Venice First Time Weekend Blueprint (08)
Transcription
Venice First Time Weekend Blueprint (08)
Weekend Blueprint Venice First Time Contents Mistress of Memories 04 A personal view of Venice, from Andrew B. Flint Highlights & Weekend Blueprint 08 A perfectly-planned weekend exploring the most beautiful city in the world... Hotels 12 Take your break in style, tranquillity and comfort Eat & Drink 16 Authentic atmosphere, local flavours, outright excellence Travel Planning 19 Everything you need to organise your break.. Location Italy Style Discovery Setting Urban When to go December—May Venice Rome Front cover: Gondola in front of Santa Maria Salute. Top: Canale di Cannaregio; Rear cover: Carnival masquerader with San Giorgio Maggiore. VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT 2 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Clockwise from top: Accademia Madonna, Basilico San Marco, Piazza San Marco, Carnival, street near Rialto market. JULY 08 EDITION 3 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Mistress of Memories San Marco Basin A.B. Flint sets out to explore Venice in a short break, following the Weekend Blueprint itinerary... T he boat’s prow noses warily through the slack water as tall wooden poles materialise one at a time out of the murk. Behind us, each channel-marker is swallowed again softly by fogs playing Grandmother’s Footsteps with our stern. We progress in a bubble through the gloom. A cold sweat condenses onto every surface and sound is deadened; my fellow passengers withdraw into themselves and conversation stops. An hour ago I was soaring over the crystal icecaps of the Alps, radiant in brilliant sunshine. Now I’m fumbling blindly through the chill, totally reliant on the boatman’s skill. Somewhere out there, the most beautiful city on Earth clings to a slimy mud bank in the fastness of its lagoon. But all I can see is pewter water circumscribed by blank walls of vapour. Dark Age beginnings Venice’s unique location suddenly makes perfect sense. As barbarian hordes – VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT Vandals, Goths, Huns, your worst nightmares – ripped apart the carcass of the old Roman Empire, life became very cheap and commerce all but impossible. Driven from their homes, the citizens of “the former swamprats would extend their rule across the eastern Mediterranean and found a republic to last a thousand years” one town (Aquileia) were forced to scratch a marginal existence amongst the hidden reed beds and shifting quagmires of the lagoon. Gradually, however, they turned the tables on their tormentors. 4 Without intimate knowledge, the lagoon’s channels were a deadly labyrinth. Intruding vessels sooner or later find themselves grounded. Stuck fast and isolated, the hulks could be picked off at leisure, their crews dead men walking. A brutal birth, but one that served fledgling Venice well: over the coming centuries, the former swamp-rats would extend their rule across the eastern Mediterranean, found a republic to last a thousand years and build themselves a city without equal for opulence and refinement. Grand Canal It’s hours later and I’m on another waterbus, but my surroundings couldn’t be more different. My ferry from the airport eventually found its target and strengthening sunshine long since burnt the mists off. Sitting in a plum seat in front of the wheelhouse, I’m overwhelmed by the pomp and circumstance of the Grand Canal. From the gloom and squalor of the Dark Ages I’ve fast-forwarded eight hundred years to the high living of the WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Clockwise from top: Quadriga looted from Byzantium (Basilica San Marco), creature from Venice Lagoon (Rialto Market), Grand Canal at dusk. late medieval era; to a time when, to the wonder of contemporary chroniclers, the city’s shipyards could build a fullyequipped war galley in a day and Venetian merchants lived more grandly than Europe’s kings. Puttering along the canal’s winding course, I gaze at graceful palazzi in a profusion of architectural styles. Byzantine, Gothic, Renaissance and the later Baroque exist happily side by side in arcaded and ornamented testimony to the craft of Venice’s masons. On the water, vessels of all sizes - from lumbering public vaporetti through sleek motoscafi to precariously low-sided tourist gondolas - jostle to make headway. From a boat-borne perspective the canal’s sinuous curves only reveal its secrets slowly one treasure at a time, measuring out a rhythm of keen anticipation followed by unfailing delight. Midway down the channel, my boat passes beneath the shadow of the Rialto Bridge, the link between Venice’s marketplace and her seat of power around St. Mark’s Square, Marching across the span, stone-built market stalls remind me that trade was the engine of Venice’s fabulous success – once her arch-rival, Byzantium, had been cut down. For her first five hundred years, Venice had been forced to play vassal to the declining but immensely wealthy imperial power. However, in a masterstroke of ruthless statecraft, Venice struck a deal with Crusaders in 1204. She provided them with sea transport to the Holy Land in return for their sacking her commercial competitor and - in theory at least - sovereign overlord. Byzantium disposed of, Venice’s