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Welcome to the land of incredible
artistic and architectural treasures and the birthplace of pizza
and
gelato (ice cream in Italian...)! It is easy to get lost in this
sprawling city, but
hopefully we can help you orient yourself and reduce the
probability of this event happening to you (you still will get lost, but
not as often...).
We wish you a very pleasant and safe stay in Roma, Italia!
Click here to watch a 2min video clip of
Rome
Quick Travel Tips:
Population Rome 2.5M Italy 58M
Currency Euro
Electricity 220V AC 50Hz.Voltage
converters are not easy to find, we suggest you get one before you start
your trip. Italian sockets are designed to accept European round prongs.
Tipping: 10% in Restaurants and
Taxis. Others discretionary.
Safety Issues Traveling in Rome is
in general very safe.
Watch out for pickpockets, though!
Internet Cafes There are plenty of
internet cafes around Rome. If you are staying in a hotel, you might get
an internet connection in your room (internet connection may or may not
be free. Check with your hotel desk).
Because of anti-terrorism laws, you are required to present your passport
for using a public internet cafe.
Airports Leonardo da Vinci, also
known as Fiumicino is the main airport of Rome. It is situated 26 km
southwest of the city. You can get into town by the Leonardo
Express, the 30-minute Fiumicino- Stazione Termini direct train,
which runs half-hourly from the airport. This train also goes to
Trastevere, Ostiense and Tiburtina. A night bus runs to Stazione
Tiburtina.
Ciampino is another airport which is
mainly for domestic flights, although some international flights
also arrive. It is located about 20km southeast of the city.
From Ciampino you can catch a LiLa/Cotral
bus that connects with a subway to Stazione Termini. You can also
drive down the Via Appia Nuova. Departure tax is prepaid with your
air ticket into or out of Italy.
Book
a transfer shuttle Online from the Fiumicino
Airport to your Hotel
Book a private transfer (Fiumicino or Ciampino)
Train
Termini is the main railway station of Rome. Trastevere is a secondary
station. Rome is very well connected by train from all Italian
and European cities, and if you will be traveling in Italy or
Europe, we suggest you buy in advance a Trenitalia Pass
and Eurail
Pass
.
The passes are shipped to your home anywhere in the world.
Religions Predominately Roman
Catholic with mature Protestant and Jewish communities. A short primer
on
Culture and History of Rome
Languages Italian, but you can get
by pretty well with English in Rome. If you really like speaking the
local language at least a little bit.
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Climate Mediterranean. Rome's mild
climate makes it popular to visit during all times of the year. July and
August are hot and many businesses close during this time of the year.
From December to February it is briskly cold but it's rarely grey and
gloomy. Banks and ATMs You
can find banks and Teller Machines easily almost everywhere in Rome.
Banks' normal business hours are 8:45am-1:30pm, 2:45pm-4pm Monday to
Friday.
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Vatican Museum Staircase
Click
here to watch a short 1min
video clip of Vatican City
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Foreign Exchange Offices
Thomas Cook Piazza Barberini, 21. Metro Line A: Barberini.
Mon-Sat 9am-8pm ; Sun 9:30am-5pm
Via della Conciliazione, 23 (down the street from St. Peter's). Bus 40
Express, 62, 64. Mon-Sat 8:30am-7:30pm ; Sun 9:30am-5pm
Via del Corso, 23 (close to Piazza del Popolo). Metro Line A: Spagna or
Flaminio. Mon-Sat 9am-8pm ; Sun 9:30am-5pm.
American Express Piazza di Spagna, 38. Tel. 06 67641. Close
to the Spanish Steps--Metro Line A: Spagna. 9am-5:30pm Mon-Fri;
9am-12:30pm Sat.
Car Rentals We recommend Easycar
for your car rentals in Rome and Italy- they offer some of the lowest
rates here. They also have a couple of locations in downtown Rome (in
addition to the Airport and Termini Station) for easy pick-up and
drop-off.
Telephones Country Code Italy- 39,
Rome- 06
Calling from Rome- International calling cards are available at many
stores in Rome.
