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10 Best place to visit in Breganze Italy

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Best Things to Do in Bologna, Italy

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ViewCation Presents: Best Things to Do in Bologna, Italy.

Bologna is the ideal spot to go sightseeing because it is big enough that there are plenty of activities to partake in and sights to behold, yet small enough to avoid the suffocating crowds that sometimes overwhelm larger towns. Bologna houses the oldest university in the Western hemisphere, as well as several antique buildings and cathedrals that date back thousands of years. In addition, there are some of the best meals we've ever had, as well as fantastic markets and entertainment. The list of awesome things to do, taste, see and embrace is quite extensive. However, one of the best things to do in Bologna is to visit the city's many food markets.

▬Contents of this video▬
00:00 - Intro
00:20 - Climb the Two Towers
01:05 - Explore the Local Food Markets
01:41 - Walk Under the Historic Porticoes
02:30 - Go on a Bologna Food Tour
03:31 - Go For Aperitivo
04:06 - Tour Prendiparte Tower
04:48 - Visit Basilica San Petronio
05:16 - Take A Bologna Bike Tour
05:47 - Feast Your Way Around the Mercato Delle Erbe
06:16 - Go for a Run Through San Pellegrino Park
06:44 - Visit La Piazzola
07:08 - Tour Piazza Maggiore
07:37 - Outro

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Visiting the different farmers' markets of a city is a great opportunity to get to know the culture through its food. Bologna houses some of Italy's most renowned marketplaces, making any trip there an adventure in and of itself. You can find FICO Eataly World, which bills itself as the world's largest food park, not far from the primary thoroughfare. You can make the most of your time in Bologna by visiting some amazing eateries and trying some of their delicious food and drinks.

Also on the list of best things to do in Bologna includes going on a Bologna bike tour. Biking around Bologna is a great way to view the city and its surroundings at a more leisurely pace than walking would allow. A guided bike trip will be among the most memorable experiences you'll have in this city. Close to Bologna's train station, BIKEinBo provides a two-hour guided bike tour that is both entertaining and informative, providing an excellent introduction to the city's long and storied past. Regardless of your hobbies or passions, you'll find something to enjoy in Bologna.

Best Things to Do in Bologna, Italy
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Thiene Bonin Longare Palace, Vicenza, Veneto, Italy, Europe

Thiene Bonin Longare Palace is a patrician palace in Vicenza, northern Italy, designed by Andrea Palladio probably in 1572 and built after Palladio's death by Vincenzo Scamozzi. It is one of the city palazzi of the Thiene family that Palladio worked upon, the other being Palazzo Thiene in the near contrà Porti. Since 1994 the palace has formed part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site the current name of which is City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto. There are more doubts than certainties surrounding the history of the urban villa that Francesco Thiene built on family properties at the eastern extremity of the Strada Maggiore, today the Corso Palladio, beginning with the exact date of its construction. At Palladio’s death the building had still not been executed: on the Pianta Angelica of 1580, in fact, there still appear only old houses and a garden. A document of 1586 records that construction had still not begun, but certainly in 1593, on the death of the patron Francesco Thiene, the palace was at least a third built. Enea Thiene, who inherited the estate of his uncle Francesco, carried works to their conclusion, probably within the first decade of the 17th century. In 1835 the palace was acquired by Lelio Bonin Longare. In his treatise L'idea della architettura universale (published in Venice in 1615), Vincenzo Scamozzi writes that he was responsible for completing the building’s construction on the basis of a project by another architect with certain revisions to the original design. The architect that Scamozzi does not name is certainly Andrea Palladio, because two autograph sheets survive which can be referred to Francesco Thiene’s palace: on these are traced two plan variants, substantially close to the present building, as well as a sketch for the façade which is very different from that executed. It is unclear when Palladio formulated his own ideas for the palazzo, but it is credible that he did so in 1572, the year in which Francesco Thiene and his uncle Orazio divided up the family properties and the former obtained the very site where Palladio’s edifice would rise. If one analyses the realised building, various elements stand out which favour a dating to the 1570s: for example, the many points of contact with the Palazzo Barbaran da Porto, both in the design of the lower part and in the great, double-storey loggia of the courtyard. Instead, the side could be the work of Vincenzo Scamozzi, given its affinities with the Palazzo Trissino by the Duomo. The deep atrium, which is substantially indifferent to the grid of architectural orders, could also be by Scamozzi and while the rooms on its right, as one enters, clearly reuse rather irregular, pre-existing walls, those on the left are perfectly regular and evidently rise from new foundations.
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Thiene Palace, Vicenza, Veneto, Italy, Europe

