Viale Garibaldi, one of the very few green areas in Venice. Well chiefly "green" in summer to tell the truth. You cross it when, stopping at the Vaporetto station "Giardini", you go towards Via Garibaldi and Isola di San Pietro.
Heart of the city, the Doge's Palace dates from around year 810. By this time it was nothing more than a stronghold with high walls and defensive towers. The palace as we can admire it nowadays, is the result of a long series of unfortunate events, as fires, and of various reconstructions and improvements...
Large bank at the south of the Castello, la Riva degli Schiavoni stretches from the Palazzo Ducale to the Arsenal. It's a nice and sunny promenade along St Mark's Basin, sometimes packed with tourists...
In the north of the island, in the quiet sestiere of Cannaregio, along the wide Fondamente Nove, you will discover Santa Maria Asunta, also known as the Church of the Gesuiti. A huge baroque building from the 17th century.
At dawn my lover comes to me And tells me of her dreams With no attempts to shovel the glimpse Into the ditch of what each one means At times I think there are no words But these to tell what's true And there are no truths outside the Gates of Eden Bob Dylan
Comings and goings, all day long, on the new "Calatrava" glass and stone bridge, linking the railway station to Piazzale Roma where the bus station is...
In spite of the innumerable footsteps I've left on Venice's ground, there still are some places that I've the surprise to discover. Or maybe did I just forgot them...
I cannot walk through the suburbs in the solitude of the night without thinking that the night pleases us because it suppresses idle details, just as our memory does. Jorge Luis Borges
An American living in Venice, or maybe a Venetian who dreams to go and live in Missoula, Montana... It could have been my clothes line indeed. It's not. Too bad!
"When one door closes, another opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one which has opened for us." Alexander Graham Bell
Always buzing with activity, Bacino Orceolo, right near Piazza San Marco, on the other side of the Old Procuraties, is the most important gondolas "parking" and "station" in the very heart of the city.
Crossing the Academia bridge is always a perfect occasion to take some rest in your day stroll and, leaning over the water as on a ship's rail, observe the activity on the canal and, even further, on St Mark's basin.