Rome apartments > Trastevere apartment accommodation > Vicolo Scala (14 people) - Rome > Tips and Area
Rome apartments for rent
About UsWhy choose us?How To JoinServices for TouristsContact us!
  Description
  Facilities
  Where We Are
  FAQ
  Photo Gallery
  Book Now!
  Tips and Area


Send to a friend!  


Apartments in Rome, inspected by the staff.
Inspected by us!  
Rome apartments Trastevere: Vicolo Scala (14 people)Rome apartment Trastevere: Vicolo Scala (14 people)apartments Trastevere Rome Vicolo Scala (14 people)apartments Trastevere Rome Vicolo Scala (14 people)Rome Trastevere apartment Vicolo Scala (14 people)

Trastevere apartment, Rome: Vicolo Scala (14 people) - Tips and Area

6BR / 2BA Two Apartments on the same floor of the same building in the heart of old Trastevere


More info:   Description   Facilities   Where We Are   FAQ   Photo Gallery  Tips and Area

Rome accommodation #: 62
Area: Trastevere, Rome
Sleeps 14 people: 12 in bed/s + 2 in sofa bed/s
Price per night: € 400 - € 400

Tips and Area

Where to eat:
Restaurants:
Augusto:
Piazza dé Renzi, 15. North of P.S. Maria in Trastevere. A Trastevere institution, as traditional as they come. This is what cheap and cheerful Roman dining is all about. Sit outside in summer at folding wooden tables with paper tablecloths, on which your bill be scribbled at the end of the evening.
Serves traditional Roman cuisine, including rigatoni cacio de pepe, with pecorino cheese and pepper, pasta e fagioli - thick borlotti bean soup with pasta – and pasta all’amatriciana and the pollo arrosto con patate. Very crowed, be prepared to wait for a table.

Da Giovanni: Via della Lungara, 41/a. Artists’ hangout on the edge of Trastevere. Prices are unbelievably low and the cooking is good, plain Roman fare. It’s tiny and you can’t make reservations, so come as close to opening  time as possible. The menu changes daily but fettuccine al sugo (pasta with simple tomato sauce) is always there. Try the pasta with chickpeas or borlotti beans if you can. House wine doesn’t cost much more than water.

Da Paris: Piazza San Callisto 7. This great restaurant serving Jewish food near Santa Maria in Trastevere, is known for its fish and pasta and for the traditional Roman dish like gran fritto vegetale con bacalà (a fry-up of artichokes, courgettes and their flowers and salt cod) trippa alla romana (tripe in the Roman style). All this is accompanied by an excellent wine list. In summer, there are a few tables outside in the square.Reservation essential.

Alberto Ciarla: Piazza San Cosimato 40. The reputation of this restaurant is stuck in the same 1960s time warp as the décor. But Alberto Ciarla is still one of Rome’s best fish restaurants and pasta e fagioli con le cozze (pasta and beans with mussels) and spigola con le erbe (sea bass with herbs) are trademark dishes.
Alle Fratte di Trastevere: Via delle Fratte di Trastevere 49-50. Trastevere has its fair share of traditional, family-run trattorie, but the cheap and cheerful Alle Fratte has got to be one of the best. It does honest Roman trattoria fare with Neapolitan influences and the service is friendly, attentive and bilingual (the owner’s wife is from Long Island). First courses like pennette alla sorrentina (penne pasta with tomatoes and mozzarella) are served up in generous portions. Secondi include over-roast sea bream, veal escalopes in marsala and a good grilled beef fillet. Desserts are home-made, the post-prandial digestive flow freely.

