About Hotels Venice

Overview

 

Venice is one of the most important tourist destinations in the world, due to the city being one of the world's greatest and most beautiful cities of art. The city has an average of 50,000 tourists a day (2007 estimate). In 2006, it was the world's 28th most internationally visited city, with 2.927 million international arrivals that year.

 

Historically Venice was a very powerful maritime free-state city. This made Venice a very wealthy city, allowing for the construction of some of the most stunning architecture in the world. Some say the city was build on a marsh but more would say the city was built on sheer nerve.

 

 

Attractions

 

Throughout it's long life Venice has always been a popular tourist destination. Over the years millions of people have travelled far and wide to see the city of angels, or the city of bridges or one of it's many names. 

Although Venice has many attractions in the city, have no doubt, Venice itself is a marvel worth seeing. There are numerous attractions in Venice, such as St Mark's Basilica, the Grand Canal, and the Piazza San Marco, to name a few. The Lido di Venezia is also a popular international luxury destination, attracting thousands of actors, critics, celebrities and mainly people in the cinematic industry.

 

 

Transport

 

Venice is world-famous for its canals. It is built on an archipelago of 117 islands formed by 177 canals in a shallow lagoon. The islands on which the city is built are connected by 455 bridges. In the old centre, the canals serve the function of roads, and almost every form of transport is on water or on foot. In the 19th century a causeway to the mainland brought a railway station to Venice, and an automobile causeway and parking lot was added in the 20th century. Beyond these land entrances at the northern edge of the city, transportation within the city remains, as it was in centuries past, entirely on water or on foot. Venice is Europe's largest urban car free area, unique in Europe in remaining a sizable functioning city in the 21st century entirely without motorcars or trucks.