Thiene Palace is a 15th-16th-century palace in Vicenza, northern Italy, designed for Marcantonio and Adriano Thiene, probably by Giulio Romano, in 1542, and revised during construction from 1544 by Andrea Palladio. In 1994 the palace was included in the Vicenza, city of Palladio World Heritage Site by UNESCO. In 1996 the World Heritage Site was renamed City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto, and it was expanded to include outlying villas. The palace is used as the historic headquarters of a bank and it also hosts some exhibitions and culture events. The palazzo was the headquarter of Banca Popolare di Vicenza. The original Gothic palace was committed by Lodovico Thiene to Lorenzo da Bologna in 1490, with an East front on contrà Porti made of bricks squared by angular lesenes worked at diamond edge, with a portal by Tommaso da Lugano and a triple window made in rose marble. In October 1542 Marcantonio and Adriano Thiene began to remodel their 15th century family palace in a grandiose project, which would have occupied an entire city block of 54 x 62 metres and faced onto Vicenza’s principal artery (today’s Corso Palladio). The rich, powerful and sophisticated Thiene brothers belonged to that great Italian nobility which could move with ease among Europe’s most important courts: they therefore required a domestic stage adequate for the cosmopolitan expectations of their guests who might visit them. At the same time, as exponents of a well-defined, political faction in the city’s aristocracy, they desired a princely palace to emphasise their proper role in the city itself, as the sign of their quasi-seigniorial power. When in 1614 the young English architect Inigo Jones visited the palace, he noted down information directly garnered from Vincenzo Scamozzi and Palma il Giovane: “this project was made by Giulio Romano and executed by Palladio”. Most probably, in fact, the original conception of the Palazzo Thiene should be attributed to the mature and expert Giulio Romano and the young Palladio should be held responsible rather for the executive design and execution of the building, a role which became ever more essential after Giulio’s death in 1546. The elements of the palace which are attributable to Giulio and alien to Palladio’s vocabulary are clearly recognisable: the four-column atrium is substantially identical with that of the Palazzo Te; also Giulian are the windows and the ground storey facades onto the street and courtyard, while Palladio must have been defined the upper storey trabeation and capitals. Works began on the building in 1542. In December of the same year, Giulio Romano visited Vicenza for two weeks as a consultant on the Loggias for the Basilica. Probably on this occasion he supplied the outline project for the Palazzo Thiene. But works proceeded slowly: on the external facade is inscribed the date 1556, and in the courtyard 1558. In 1552 Adriano Thiene died in France and thereafter, when Marcantonio’s son Giulio became marchese of Scandiano, family interests gradually shifted to Ferrara. As a result, only a small portion of the grandiose project was ever realised, but probably neither the Venetians nor the other Vicentine nobles would have accepted such a grandiose private enclave in the centre of their city.

Places to see in ( Vicenza - Italy ) Chiesa di Santa Corona

Places to see in ( Vicenza - Italy ) Chiesa di Santa Corona

Santa Corona is a Gothic-style, Roman Catholic church located in Vicenza, region of Veneto, Italy. The church contains the Valmarana chapel, whose design is attributed to the Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio.

Construction on the church was begun in 1261 by the Blessed (Beato) Bishop Bartolomeo di Breganze to house a thorn from the supposed relic of the crown (corona) of thorns forced on Jesus during his passion. The thorn had been given to this bishop as a gift from Louis IX of France. The church belonged to the Dominican order until suppression during the Napoleonic era.

