What’s new in Italy for 2009
Travelers will find changes to major sights in Rome, Florence and beyond
![]() 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.” |
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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.
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).
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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.
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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.
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.)
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