Skip navigation
advertisement

What’s new in Italy for 2009

Travelers will find changes to major sights in Rome, Florence and beyond

Image: Victor Emmanuel Monument
Rick Steves
You can now take an elevator to the top of Rome's Victor Emmanuel Monument, a grandiose sight nicknamed “the typewriter” and “the wedding cake.”
Slide show
Castel Sant'Angelo and Tiber River
  The Eternal City
Explore the cobble stone streets, be inspired by its history, art, dining and more.

more photos

  Top slideshows
Tourism B.C.
  Let the Games begin
Vancouver is all set to host the 2010 Winter Olympics, and visitors to the city will have a wealth of options to keep them busy.
Image: Deep powder at Heavenly Ski Resort
Courtesy of Heavenly Ski Resort
  Hit the lifts
Take a visual tour of some of the most popular ski and snowboard playgrounds in America — and beyond.
Image: Ice scupltures are displayed at the annu
AFP - Getty Images
  Cold as ice
The International Ice and Snow Festival in Harbin, the capital of China's Hellongiang Province, is held every year and attracts hundreds of thousands of revelers.
By Rick Steves
Tribune Media Services
updated 10:14 a.m. ET Feb. 5, 2009

Rome, the Eternal City, can be eternally exhausting to sightseers with old information. The Vatican Museum, with the Sistine Chapel, is now open longer hours (8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. most days), so its notoriously long lines should be a little more merciful. And now you can book tickets online. (There's about a $5 booking fee per ticket.)

The Roman Forum is no longer free. It's now included in a combo ticket (about $14, good for two days) that also covers Palatine Hill and the Colosseum. Palatine Hill, which strikes many visitors as a pile of old rocks, now features several recently restored rooms of the House of Augustus and a chance to see splendid ancient frescos. As only five people are allowed into the fresco room at a time, expect a 15- to 30-minute wait.

The new Museum of the Imperial Forums, near Piazza Venezia, holds discoveries from the forums of Trajan, Caesar, Augustus and Nerva — each emperor built over the works of his predecessor. It sounds important, but doesn't make my must-see list of Rome's ancient attractions.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Rather than looking up at the much-maligned Victor Emmanuel Monument, tourists can take the new “Rome from the Sky” elevator to its rooftop to enjoy a grand 360-degree view. Your bonus: From its roof you see everything in town, except this pompous, oversized monument — nicknamed “the typewriter” and “the wedding cake.”

Florence, improving its crowd management, now has a Web site for its top art museums. Tickets for the Uffizi Gallery (Renaissance art) and Accademia (Michelangelo's David) are available here (about a $5 booking fee per ticket). And most hoteliers will still book Uffizi tickets as a service to their guests (either for free or a small fee).

Slide show
'David' by Michelangelo at the Galleria dell'Accademia
  Florence a la fresco
Explore Italy's Renaissance city and discover magnificent art, architecture and more

more photos

To get to the top of Florence's cathedral dome, you face a congested climb inside the dome-within-a-dome structure. The line moves slowly, quarters are tight, and the people you'll squeeze by need a shower. You'll enjoy a better view that includes the dome itself, often with fewer crowds, from the top of the adjacent Giotto's Tower. Santa Croce Church, with tombs and memorials that make it a kind of Renaissance hall of fame, is very popular. To avoid its lines, you can buy your ticket at the leather school around the back and enter the church from there.

Florence's Science Museum, providing vivid proof that the Renaissance involved more than the visual arts, should re-open after extensive renovation work this summer. Until then, you may find a few choice exhibits, including Galileo's telescope and his finger, in temporary rooms in the basement.

Slide show
  City of Water
There’s no other place in the world like Venice. Explore and discover this unique, mystical and extraordinary aquatic city.

more photos

Venice seems as crowded and greedy as ever. Vaporetto (water bus) tickets for a ride down the Grand Canal now cost nearly $10. The only way to visit the Doge's Palace, the city's top sight, is to buy a museum pass, which includes the less-visited Correr Museum. While it's a scheme to make people heading only for the Doge's Palace pay to see two places, the advantage is that you can buy the pass at the nearby Correr Museum, which never has crowds, and then walk directly into the Doge's Palace without a wait.

Venice has banned pigeon feeding on St. Mark's Square, saying the pigeons are a health hazard and contribute to degradation of the city's monuments. Enjoying what was once perhaps the city's best, cheap form of entertainment (about $1.40 for plenty of seed) could now net you a $70 to $700 fine.

You can skip the lines at the Accademia, Venice's finest art museum, by making reservations for an entry time at least a day in advance (easier by phone at 011-39-041-520-0345 than online at their clunky Web site).

Milan's underrated yet impressive Duomo Museum should re-open in 2009, following an extensive restoration project. The Milan train station will remain a construction zone through 2009, so be prepared for the baggage check, tourist information office, and other services to be tucked into temporary quarters at the station.
  It's A Snap!

See the amazing images sent by msnbc.com readers and submit your own for next week!

To get a deeply discounted ticket at Milan's La Scala Opera House, show up at 1 p.m. to put your name on a list, then return at 5:30 p.m. in the hopes of getting a voucher, which you'll then show at the ticket window to purchase a ticket.

Thanks to “The Da Vinci Code,” tickets to see Leonardo's The Last Supper need to be booked a month or more in advance. You can reserve online, but you'll have more options for dates and times if you call the booking office at 011-39-028-942-1146.

Italy, even with its high prices and long lines, is worth the trouble.

More on Rick Steves | European travel

(Rick Steves writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. E-mail him at , or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, Wash. 98020.)

© 2009 Rick Steves ... Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Resource guide