The church has an altarpiece depicting, the Baptism of Christ (1500-1502) by Giovanni Bellini. The Thiene chapel has frescos by Michelino da Besozzo, and an altarpiece depicting an Enthroned Madonna and child venerated by Saints Peter and Pius V by Gianbattista Pittoni. Other works in the church include an Adoration of the Magi’’ by Veronese, a Madonna of the Star‘ by Marcello Fogolino, a St Mary Magdalen with Saints Jerome, Paola and Monica, (1414-1415) by Bartolomeo Montagna, a canvas depicting St Anthony and friars distributing alms to poor (1518) by Leandro Bassano, and two canvases with depictions of St Sebastian and St Martin by Battista da Vicenza.

After the death of one of his patrons, Antonio Valmarana, likely in 1576, Palladio designed this funereal chapel. Santa Corona had already been the church were other members of the family had been interred. Ten years earlier, Palladio had designed the Palazzo Valmarana in town for the family. The chapel was constructed by 1597, and family members transferred here. While there is no documentary evidence linking this design to Palladio, it highly resembles his chapels found at the Il Redentore in Venice.

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SPV Superstrada PEDEMONTANA VENETA | aggiornamento 2023 | Malo - Spresiano A27

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Sovraimpressione della segnaletica stradale verticale lungo tutto il percorso.

Superstrada Pedemontana Veneta
START: SP 46 Malo - inizio tratto aperto
END: Autostrada A27 direzione Venezia
***???????????????????????????????? : May 2023
recorded and edited by HWYitalia

♫ TRACKLIST:
(from Epidemic Sound)
Inner Universe - Freeze Dream
Moodini - Young Community
Beach Memories - Sum Wave

La Superstrada Pedemontana Veneta è un'arteria stradale italiana a pagamento di proprietà della Regione del Veneto in concessione a pedaggio ed è percorribile tra Malo e Spresiano, dove si innesta all'A27. Non ha una classificazione alfanumerica come le altre autostrade italiane, ma è identificata dalla sigla SPV.

È stata aperta in sei diverse fasi progressive, a partire dal 3 giugno 2019 fino al 6 aprile 2023. È percorribile per un tratto di circa 82 km sui 94,747 km totali previsti da Malo a Spresiano, dove dal 6 aprile 2023 è collegata all'A27.

A completamento di tutti i lavori sarà un'arteria che collegherà Montecchio Maggiore a Spresiano passando per i distretti industriali di Malo, Thiene e Schio, per Bassano del Grappa, per Montebelluna e a nord di Treviso, interconnettendosi a 3 autostrade (da ovest: la A4, la A31 e la A27).

Assieme alla Strada di grande comunicazione Firenze-Pisa-Livorno e l’autostrada Catania-Siracusa è una delle tre strade che ha ricevuto in via definitiva una classificazione formata solo da lettere e non alfanumerica.

L'apertura al traffico del primo tratto (da Breganze all'allacciamento con l'autostrada A31 Valdastico) di 7,2 km è avvenuta il 3 giugno 2019, mentre la conclusione dell'intera opera era prevista per settembre 2020.
A dicembre 2019 i vertici di Spv e SIS stimavano la conclusione dell'opera per novembre 2021.
Il 18 giugno 2020 viene inaugurato il secondo tratto da Malo all'allacciamento con l'autostrada A31 Valdastico portando l'intero tracciato percorribile a 12 km. Il completamento dell'opera viene confermato entro la fine del 2021, esclusa la galleria di Malo e l'allacciamento con l'autostrada A4, quest'ultimo previsto entro i primi mesi del 2024.
A fine agosto 2020 la struttura è allagata a causa delle piogge e resta chiusa per un giorno “in via precauzionale” nel tratto compreso tra Malo e la A31 Valdastico.
Il 19 novembre 2020 è stato aperto il terzo tratto Breganze-Bassano Ovest, seguito dall'apertura del tratto Bassano Ovest-Montebelluna di altri 35 chilometri il 28 maggio 2021.
L'8 luglio 2022 è stato aperto il quinto tratto Montebelluna-Spresiano di altri 14,5 chilometri.
Il 6 aprile 2023 è stato inaugurato l'allacciamento finale del lato trevigiano della superstrada con l'autostrada A27.

