Venice Tourist Information
Welcome to Venice
Grand Canal, Venice

Grand Canal, Venice

The Grand Canal is the main channel of Venice. Along 3800 meters (width from 30 to 70 m, average depth of 5 m), divided into two parts the old town by drawing an "S" that goes from the Santa Lucia train station to the Punta della Dogana. Public transport is provided by vaporetti and water taxis, and many tourists ride the canal by gondola. It is flanked along the length by magnificent buildings of the centuries twelfth to eighteenth, which manifest the welfare and art created by the Republic of Venice, making it one of the symbols of the city. Every year the Venetians live on old traditions such as the Regata Storica of Venice.

Grand Canal Venice

Canal Grande Pictures

 

Tourist Attractions of Venice

Venice-Travel-Guide is a tourism guide with articles and information on Venice, Italy. Your source for travel news, photos, travel advice for vacations, travel deals, discount travel packages, and travel guides including information on popular Venice attractions. This site gives you the best travel content online for travel, tourism and vacation planning.

Search for tourist attractions below, and read more about all the exciting things to do in Venice. Click on the attraction to get more tourist information. If your time in Venice is limited, see our list of top 10 tourist attractions in Venice.

In this section you will find information about main tourist attractions of Venice historical center: top tourist places to visit, historic sites, gardens and parks, visitor attractions, advices for sightseeing, pictures, highlights, most popular photos, details of all sights and landmarks and things to do; definitely the best tourism and travel guide in Venice.

Monuments and Museums in Venice
Venice Churches
Venice Bridges
Venice Squares

Venice Top Ten Attractions

For first-time visitors to the city, we offer a list of the most popular museums, sights and main tourist attractions in Venice, Italy.

Saint Mark's Square

Saint Mark's Square

Piazza San Marco consists of an artistic complex of buildings in different styles that over time have created a harmonious setting to the square. Piazza San Marco is trapezoidal, and the Procuratie Vecchie and Procuratie Nuove run along the two extensive sides. They are known as old and new on the basis of the age of the buildings over the arcades.

The monumental Piazza San Marco is composed of three areas: the Piazza itself, the area enclosed between the Procuratie Vecchie and Nuove and the Basilica; the Piazzetta, in front of Palazzo Ducale and the Library; and the Piazzetta dei Leoncini, overlooking the Patriarchal Palace, so named for two statues of lions delimiting the central area elevated.

Grand Canal

Grand Canal

The Canal Grande is the main channel of Venice. Along 3800 meters (width from 30 to 70 m, average depth of 5 m), divided into two parts the old town by drawing an "S" that goes from the Ponte della Libertà to the Bacino di San Marco. Public transport is provided by vaporetti and water taxis, and many tourists ride the canal by gondola.

It is flanked along the length by magnificent buildings of the centuries twelfth to eighteenth, which manifest the welfare and art created by the Republic of Venice, making it one of the symbols of the city. Every year the Venetians live on old traditions such as the Regata Storica of Venice.

Rialto Bridge

Rialto Bridge

The Ponte di Rialto is one of four bridges, in addition to the Accademia Bridge, the Ponte degli Scalzi and Constitution Bridge, crossing the Grand Canal in Venice. Of the four, the Rialto Bridge is the oldest, the most famous and one of the architectural icons of Venice. The Rialto Bridge is an arched stone bridge lined with arcades on each side.

Under the arcades are many shops. The bridge was designed by Antonio da Ponte in 1591. The project was considered by some people too daring from the engineering point of view, even according the architect Vincenzo Scamozzi the bridge would have collapsed.

Galleria Giorgio Franchetti Ca' d'Oro

Ca dOro in Venice

The Ca' d'Oro is a palace on the Grand Canal, one of the older palaces in the Venice. It is currently used as an art museum, the Galleria Giorgio Franchetti. The name Golden House derives from the fact that in the past some parts of the facade were covered with gold. The palace was built for the Contarini family between 1428 and 1430.

Internally the building has a C-shaped plant which is built around an open courtyard, in the center of which is placed a large marble well. The gallery houses a collection of works of art collected by Baron Giorgio Franchetti in his life. Among the most valuable works include the St. Sebastian by Andrea Mantegna, the Pietà with two angels by Marco Palmezzano, Venus in front of the mirror and Judith of Titian, vedute of Francesco Guardi, the Sleeping Venus by Paris Bordone and large portions of the frescoes Giorgione, from the facade of the Fondaco dei Tedeschi. The Vittore Carpaccio there are three canvases with the Stories of the Virgin.