Antico Arco: Piazzale Aurelio, 7. Dinner at this relaxed creative Italian restaurant on the Gianicolo hill – right behind Porta san Pancrazio – is always a pleasure. The soothing modern décor makes up for the lack of a view and the service is mostly attentive – though it can get a little terse at peak periods. The menu is strong on all fronts, from the antipasti, which include an outstanding onion flan with a piccant grana cheese sauce, to the primi, where Antico Arco classics like the risotto with castelmagno cheese are flanked by recent innovations such as the ravioli filled with potatoes and squid in an olive broth. The secondi cover the board from meat to fish to game and choreographic desserts are no letdown. Maurizio, the sommelier, can help you steer a course through an extensive, well-priced wine list. It’s hugely popular, so book in advance.

Pizzerie:
Dar Poeta:
Vicolo del Bologna, 45-46. From Piazza S. Egidio, head down V. della Scala and turn right. Hardly a tourist in sight. Eighteen types of bruschetta and unusual pizzas amid the old favourites. Save room for the dessert, the sweet calzone stuffed with Nutella and ricotta is to die for. No reservations, be prepared to queue.. the bill is scrawled on the tablecloth.

San Callisto: Piazza San Callisto, 9a – Off S. Maria in Trastevere. One best pizza in Rome: shame about the service and the long, long, long waits for a table. Gorgeous thin crust pizzas so large they hang off the plates. The bruschetta alone is worth a postcard home.

Da Ivo: Via San Francesco a Ripa, 158. The classic pizza is always good, but the owners also come up with interesting and unusual toppings. It’s busy and bustling so arrive early or be prepared to wait for a table. However the turn-over quick and the service efficient.

Popi Popi: Via delle Fratte di Trastevere, 45. On one of the little alleys that join Viale Trastevere to the basilica of Santa Maria in Trastevere, Popi Popi is excellent for both its pizzas and its prices. Very popular with young Romans, especially in summer, when you can sit outside and enjoy Trastevere’s bustle. There’s a selection of traditional dishes in addition to pizzas.

Bars & Pubs Snack & Quick meals:
Friends Art Café:
Piazza Trilussa, 32-34. Excellent for both breakfast and aperitif. Snacks set out on the counter are included in the price of a drink. Behind the bar there’s a dining area decorated with modern paintings that serves salads, vegetable pies and a small selection of pastas and meat dishes, plus desserts.

I Dolci di Checco er Carrettiere: Via Benedetta, 7. Located behind Piazza Trilussa, this small bar, annexed to one of the Trastevere’s oldest restaurants, has outstanding cakes and pastries, plus fresh quiches, crisp crocchette and, usually, tasty baked pasta. There’s a savvy selection of malt whiskies too, and some of the best gelato this side of the Tiber.

Enoteca Ferrara: Piazza Trilussa 41A. Tasteful "enoteca" with a 900-label cellar. The apartheid wine lists (one book for whites, one for reds) provide a happy evening’s reading. Some punters come to Ferrara to buy a bottle, some for a pre-or-post-dinner glass of wine, some overcome the slight diffidence of the bar staff and succumb to one of the wholesome-looking dishes on the counter. The more serious eater, however, books in advance and takes advantage of the restaurant’s inventive offerings, including mussel and clam soup and fried fillet of perch, served with red cabbage and lemon. In spring/summer time you can wine and dine in a pretty garden at the back. Perfect for both a glass of wine or a romantic dinner.

Enoteca Trastevere: Via della Lungaretta, 86. The name says it all. A fine wine bar offering dozens of wines by the glass. Large list of beers, cocktails and fine spirits.

Freni e Frizioni: Via del Politeama 4-6. Cool bar - Great Brunch.

Ombre Rosse Caffè: P.S. Egidio, 12. A mellow place to sit outside and people watch. From full breakfast to afternoon tea, from aperitifs to nightcaps. Live jazz or blues couple of nights a week. Wine by glass, cocktails, pint of beer.

Bibli: Via dei Fienaroli. A great place for Sunday brunch, or just for coffee.

Stardust lounge: Vicolo dè Renzi, 4. Small club in Trastevere full of atmosphere. Altough it no longer live music, the setting retains a jazz club feel in a soulful way rare in Rome.

