disegno

Introduction

The Walk takes into account the area north of Rome, just outside the Aurelian Walls, between:

The area includes the district Flaminio, the district Parioli, the district Pinciano, the district Salario and the Trieste area.

The area includes two Roman consular roads: Via Flaminia and Via Salaria, on whose path many traces of history have been left for centuries.Finding these tracks, especially those that had erased or hidden by the development of the last century building, is one of the objectives of this walk

In addition to the Via Flaminia and Via Salaria, one of the roads in this zone is the current route of Porta Pinciana. It's the via Salaria Antica (Salaria vetus), which in medieval times was called vicolo delle Tre Madonne.

Until the late-1800s this whole area was full of villas and vineyards where the noble Roman families were going to get some fresh air. The roads, except the two Roman roads, were running between the walls of private property, the "walled roads.

Around 1900 were built the houses in the neighborhood Salario and neighborhood Pinciano between the mura Aureliane e viale Parioli (today viale Liegi).

Between 1909 and 1911 were made Piazza Pitagora, piazza Ungheria, piazza Regina Margherita, the current Viale Parioli, while via Monti Parioli and viale Pilsudski overlapped to ancient Roman routes (note the via Salaria Antica e vicolo della Rondinella).

In 1911, for the Universal Exhibition, was built Viale delle Belle Arti and the construction of the neighborhood Flaminiobegan, with the National Stadium (Stadio Flaminio) and viale Tiziano.

The new route, now called Viale Bruno Buozzi, put in communication throughout the area built around the square Pythagoras and piazza Ungheria with the Via Flaminia.

With the construction plan, drafted by Sanjust and approved in 1912, they could save the green spaces covered by the plan itself: Villa Borghese, Villa Chigi, Savoy villa (now Villa Ada) that, with the plan of 1931, was linked to private park as residence of the royal family, and the Parcs of via Monti Parioli.

Between 1908 and 1926 was built the Quartiere Coppedè, whose name is that of his creator: the Florentine architect Gino Coppedè. Among via Nomentana and Corso Trieste developed a housing made of civilian buildings, hidden in green, it was later realized avenue Eritrea.

The Olympic Village was build for The 1960 Olympics Games. Nel 1995, nella zona di Monte Antenne , viene inaugurata la Moschea e il Centro Culturale Islamico progettato dall'Arch. In 1995, the area of Monte Antenne, was opened the Moschea and the Islamic Cultural Center designed by Paolo Portoghesi which is the largest Islamic center of Europe. Auditorium.

Area and resident density for each neighborhood

  • Flaminio: Ha 118,77 - residents / HA 111.50
  • Parioli: Ha 475,06 - residents / HA 31.11
  • Pinciano: Ha 356,62 - residents / HA 60.36
  • Salario: Ha 46,88 - residents / HA 188.12
  • Trieste Ha 370,63 - residents / HA 176.41

Mappa Sito ufficiale

Skip Skip Skip Administration

Administration