The Citizen (Gauteng)

Will tourism return to Italy?

Eternal City lives up to its name ROME: RESTAURANT­S, HOTELS REOPEN

- Seth Sherwood © 2022 The New York Times Company

With masking and vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts largely dropped in Italy and summer approachin­g, crowds of travellers have begun to return to Rome’s Centro Storico – the area most dependent on tourism and the hardest hit by the pandemic – according to hoteliers and others working near Rome’s iconic spots.

“Trevi Square and the whole centre of Rome is full of tourists again,” said Fabrizio Rezza, reservatio­ns manager for the Hotel Fontana, referring to the throngs around the storied monument in front of the hotel, Trevi Fountain.

“It seems like no one is afraid of Covid any longer.”

And so the Eternal City continues to live up to its name, boosted by some long-awaited reopenings and a crop of new restaurant­s, hotels and cultural spots all over town.

Museums and archaeolog­ical sites

Under renovation since 2007, the distinctiv­e circular Mausoleum of Agustus began welcoming the public again last year, and the Casa Romana, a fourth-century dwelling beneath the free Museo di Scultura Antica Giovanni Barracco, has also reopened after an even longer hiatus.

Among Rome’s fledgling cultural venues, the new Museo Ninfeo offers visitors the chance to admire the ruins of a former hideaway and pleasure garden for emperors like Claudius and Caligula.

The just-opened (and free) Garum museum (named after an ancient Roman fish sauce) traces the history of Italian cooking and eating. Housed in a 16th-century palazzo, the new museum showcases centuries-old utensils, vessels, moulds and other cookware, as well an extensive library of books and prints related to the culinary arts.

Italy has also reintroduc­ed free admission for state museums and archaeolog­ical sites the first Sunday of each month.

At all other times, certain tourist hotspots, notably the Colosseum site (which includes the Forum and Palatine Hill; €16) and Galleria Borghese (€13; free for those 17 and under), require tickets to be purchased online.

Vast Buffet of New Restaurant­s

Over the past two years, many beloved restaurant­s in Rome were forced to shutter, such as Michelin-starred Metamorfos­i, the panoramic hilltop Lo Zodiaco, and Doozo, considered by some to have been Rome’s best Japanese restaurant.

But fittingly for a food-centric city, Rome’s red-hot dining scene is serving up a vast buffet of new restaurant­s, from thin-crust pizzerias awash in craft beer (L’Elementare), to gourmet delis abounding in prosciutto platters and grilled meats (Aventina), to natural-wine boutiques with an ace selection of Italian dishes served from an open kitchen at the back (Enoteca l’Antidoto).

Some of the most-sought new tables are at Romanè, the new restaurant from celebrity chef and restaurate­ur Stefano Callegari, famous as the inventor of the trapizzino, a conelike bread container that can be filled with anything from eggplant parmigiana to beef tongue in green sauce.

Hotels: luxury and kitsch

The lack of tourists also hurt the accommodat­ions sector.

According to Giorgio Palmucci, president of ENIT, the national tourism agency, around 400 regional hotels have closed during the pandemic.

They include giants like the Sheraton Hotel Roma and Conference Centre and the Selene, which had hosted luminaries like former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.

Despite significan­t losses, the hotel sector is starting to rebound, thanks to recent arrivals like the luxurious W Rome and the kitschcool Mama Shelter Roma with its roof bar, coworking space and plant-draped restaurant.

For particular­ly fat wallets, the Maalot Roma is a hushed townhouse blending contempora­ry artworks and historical furnishing­s (tufted couches, Oriental carpets) that has been earning raves for the plush Don Pasquale restaurant.

Pizza labs, Patti Smith and other summer events

Summer festivals are set to unfold around Rome, with some returning after a pandemic-era pause.

In late May, around 60 master pizza chefs will knead, toss and bake their way into the hearts (and stomachs) of those attending the free La Città della Pizza.

The festival celebrates Italy’s most famous food in its many permutatio­ns – Neapolitan, Roman, folded, fried – as well as bread and olive oil, and a free “pizza school” will offer further indoctrina­tion into the art of the pie.

You can then wash it all down in mid-June with some of the 2 500 Italian and internatio­nal vintages on hand at Vinoforum (admission, €20), the city’s big annual wine and spirits gala.

On the musical front, the citywide, multiweek concert series known as Rock in Roma makes its return in June after a two-year hiatus.

Held at large venues around town – notably the ancient Circus Maximus – this year’s series will feature Italian and internatio­nal performing artists like Patti Smith, Massive Attack, Herbie Hancock, Suicidal Tendencies and Maneskin.

 ?? ?? HAPPY HOUR. Diners at the new Pizzeria LÕElementa­re, which serves up thin-crust pizzas and craft beers, in Rome.
HAPPY HOUR. Diners at the new Pizzeria LÕElementa­re, which serves up thin-crust pizzas and craft beers, in Rome.
 ?? ?? HYPE OF ACTIVITY. Crowds are flocking to cafes along Via delle Muratte, near Trevi Fountain, in Rome.
HYPE OF ACTIVITY. Crowds are flocking to cafes along Via delle Muratte, near Trevi Fountain, in Rome.
 ?? ?? HOTSPOT. Ancient Greek and Roman sculpture at the Museo di Scultura Antica Giovanni Barracco, which can be toured for free, in Rome.
HOTSPOT. Ancient Greek and Roman sculpture at the Museo di Scultura Antica Giovanni Barracco, which can be toured for free, in Rome.
 ?? Pictures: The New York Times ?? COLOURFUL. The Roman Forum, in Rome.
Pictures: The New York Times COLOURFUL. The Roman Forum, in Rome.
 ?? ?? TOURIST ATTRACTION. Sightseers at the Colosseum in Rome.
TOURIST ATTRACTION. Sightseers at the Colosseum in Rome.

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