Glass Hosteria: Vicolo del Cinque 58. Cocktail & wine bar, wine by glass, cocktails, pint of beer.

Original Language Cinemas:

Alcazar - Via Merry del Val, 14 - 06-5880099 (Trastevere)

Nuovo Olimpia - Via in Lucina, 16g - Tel. 06-6861068

Metropolitan - Via del Corso, 7 - Tel. 06-3200933

Where to Shop:

For English Books:

The Almost Corner Bookshop: Via del Moro, 45 (tel. +39-06-5836942). Open from 10.00 until 13.30 and from 15.30 until 20.00. All types of books from best-sellers to guides of Rome and Italy (Lonely Planet, Touring Club, Michelin, Let’s go) and anything a customer requests.

About Trastevere:

Beside the Tiber at the end of the fine Sixtus Bridge, rebuilt by Baccio Pontelli under Sixtus IV (1474) one arrives in Trastevere,  the most popular and the most Roman of all the districts in Rome. Starting with Piazza Trilussa where there is a a large XVI century fountain designed by G. Fontana and, in a corner among the plants, the monument to Trilussa, the noted Romanesque poet. At n. 20, Via S. Dorotea is the famous House of Baker Girl, the beautiful girl of the people, daughter of a baker, who was loved by Raphael. The name Trastevere refers either to its trans Tevere (across the Tiber) location or its settlement during the reign of emperor Tiberius – has a distinct Roman soul all its own. The Trasteverini claim to be descendants of the purest Roman stock – Romani dé Roma (Romans from Rome). Some residents even claim never to have crossed the river.

Trastevere, amongst Rome’s most picturesque neighborhood, and certainly its most entertaining to live, is south of the Vatican and west , across the Tiber from the Centro Storico. Viale Trastevere runs across Ponte Garibaldi all the way to Largo Argentina and Corso Vittorio Emanuele II and is the main drag of the neighbourhood. Most of the Trastevere’s points of interest lie near this street, and not far from the river. Between Trastevere and the Vatican is the exclusive and park-like Janiculum Hill, or the Gianicolo. Trastevere is home to raucous pubs, pizza joints, and a loud bohemian population. By day, the cobblestone streets rumble with the sounds of children and Vespas, but when night falls, hippy expats add their voices to the madding throng in Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere. You may have difficulties in finding a table outside in the summer months without reservation.

The legendary founder of Ostia, KingAncus Martius, first founded Trastevere not as a residential spot but as a commercial and military outpost to protect the valuable salt-beds at the base of the Tiber. The Vatican and Gianicolo hills that flank Trastevere became important outposts for defending the city from Etruscan invasions. During the Empire, sailors in the imperial fleet inhabited the area, building mud and clay huts along the river’s banks. The success of a commercial port started by Hadrian lured Syrian and Jewish merchants to the neighbourhood, and the maritime business flourished alongside such cottage industries as tanning, carpentry, milling, and prostitution.


By the Middle Ages, Trastevere’s commercial activity began to wane and many residents retreated to the other side of the river. In his 1617 guidebook, editor Fynes Moryson warned readers, “because the aire is unwholesome, as the winde that blows here from the South, Trastevere is onely inhabited by Artisans and poor people”. The popes took little interest in the neighbourhood and rarely extended their wealth to build churches or monuments here. The community remained fiercely self-sufficient and in keeping with its independent spirit, Trastevere supported two revolutions in the 19th century: Mazzini’s quest for a Republic in 1849 and Garibaldi’s resurgence in 1867.