La Pedemontana è una strada a due carreggiate indipendenti, ciascuna con due corsie per senso di marcia ognuna larga 3,75 metri, con corsia d'emergenza larga 3 metri, con banchina sinistra di 75 cm e con spartitraffico centrale di 3,00 metri, costituendo una piattaforma di 25,50 metri di sezione.
La velocità di progetto è pari a 120 km/h per tutto il percorso.
Degli oltre 90 chilometri di tracciato, 50 km sono in trincea, 26,5 km in rilevato, 7,8 km in gallerie naturali e 5,9 km in gallerie artificiali.
Il pedaggio per la tratta già in funzione è di 0,16420 €/km per i veicoli di classe A, 0,29405 €/km per i veicoli delle altre classi.

L'infrastruttura, realizzata in finanza di progetto da Superstrada Pedemontana Veneta S.p.A., subentrata all'ATI SIS SCpA - Itinere SA il 15 febbraio 2011, che gestirà l'opera e ne riscuoterà il pedaggio per 39 anni, avrà un costo di 2.391 milioni di euro.

Il costo aggiornato al 2013, stimato per l'intero progetto è pari a 2258 M€, a fronte di un contributo pubblico globale, sia statale che regionale, di 615 M€ a cui si dovranno aggiungere gli eventuali contributi regionali in ragione dei flussi di traffico per il bilancio economico del project financing.

Alla scadenza dei 39 anni l'infrastruttura tornerà in gestione alla Regione.

Fonte: Wikipedia

00:00 Introduzione
00:40 svincolo di Malo - inizio SPV
02:00 interconnessione A31 Valdastico
02:55 Breganze
04:00 Colceresa - Pianezze - Marostica
05:10 Bassano del Grappa
06:40 Loria - Mussolente
07:25 Riese Pio X
08:40 Altivole
10:50 Montebelluna
12:15 Povegliano
13:10 Spresiano - Villorba
13:45 Allacciamento A27 Venezia - Belluno

BARTOLOMEO COLLEONI - ITALY, VENICE

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Marostica. The place to live. To love. To visit.

Video promozionale del Comune di Marostica versione inglese

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Porto Breganze Palace, Vicenza, Veneto, Italy, Europe

Porto Breganze Palace, the most sumptuous of the buildings of the time, with a portal by Lorenzo da Bologna adorned with delicate marble carvings, and a unique four-light window of its kind. In the exceptional sequence of late Gothic palaces of contrà Porti Palazzo da Porto Breganze, built around the middle of the fifteenth century, stands out for its noble lines and rich decorative solutions. The prominent element of the facade is the superb marble four-light window, which repeats, unique in the mainland, the features of the Venetian Ca ’d’oro. The round-headed door, the only asymmetric element of the façade, bears instead the indication «1481» and is considered one of the first works from Vicenza of the workshop of Tommaso da Lugano and Bernardino da Como; characteristic, the carved decoration of racemes and candelabras.

Places to see in ( Vicenza - Italy )

Places to see in ( Vicenza - Italy )

Vicenza is a city in the Veneto region of northeast Italy. It’s known for the elegant buildings designed by the 16th-century architect Andrea Palladio. These include the Palladian Basilica and the Palazzo Chiericati, now home to an art gallery. Nearby, also by Palladio, the Teatro Olimpico replicates a classic outdoor theater, indoors. On the outskirts of town, the hilltop Villa La Rotonda has 4 identical facades.

Vicenza is located in the Veneto region of Italy, in its own province (the Provincia di Vicenza). It's a medium-sized town, with a population of 110,000. There has been a settlement here right back into the depths of history; remains of the Roman town can still be seen. Later, after the barbarian invasions which repeatedly devastated this part of Italy, it became a significant town, ruled at different times by various greater powers. For several centuries it was governed by Venice; then Napoleon, then the Austrians. In 1866 it became part of the new Kingdom of Italy.