Scuola Grande di San Rocco

Confraternity of St. Roch

The Scuola Grande di San Rocco is a magnificent edifice, devoted to one of the greatest schools or fraternities of Venice. It is truly rich and extraordinary, and one can scarcely conceive how an association of almost one hundred private citizens could lavish so much wealth in erecting perfect museum of the fine arts.

This majestic and noble structure is adorned both within and without, with columns, cornices, carved work and figures remarkable both for design and execution. Inside, the enormous pictorial work developed by Tintoretto for the fraternity stands out especially.

Basilica di Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari

Frari church

The Basilica di Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, usually just called the Frari, is one of the main churches in Venice. The imposing brick edifice is built in Italian Gothic style. The bell tower, finished in 1396, is one of the highest in the city. It is located in the Campo dei Frari of the same name, in the San Polo district, and is dedicated to the Assumption of Mary.

The church has so many Renaissance masterpieces that it is rightly felt to be one of the most import Renaissance "museums" in the city. Some of them are the Assumption and the Pesaro altar-piece by Titan, the Madonna and Saints by Giovanni Bellini, the St John the Baptist by Donatello and the Monument to Canova.

Campo dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo

Campo dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo

The Campo dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo is one of the largest squares of Venice, located in the Castello district, on the edge of Cannaregio. At the center of the campo, on a base of colored marble, there is the equestrian statue of Bartolomeo Colleoni by Verrocchio. Colleoni was a famous mercenary who fought for the Republic of Venice.

The impressive Santi Giovanni e Paolo church (San Zanipolo in Venetian dialect) closes the angle at the Scuola Grande di San Marco, a Renaissance building today the hospital of the city, which is also developed along the fondamenta del rio Mendicanti. The Scuola Grande de San Marco in ancient times was one of the main brotherhoods dedicated to carrying out works of charity.

Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute

Saint Mary of Health Church

In 1630 the government of the Serenissima Republic decided to build a votive temple dedicated to the Virgin Mary to celebrate the end of the Plague which had decimated more than a third of the Venetian population, the Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute. Of the eleven projects presented, Baldassare Longhena's was considered the best.

The church was given an octagonal form and raised almost theatrically onto a sort of platform preceded by a series of steps. The construction, externally punctuated by the prospects of the six chapels, is dominated by a large cupola, surrounded by a flock of angels. The church is used each year for a procession during the Feast of the Salute, which is still one of the Venetians' favourite events. Here you will find the a marvellous Byzantine icon, a polychrome marble floor and many paintings by Titian, Tintoretto and Luca Giordano.

Gallerie dell'Accademia

Accademia museum gallery

The Gallerie dell'Accademia is the main museum of Venice, which contains the best collection of Venetian art, especially related to the paintings of the period from the 14th century to the 18th century. The rich collection of paintings is represented by artists such as Giorgione, Giovanni Bellini, Carpaccio, Veronese, Tintoretto and Titian.

There are also preserved other forms of art such as sculptures and drawings, including the famous Uomo vitruviano by Leonardo da Vinci (shown only on special occasions). The Accademia Galleries are located in the Dorsoduro district, at the foot of the Ponte dell'Accademia, in what was until the early nineteenth century, the vast complex of the church of Santa Maria della Carità, the Monastery built by Palladio and the Scuola Grande di Santa Maria della Carità. They take their name from the Accademia di Belle Arti (Fine Arts Academy) opened in 1817 and they shared the complex until 2004.

Murano and Burano Islands

Murano Island

Murano is an island in the Venetian Lagoon, located north-east of Venice, composed of seven smaller islands, is known around the world for the craft of glassmaking. Murano is home to the Museo Vetrario or Glass Museum in the Palazzo Giustinian, which holds displays on the history of glassmaking.

Burano is an island known for its typical brightly colored houses, but also for the centuries-old lace work and gastronomic traditions.

 

Subcategories

Full information and details about the Monuments and Museums of Venice. This guide to the places of interest in Venice offers basical information about some of the historical buildings and most important attractions in Venice.


Although San Marco is free, other famous churches charge an entry fee. If you plan to visit three churches or more, you are better off buying the churches pass. There is also a combined pass for museums, churches and transportation only available at the tourist information office but it is relatively expensive.