After World War II, things began to change – drastically. The cause was gentrification, as the quaintly “backward” ways of Trasteverini slowly became celebrated by wealthy bohemian types and tourist operators. An recent influx of yoga stores, souvenir vendors, and middle-aged tourists has brought the threat of banality to this famously “authentic” Roman neighbourhood. The area has more or less retained its gusto. To keep the spirit of independence alive, Noantri (“we others”, in dialect) is celebrated during the last two weeks of July. Though a bit tacky, the festival features religious processions, masses dedicated to protecting “the life of Trastevere”, some kiddie rides, and a porchetta (roast pig) on every corner

Not to be missed:

Sites and Monuments:

Santa Maria in Trastevere ** - This august basilica rises up in the heart of Trastevere, on the square of the same name decorated by a XVII cent. fountain and dominated by the fine Place of S. Calisto (XVII cent.). This was the first church in Rome to be dedicated to Virgin Mary, the floorplan and wall structure of Santa Maria in Trastevere dates back to the 340s AD though this basilica has been added onto multiple times over the centuries. The present construction dates from 1130-43. The front, adorned with XII and XIII cent. Mosaics and fine Romanesque bell-tower is reached via a portico under which are various marble and funeral tablets.
The interior has a nave and two aisles on large ancient trabeated granite columns, a Cosmatesque pavement and a rich wooden roof to a designed by Domenichino (1617). In the Presbitery, closed by a marble surround, a mark indicates the place where, according to legend, oil spurted out on the day of Christ’s birth. The apse features gorgeous, large and important mosaics by Pietro Cavallini * dating back 1140.  Though this structure dates from the 12th centur, an earlier basilica existed on the site under Calixtus in the 3rd century. The mosaics of the Virgin and the saintly women lining the exterior give way to a sea of gold and marble inside. The 12th-century mosaics in the apse and the chancel arch depict Jesus, Mary, and a bev of saints and popes in rich Byzantine detail.

The museum of Roman Folklore and the Romanesque Poets, is being arranged (1980) in the nearby Piazza St. Egidio, with part of the collection previously displayed in the Braschi Palace.

Via della Lungara – Long straight road of Renaissance Rome, opened under Julius II, between the Septimius Gate in the Aurelian wall and the S. Spirito Gate, by A. Sangallo the Younger (1540). Palazzo Corsini is at n. 10, and in front of it the famous Farnesina.

Palazzo Corsini *  (Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica) - The Palace was rebuilt by F. Fuga in 1732 in austere Baroque form and is now the headquarter of Accademia dei Lincei, famous cultural institute founded in 1603. The 1st floor of the palace while awaiting the definite transfer to the Barberini palace, houses part of National Gallery collection comprising a fine and valuable collection of Italian and foreign works of the XVII and XVIII cents.: paintings by Caravaggio, O. Gentileschi, G. Reni, Guercino, Baciccia, L. Giordano, Canaletto, Valentin; van Laer, Rubens, van Dyck, Murillo, van Wittel.

The overflow from the national collection at Palazzo Barberini is housed here, includine the standard assortment of works by Guercino, Reni, Caravaggio, Rubens and Carracci. Via della Lungara 10. Tel. 06-68802323. Tues-Sun 9am-7.30 pm”.

Farnesina ** - The Villa, one of the architectural jewels of the Renaissance, all grace and harmony, was built by F. Peruzzi (1508-11) for the Senese banker Agostino Chigi, who received Popes, cardinals, princes and artists there; in 1580 it passed to the Farnese family.

On the ground floor a visit should be made to the Gallery, which has a beautifully painted vault (Story of Psyche**) by Raphael (1517) with the help of Giulio Romano, F. Penni and Giovanni da Udin, and an adjoining room also painted by Raphael (the famous Galatea **, 1511), B. Peruzzi (Constellations) and Sebastiano del Piombo (Polyphemus and scenes of the metamorphosis). On the 1st floor, the Hall of Architectural Perspectives, painted by B. Peruzzi and helpers; in the bedroom, Marriage of Alexander and Rossana **, a glorious fresco by Sodoma. The Gabinetto Nazionale delle Stampe (National Collection of Prints) is also in the palace, Italian and foreign prints from XV to XIX cent..

