San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

CLOSED COLOSSEUM GETS REPAIRS, AWAITS CHANCE TO REOPEN

Lockdown at historic site creates losses, sense of emptiness

- BY CHICO HARLAN & STEFANO PITRELLI Harlan is Rome bureau chief and Pitrelli a Rome-based reporter for The Washington Post.

Only a few living souls are inside the Colosseum these days: a team of security guards, some maintenanc­e workers and a family of hedgehogs, who live in the bowels and have grown bolder without so many people around.

In normal times, the Colosseum would be teeming with visitors — 3,000 at any minute, 7.5 million in a year. But in 2020, only 1.5 million came through the gates. And since Italy retightene­d restrictio­ns in November, the site has been closed to the public.

Depending on the moment, the amphitheat­er built two millennium­s ago for mass spectacles is, for now, a strange mix of nature reserve and constructi­on site. The only occasional noise comes from a walkietalk­ie or bird.

The lockdown has a convenient element, as it provides a window of opportunit­y for repair work. In recent weeks, workers have renovated the bathrooms, strengthen­ed several arches and sealed leaky areas in the bricks.

The people who manage the Colosseum, though, say the current situation is unsustaina­ble. The site, along with an abutting archaeolog­ical area that includes the Roman Forum, is normally so profitable that it pumps a share of its revenue back into the government. Last year, the Colosseum and the Forum lost 51 million euros (about $63 million).

“There is a great sense of emptiness,” said Alfonsina Russo, the Colosseum and archaeolog­ical park’s director, during a recent visit.

She guided us back down to the ground level. Paces away from the central oval where gladiators did battle, a chute leads to a tunnel once used by emperors who wanted to make a grand, secret entrance into the arena.

The tunnel was starting to look more befitting of an emperor. The dark passage still had some hoses and other equipment lying around, as well as a yardsale-style pile of stone ruins. But Russo said there were plans — over the next year or so — to open the tunnel to tourists.

 ?? FEDERICA VALABREGA FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Usually awash in visitors, the Colosseum in Rome is largely empty these days, other than constructi­on workers and emboldened wildlife.
FEDERICA VALABREGA FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Usually awash in visitors, the Colosseum in Rome is largely empty these days, other than constructi­on workers and emboldened wildlife.

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