Project Description
Description
Essentials about Via Vittorio Veneto in brief
Leaving Villa Borghese Park to the south, you reach the wide boulevard Via Vittorio Veneto, which in the 1950s became synonymous with Italian dolce vita thanks to Federico Fellini’s cult film of the same name. Unfortunately, there is not much left of the glamorous, sweet life of the rich and beautiful today. Nevertheless, Via Vittorio Veneto is still worth a stroll – even if you just want to stop off at Harry’s Bar.
The bars, cafés and hotels on Via Vittorio Veneto
Once, stars and starlets were seen here in the bars, cafés and grand hotels, and paparazzi were guaranteed to make a fat haul. Despite all the efforts to revive it, the old splendor of Via Vittorio Veneto has largely faded and an air of melancholy surrounds the street. Just at the northern beginning of the street, however, an institution among Rome’s bars still attracts tourists (and locals, too) today: The legendary Harry’s Bar. With piano sounds and champagne risotto, surrounded by countless memorabilia, you can still effortlessly transport yourself back to the glamorous past of sinful dolce vita.
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Admission fees
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Address
Getting there
By public transport:
Metro line A: Stop Barberini
Bus lines C3, 52, 53, 61, 63, 80, 83, 150, 160 and 590
By car:
The nearest parking garages are MuoviAmo Pinciano and Parking Ludovisi.
Photos: By randreu, CC BY 3.0, Link / By randreu, CC BY 3.0, Link / By randreu, CC BY 3.0, Link
Texts: Individual pieces of content and information from Wikipedia DE and Wikipedia EN under the Creative-Commons-Lizenz Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
English version: Machine translation by DeepL