This graceful little Renaissance villa along the banks of theTiber has frescoes by Rapahael, Peruzzi and Sodoma and is in general a very pleasant place to be. Via della Lungara, 230. Tel. 68801767. Mon-Sat 9am – 1pm.

S. Pietro in Montorio * - The Church of St. Peter is placed where, according to tradition, St. Peter was crucified, and was rebuilt in simple Renaissance form perhaps by Baccio Pontelli (XV cent.).
The interior, a single nave with chapels and niches, contains various works of art: in the 1st chapel on the r., Flagellation, by Sebastiano del Piombo; in the 4st chapel L., Deposition, by the Caravaggio-esque Dirck van Baburen (1617). From the square, panorama * of Rome. In the small court on the r. of the church the Tempietto of Bramante **, an elegant circular building with an outer ring of columns and cupola, of classica simplicity and monumentality (1502). A hole in the chapel below is said to be where the cross of St. Peter was fixed.

Built on the spot once believed to be the site os St. Peter’s upside-down crucifixion, the biggest draw of the Church of S. Pietro in Montorio is a masterly Flagellazione di Gesu, painted on slate by Sebastiano del Piombo from designs by Michelangelo. The Church also contains the tombs of Irish noblemen, exiles persecuted by English Protestants. Next door in the center of a small courtyard is the stunning Template of Bramante. A combination of Renaissance and Classical architecture, it provided the inspiration for the larger dome of St. Peter’s.

Passeggiata del Gianicolo * - After the Pincio, this is the most beautiful and frequented walk in Rome, famous, above all for the splendid panorama it offers. Before the entrance to the park is the Paola Fountain of the time of Paul V, with a majestic display of architecture by F. Ponzio and G. Fontana. An avenue leads to the vast square, Piazzale del Gianicolo, the middle dominated by the equestrian statue of Garibaldi, by E. Gallori (1895), and from the terrace of which, a magnificent panorama * of the city can be enjoyed. Continuing down the avenue one meets the monument to Anita Garibaldi (1932) and comes out into the opening with the Faro della Vittoria. This gives the most complete panorama ** of the city, which can be seen spread out from St. Peter’s to he Villa Borghese, to St. Mary Major and St. John in the Lateran, and the Aventin. The slope steepens; near a turning is the trunk of the Tasso Oak which was struck by lightning, under whose shade the poet used to sit. The Church of St. Onofrius is near a hospital just before the end of the walk.

Look down over all of Rome’s monuments. Reach the summit by walking from Via Garibaldi, Trastevere. The cannon goes off every day at noon. Bus 870 from Piazza Fiorentini (off Corso Vittorio Emanuele, where it meets the Tiber).

Botanical Garden – Filled with well-labeled specimens of trees and flowers, the gardens remain green and luxuriant even when the rest of Rome is dull and brown. The remarkable assemblage of flora stretches from valleys of ferns through groves of bamboo to a hilltop Japanise Garden. Of interest are the garden of roses cultivated during the Baroque period in Rome, containing the two founding bushes from which all domesticated Italian roses supposedly have sprung, and the stellar Garden for the Blind, a star-shaped garden of various plants labelled in Braille.S. Onofrio – Rises picturesquely at the top of a panoramic flight of steps with a lovely terrace on the left. It was founde in 1419 and altered. Three Domenichino frescoes are under the portico on the r. The interior has an Annuncation, an early work by Antoniazzo Romano (1st chapel r.) and frescoes by Peruzzi (1503), others in the style of Pinturicchio in the polygonal apse. In the adjoining CONVENT Torquato Tasso died in 1595; charming cloister with portico and loggia. The small Tassiano Museum is in the rooms occupied by the Ordine Equestre del Sepolcro di Gerusalemme with relicts, editions and translations and the tombstone of the poet (in another room, a lunette with the Madonna and Child and donors, attributed to Boltraffio, 1513).



More info:   Description   Facilities   Where We Are   FAQ   Photo Gallery  Tips and Area