The waterways are the lifeblood of the city and the most well known canal in Venice is the Grand Canal, known by the locals as the most beautiful street in the world. The Grand Canal is crossed by four bridges: the Rialto bridge, the Ponte degli Scalzi near the railway station, the Accademia bridge near the eponymous art gallery, and a fourth bridge, the Constitution bridge, designed by Santiago Calatrava, which is a link between the railway station and Piazzale Roma.

Without a doubt, the most famous bridge in Venice is the Rialto Bridge, which has become an icon of the city. Rialto Bridge is also the main and oldest of the four bridges over the Grand Canal and until the 19th century, it was the only way to cross on foot from one bank to the other.

An alternative way of crossing the Grand Canal is to take a traghetto, a gondola-like boat capable of ferrying a dozen or so passengers from one bank to the other; for a small fee you too can enjoy the experience of being rowed across the Grand Canal and of having an original perspective of it.

In the past, bridges of Venice were built by the owners of buildings adjacent to the canals or were financed by a neighborhood tax. These were wooden bridges, often simple boards resting on the banks of a canal, and which were crossed on horseback. Stone bridges came later and none had railings. These were placed, made of brick or iron, at the beginning of the 19th century during Austrian domination.

The oldest bridge in stone in Venice was the beautiful Ponte della Paglia (Straw Bridge), built in 1170, which crosses the Rio di Palazzo next to the Doge's Palace, connecting the Piazzetta with the Riva degli Schiavoni. This bridge is usually full of tourists because it allows an excellent view of the Ponte dei Sospiri (Bridge of Sighs).

The only bridge without a railing found in the historic center of Venice is the Ponte Chiodo, near the Ca' d'Oro, in Cannaregio. There is another bridge without a railing, the Ponte del Diavolo (Devil's Bridge) on the island of Torcello.

But... How many bridges are there in Venice? The number of bridges in Venice is 438, of which 90 are private, and which adds up to 455 if the Murano (9) and Burano (8) bridges are included.

The 10 most beautiful bridges in Venice (Italy) are: Ponte di Rialto, Ponte dei Sospiri, Ponte della Paglia, Ponte dell'Accademia, Ponte degli Scalzi, Ponte Chiodo, Ponte dei Pugni, Ponte delle Guglie, Ponte de l'Arsenal or del Paradiso and Ponte della Costituzione.


There is another Venice that we would like to introduce to you, the Venice of aromas, of gardens and parks dotted around it, most of them very beautiful, but tucked well out of sight and largely unknown to the general public.

Great places to take a break and enjoy the intimate gardens or the public parks, are the Napoleonic (Biennale) gardens, the Groggia gardens with its small theatre, the St. Elena pinewood, the Savorgnan gardens, the Papadopoli gardens, the Giardinetti Reali not to mention the museum garden of Ca' Rezzonico, Ca'Zenobio, Ca' Tron or the Cini Foundation and the small landscaped courtyard garden of Querini Stampalia.

And what about the gardens and orchards of the islands? From the Lido with its liberty gardens to S.Erasmo, San Lazzaro degli Armeni, San Francesco del Deserto, or the oasis and parks you have a great choice.

Venice is also green spaces that the genius of its inhabitants has managed to create in the lagoon, so we invite you to deviate from the beaten tracks to discover and get lost in another Venice.

At one time Venice was surrounded by green fields, the squares of the city were used for growing or grazing of animals (hence the origin of the name Campo), but over the centuries, these areas have been gradually covered by paving stones. Nowadays the public gardens area is not very extensive, it is about 120,500 square meters divided into six gardens scattered around the city. These parks are: St. Helena, Napoleon Gardens, Groggia Gardens, Savorgnan Park, Papadopoli Gardens and the Royal Gardens.


Strolling through the old, winding streets of Venice at some point you will find yourself on one of the city’s numerous squares, called campi in Italian, for they started out as grassy fields (campo means 'field'). Most smaller campi are known to hold daily markets, which have become an attraction in their own right. Piazza San Marco, the only piazza in Venice, is one of the most magnificent squares in the world, comprising a remarkable ensemble of architectural buildings. Campo San Polo, Campo Santa Margherita, Campo San Stefano and Campo dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo attract nearly as many visitors with their sights and unique atmosphere. Almost always located in front of a church and therefore paved, they are lively meeting places extremely valued by Venetians, young and older ones.