Travel Agents
-Scor, Via Orlando Vittorio Emanuele, 75, 00185 Phone: 06
4745889, 06 485738
-Romitalia Turismo, Via Crescenzio, 107 00193 Phone: 06
6874518, 06 6876025
Real Estate Agents
-Mariangela Immobiliare
Via Di Torre Argentina, 44, 00186 Phone 06 6893725
-San Giorgio Immobiliare 84 S.P.A
Via Del Gesu', 62, 00186 Phone 06 6794886
-Dmd Di Di Maulo Daniela
Piazza Mattei, 12, 00186 Phone 06 6833962 - |
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Smoking
Smoking has been banned in all enclosed public places since Jan. 2005. The
law covers bars, restaurants, offices, public buildings, public
transport and cinemas. Smokers face fines of up to US$300.
And now, the hard
to find fun facts, practical tips, and tourist traps...from
personal experiences, both good and bad...
- Almost all the statues and buildings
in Rome have dates written on them - in Roman numerals (the I's, X's
and the C's...remember?). This is fun to translate into real
numbers, especially if you have kids with you...
- You are not allowed to enter churches
(including St Peters) in shorts, short skirts, or sleeveless tops.
- For Coliseum (also spelled Colosseum)
Tours, when you are waiting in line to get in, ignore the private
tour guides who are telling you every so often that you will be
waiting for 40 minutes in the line. The private tour guides end up
taking too many people in the group...your best bet are the official
tours, and you will only pay 5 dollars more than the admission.
- Italians and Romans are obsessed with
dressing well, especially for dinners. So unless you really want to
stand out as a tourist, take some nice clothes with you...you just
might blend in. Bring yourself a step closer to 'When in Rome do as
the Romans do...'
- The bizarre "signs" in the sky above
Republic Plaza and Termini are bird formations, don't be alarmed! It
is known to scare the hell out of some people.
Click here to watch a 3min video clip of
this!
- When you are visiting the Vatican
museums (Sistine Chapel), take your binoculars with you, and also a
hand-held mirror. You will want to see the detail on the ceiling,
and you will need a break from the neck-cranin..these tools will
come in handy....
- A lot of Rome can be covered on foot.
Pack some nice walking shoes with you...
- Ask how much it costs before you get
your picture taken with one of the "Gladiators" outside the Coliseum
or any other "Ancient Roman" you see elsewhere. They might charge
you an insane amount of money if you get the picture taken before
you fix the price...
- Piazza is Italian for square and
has nothing to do with
Pizza. European towns have these squares every few blocks in the
city, Rome has some really nice ones...and they are most often nice
parks to relax and chill-out.
- Rome's streets and squares are
full of plaques and markers detailing the famous personages who lived in
the neighborhood: a poet who rented an apartment close by, a sculptor or
a painter who helped decorate the square. Pay attention to themsometimes
they are more interesting than all the big famous tourist spots. History
and culture run everywhere in this city, and these elements will help
you feel it....
- In Rome, street names are generally
posted at the corners of buildings on the second level above ground.
- To orient yourself in Rome (if you don't
carry a compass...), remember that the central causeway, Via del Corso
(or just the 'Corso') runs almost straight north and south from the
Piazza del Popolo to the Piazza Venezia. Most sightseeing in Rome is
within a few blocks of this easy to find thoroughfare. You can also use
the Aurelian Wall surrounding the city as another marker.
- A common myth is that if you throw a
coin in the Trevi Fountain, you will return to Rome.
- You are not allowed to eat on the
Spanish Steps.
- The letters S.P.Q.R.: Everywhere in Rome
you will encounter these four letters. S.P.Q.R. comes from the
Senatus Popolusque Romanus, with which resolutions were begun in
ancient Rome. Today it is still one of the identifying symbols of Rome,
together with the She-wolf (which fed Romulus and Remus when they were
babies, the legend goes).
- The Spanish Square (adjoining the Steps)
got its name when the Spanish Embassy was built in Rome in 1646. The
Steps were added in 1725.
- Rome has hundreds of churches which
don't look that spectacular from the outside, but have amazing
interiors! So if you find yourself tired of visiting the major hot
spots, take a stroll and enter any church...you might be pleasantly
surprised...
- Palatine, Aventine, Capitoline, Quarinal,
Viminal, Esquiline and Caelianare the seven hills of Rome.
- When visiting the Roman forums, take
some water with you, hard to buy water there. And you can leave your
fashion clothes at home, you will come out all dirty and covered in dust
after a visit to this place...
Click here to watch a 2min video clip of
Rome
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Bridge to Castel SantAngelo |
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