Boutique hotels in Rome
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Hotel de Russie
- Style
- Grandeur with gardens
- Setting
- Between the Spanish Steps and Piazza del Popolo
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Crossing Condotti
- Style
- Elegant neo-Baroque apartment
- Setting
- Chic Condotti side-street
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Portrait Suites
- Style
- Roman fashion house
- Setting
- Spanish Steps shopping streets
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Il Palazzetto
- Style
- Wine-lovers' world
- Setting
- A stagger from the Spanish Steps
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Residenza Napoleone III
- Style
- Super-luxe palazzo
- Setting
- Fashionable Via Condotti
Rome Activities
Highlights the best Rome has to offer, from art and culture to fun-packed activities; we've even found the most inspiring place to enjoy the views from.
Worth getting out of bed for
- Viewpoint
- Piazza del Campidoglio by night, for panoramas over the Forum and the Palatine, or the top of the Spanish Steps, for a view over the Centro Storico to St Peter’s – one Shelley and Keats doubtless swooned over.
- Arts and culture
- Wherever you wander, Rome’s importance to Western civilisation is inscribed in stone: the Colosseum, the Forum, St Peter’s, the Sistine Chapel, and the Pantheon are all worth eyeballing. Visiting the Vatican? Plan carefully: queues can be horrific and it will eat up your whole day. Galleria Doria Pamphilj (www.doriapamphilj.it) is a palazzo groaning with C15th–C18th treasures; Villa Borghese boasts spectacular grounds and a magnificent art collection (www.galleriaborghese.it); and Rome’s cake-layers of history are visible near the Colosseum at Basilica di San Clemente.
- Something for nothing
- An audience with the Pope is free (www.vatican.va). Or test the world’s oldest lie detector in the portico of Santa Maria in Cosmedin, where you can play at being Hepburn and Peck in Roman Holiday. No fibbing, though: if you lie while your hand is in the carved-marble Bocca della Verità (‘mouth of truth’), it will be bitten off.
- Shopping
- Via Condotti, starting at the foot of the Spanish Steps, is Rome’s most prominent shopping street; Via Frattina runs parallel, along the same lines. Via del Corso focuses on younger styles. If you prefer edgy and unusual, poke about near Piazza del Popolo; Via Sistina is good for small, stylish outlets. On Via Nazionale, you’ll find leather stores and a handful of boutiques. The open-air Porta Portese fleamarket in Trastevere is the largest in Europe, held every Sunday from 5am until around 2pm.
- Daytripper
- Bypass the beaches and join the locals as they head for the cool waters of Lake Bracciano (www.lakebracciano.com), a picturesque reservoir about half an hour’s drive outside Rome. The catacombs along the Via Appia Antica are the ancient communal burial ground of the city, covering several kilometres of tunnels carved out of the soft rock. The catacombs of San Callisto are the most famous and it's possible to take a guided tour.
- Perfect picnic
- With so many amazing trattorie to try out, picnicking won’t be top of your to-do list; that said, if portable snacks are your thing, there are few pleasures as great as licking a hazlenut gelato while you stroll the sunny side of the streets. Try Giolitti at 40 via Uffici del Vicario (+39 06 699 1423; www.giolitti.it ); or Il Gelato di San Crispino near the Trevi fountain at 42 via della Panetteria (+39 06 679 3924; www.ilgelatodisancrispino.com).
- Walks
- A stroll at sunset in the lush Pincio Gardens, above Piazza del Popolo.
- Activities
- Attend a wine-tasting class at the prestigious International Wine Academy (+39 06 699 0878; www.wineacademyroma.com), adjacent to one of our favourite Smith hotels, Il Palazetto.
- And...
- The Pantheon is the most perfectly preserved ancient building in the city. The enormous columns in the entrance were transported all the way from Egypt, and the dramatic interior is richly decorated in marbles beneath the massive masonry ceiling.
Diary
March/April Good Friday: the Via Crucis, a torch-lit procession from the Colosseum up the Monte Palatino reenacting the 14 stations of the cross. On Easter Sunday, the Pope gives his blessing from the balcony of St Peter’s (www.vatican.va). May Primo Maggio, the annual May Day festival in Piazza San Giovanni, welcomes spring with a big free stage gig (www.primomaggio.com). June–July Around Sound, a month of nightly jazz at La Palma Club (www.lapalmaclub.it). 29 June The feast day of Rome’s patron saints Peter and Paul shuts the city down. September Photography festival FotoGrafia (www.fotografiafestival.it). La Notte Bianca keeps you up all night with music, drama and dance – perfect for 24-hour party people (www.lanottebianca.it). RomaEuropa Festival: big-hitting culture (www.romaeuropa.net). October Celluloid is celebrated at the Rome Film Fest (www.romacinemafest.org). November The annual Roma Jazz Festival brings bebop, swing and all things snazzy to the Eternal City (www.romajazzfestival.it). 25 December The pope’s Christmas blessing is delivered at noon.