Vicenza was a prosperous town under Venetian rule, and its pride was demonstrated in fine architecture, much of which still survives. Its 'unique appearance,' largely owing to the work of influential sixteenth-century architect Andrea Palladio, has led to the town's designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site: City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto. After Palladio, Vicenza is most famous for its trade in precious metals, it's also known as the 'City of gold'. It's a lovely town to visit; with a beautiful, compact town centre and attractive villas and viewpoints in the hills a short walk away.

The railway station is to the south-west of the town centre; most of Vicenza's attractions are clustered closely together inside the old town walls. Walking straight along Viale Roma from the railway station, you'll pass two bus stops for the number 8 - if you are planning a trip to the villas just outside town, check the latest timetable displayed here. Soon you'll arrive outside the old town gate, Porta Castello, but first you can visit the Giardino Salvi just outside the gateway: a shady park, ornamented with statues and the Palladian Loggia Valmarana, which is dramatically reflected in dark waters.

Just inside the gateway lies a very convenient self-service restaurant, Self Pause, which is a cheap and quick place to fill up before exploring the town centre. Around Vicenza you can admire many grand buildings by Palladio and his followers. The Italian word palazzo usually means any large building rather than a palace; but many of Vicenza's palazzi do merit the grander translation. Some of the town's buildings are medieval, with several in the Venetian Gothic style, but the majority date from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. They line the narrow lanes of Vicenza's town centre; which are called contra, a local word for 'street'.

As soon as you're inside the Porta you find yourself among the town's great buildings. One of the most curious is off to your right. Designed by Palladio, Palazzo Porto Breganze was never finished and stands in an abbreviated form. In front of you is the Corso Andrea Palladio, the centre's main thoroughfare, lined with smart shops and cafes. Some of Vicenza's grandest palazzi lie on Contra Porti, off to the left.

Piazza dei Signori, a few yards south of Corso Andrea Palladio, is the heart of town. It is dominated by two of Vicenza's most striking landmarks, the Basilica Palladiana, the town's medieval law courts, with an imposing later facade by Palladio, and the adjacent Torre di Piazza, a tall and skinny tower. Right in the long midday shadow cast by the tower you'll find one of Vicenza's tourist information offices, where you can pick up a town map, leaflets about local events and attractions and any advice you may need. A second office is located not far away, by the Teatro Olimpico.

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Prima del Torcolato DOC Breganze 2017

Shot on: Canon EOS 5D MarkIII
Lens: Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8 USM
Riprese e montaggio: Patrik Bertoldo
CdP: Videorizzonti

Tour nelle Terre del Sagrantino: alla scoperta delle migliori cantine

Tour nelle Terre del Sagrantino: alla scoperta delle migliori cantine.

Ciao! Siamo Elisa e Simone di Italy You Don't Expect, appassionati di borghi sconosciuti e sentieri naturalistici.

Un tour enogastronomico per scoprire il Sagrantino Docg umbro.
Abbiamo alternato la visita alle cantine con passeggiate nei borghi di Bevagna e Montefalco.

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- Azienda Agricola Montioni
- Arnaldo Caprai
- Il Carapace - Tenuta Castelbuono

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Bike the Prosecco Wine Road

Join Italiaoutdoors Food and Wine as we welcome spring with a bicycle tour of the Prosecco, Piave and other Veneto wine regions of Italy. We will visit the province of Treviso, where spring is welcomed with the Primavera del Prosecco festival, a celebration of the wine, food, art and culture of the region. We will bicycle each day through a different wine region of the Veneto, one of the largest wine producing regions in Europe, discovering the unique products of each DOC, from the world-renowned sparkling wine Prosecco, to lesser known regions such as Piave, Colli Berici, and Breganze. Wine Enthusiast named the Veneto one of the Top 10 Wine Destinations for 2012. Come visit with us!
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Sweet Hotel, Longa, Italy

