman took extreme measures, inviting the two applicants for her hand and heart to draw up a kind of agreement that would help her decide on the call of her heart.
Read More
How Pope Benedict XVI lives outside the Vatican
Society

How Pope Benedict XVI lives outside the Vatican

Those who have seen Benedict XVI after leaving the Vatican claim that the former pontiff looks refreshed and rested, leaving politics in the past and fully devoting himself to prayers and playing the piano. The Vatican authorities say that Benedict does not even think of returning to the world stage. Before permanently relinquishing the title of head of the Holy See, the former Pope declared that he was going to lead a modest and even reclusive lifestyle.
Read More