Sweet Hotel, Longa, Italy
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The Sweet Hotel offers taste, style and a modern ambiance, and features minimalist rooms with free Wi-Fi and an LCD TV with Sky channels. You will be in the heart of the Veneto region, within easy reach of Vicenza, Padua and Treviso.
Set in the quiet town of Longa di Schiavon, the Sweet offers free parking. The property includes a beautiful sun deck, and an outdoor swimming pool, surrounded by sun loungers. The reading room and the peaceful garden are ideal to relax...
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Property Type: Hotel
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Address: Piazza Libertà 11, 36060 Longa, Italy
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Vicenza Cathedral, Vicenza, Veneto, Italy, Europe

Vicenza Cathedral is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Vicenza, Veneto, northern Italy. It is the seat of the Bishop of Vicenza, and is dedicated to the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary. Construction of the cathedral was begun in 1482, to plans by Lorenzo of Bologna, and completed in the 1560s. The cupola was planned by Andrea Palladio and probably the north doorway also. Only the original façade survived the bombing of World War II; the rest of the present building has been reconstructed. The maestri di cappella include Fra Ruffino d'Assisi (1525-31), Nicola Vicentino (1563-65), Giammateo Asola and his pupil Leone Leoni (1588-1627). The original facade is Gothic and attributed to Domenico da Venezia 16th century. It is divided into four sections: the lower one has five arches in transoms, the second with arches in the center of an oculus, the third is smooth, the fifth is decorated with five statues (and two pinnacles added in 1948). The construction of the apse in the Cathedral of Vicenza had begun in 1482 to the design of Lorenzo da Bologna, but in 1531 it was still unfinished. Early, temporary, roofing was erected in 1540, as a result of the possibility that Vicenza might host the Church Council which in the end was held at Trent. Only in 1557 did the Comune of Vicenza receive the financial means necessary from the Republic of Venice, in the shape of a bequest left by Bishop Zeno at the beginning of the century, and were therefore able to set in motion the work’s completion. Andrea Palladio, the author of the new project, most probably drew up an overall design which was however executed in two phases: from 1558 to 1559 the main cornice was built over the windows and the drum raised, while from 1564 to January 1566 the dome itself was constructed. The characteristic form of the lantern, abstract and devoid of decoration, was replicated on the summit of the cupolas of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice, and is also present in some of Palladio’s reconstructions of centrally planned antique temples, such as the Mausoleum of Romulus on the Via Appia. Since 1994, the dome, together with other Palladian buildings in and around Vicenza, has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto. It is slightly detached from the church and placed in the street that runs along the south side of the cathedral. It rests on a 10th-century stone base, the bell tower dates from the twelfth century and has five bells, in the chord of Eb, the oldest still in place was cast in the seventeenth century.

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Venice travel, Best of Venice, hidden place, Madonna music. Best of Venice tours as well as Florence, Rome & other cities as Diana guides you through Italy's masterpiece-packed cities. Beginning with Venice's timeless St. Mark's Square and Basilica, then on bakeries, bars, pastry shops, churches. With detours to Michelangelo's stunning David and the Uffizi Gallery in Florence & Rome's Ancient Forum, Colosseum, Pantheon, Vatican Museum & Sistine Chapel. For more information on Diana's FREE video tours — including her new novel set in Venice— & L-U-V your mini-vacations with Diana? Then check this out!

#museivicenzacollection 24: Andrea Palladio e Palazzo Chiericati

In questa playlist sono raccolti brevi video didattici dedicati a bambini e ragazzi, ciascuno incentrato su un'opera o un gruppo di opere conservate ai Musei Civici di Vicenza.

In questo video scopriremo tutti i segreti di Palazzo Chiericati, capolavoro di Andrea Palladio progettato nel 1550, oggi sede del Museo Civico.

Il video è stato realizzato dal Servizio attività culturali e museali del Comune di Vicenza in collaborazione con Associazione Ardea per la didattica museale.

Per visitare il Museo Civico di Palazzo Chiericati clicca qui:

Pedemontana Veneta: a place for dreaming...

Stefania Ruffo introduces the Pedemontana vicentina, a marvelous land surrounded by lovely hills and lush vineyards, where its witnesses will tell knights and princesses stories, wool tissue shipped all over the world, villas created by brilliant architect, traditional food and wines...Enjoy an unique experience in a wonderful place!

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