financial sophistication and mercantile daring - backed by the iron fist of her navy - secured virtual hegemony over the Eastern Mediterranean. With it came exclusive access to the Orient and the spices of the East. In the years that followed Venetian merchants such as Marco Polo established direct links with China (and, in passing, brought home spaghetti), reinforcing a pre-eminence in European wealth that was to last until the 16th century. This was a period when the palazzi lining the Grand Canal stored a king’s ransom in spices, silks and other luxury items, while there was little that couldn’t be bought in the crowded confines of Rialto market. Rialto Next morning I find myself wandering the self-same stone-flagged space, surrounded by a hubbub of shoppers and market traders. The artfully arranged displays and melodic sing-song cries of the stallholders prove that the city’s instinct for commerce is still in rude health. But in place of sandalwood from Arabia Felix and nutmeg from the Moluccas, the objects being traded are delicious purple artichokes from Venice’s market garden island of Sant’Erasmo and writhing eels fresh from the mudbanks of the lagoon. Parochial these may be compared to wonders past, but the quality and variety leaves my local farmers’ market far behind. It’s a real pleasure to be transported - temporarily at the least - to the everyday preoccupations of a small Italian town, which, strip away the monuments, island Venice truly remains. With such raw materials to work from, Venetian cuisine is one of the city’s undervalued pleasures (once away from the plastic picture menus of the main thoroughfares). Geography dictates plentiful seafood, while 19th century Austrian rule has left a Central Europe dedication to tummy-lining carbs – step forward risotto and polenta. But what makes Venice’s cooking so distinct is the number of dishes incorporating sweet flavours from the Levant, a further legacy of the millennium of commercial contact. Sarde in saor is one classic – sardines in a sweet-sour marinade of vinegar, onion, pine nuts and raisins, perhaps with a pinch of cumin or saffron. Enoteca al Volto With rumbling stomach I hop across the canal on a handy traghetto and burrow through side alleys to emerge at the Enoteca al Volto, a classic backstreet bacaro in business since 1936. It’s a per- JULY 08 EDITION 5 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM fect riposte, if one is needed, to the misfounded claim that Venice has been lost to the tourists. Eschewing trays of weird and wonderful chicheti arrayed along the bar, I edge past a scrum of leather jacketed locals and sit down for a more substantial lunch. The small dining room resembles a sleepy country station buffet circa 1950 - rickety wooden furniture and a fading map of Italy in basic halftone colour. A barman recites in quickfire Italian from a scrap of paper. It’s not a menu, but a list of what the cook bought at the Rialto earlier this morning. No squid, but the octopus is apparently especially tender. Fine, I go with that, and am well-rewarded by trenette with succulent pulpo. avenues, there’s little or no boat traffic and an aura of somnolent calm. Nevertheless the fabric is just as historic and I’m brought up short by a weathered basrelief of a laden camel on a venerable wall (that of the Palazzo Mastelli) followed shortly by three turbaned Moors set in time-worn stone into the side of a house. Quiet Cannaregio Fortified, I set forth to explore Cannaregio sestier (quarter) on foot. Before reaching the serious boondocks I stop by the jewel-like Santa Maria dei Miracoli. A renaissance triumph of harmony and proportion in pastel marble, it’s hands down my favourite Venetian church. Visitors are already here a desultory trickle. After twenty minutes of further meandering I have only old men and stray cats for company. Cannaregio’s outer limits are marked by a series of quiet canals lined by crumbling old villas and even the odd walled garden. Quite unlike the corkscrew waterways that permeate central San Marco, canyoned into gloom by tall townhouses rising straight from the water, the canals here are broad and light-filled, with room for wide paved walkways running alongside. The watery equivalent of suburban Into the Ghetto A melancholic atmosphere pervades the nearby Ghetto (the original after which all others have been named). Hugely important as financiers for Venice’s trade, Jews were nonetheless barely tolerated. For 400 years they were only allowed to live in Cannaregio, on one small island that was subject to a night-time curfew. Over the years, population growth naturally led to intense overcrowding, and to ease the problem, the Ghetto’s inhabitants constructed Europe’s first highrises. These now stare blankly down on me as I walk across the paved expanse of the central campo. The Nazis cleared the Ghetto, dispatching its inhabitants to the death camps. Since the war it has been resettled by a handful of Orthodox families - men and boys prominent in their ringlets and black felt hats – and is once again gently VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT “I am not alone in my gentle reverie; I have a whole city for company” 6 resurgent. Nevertheless, it feels no place to linger – too full of ghosts. I move on quickly. Despite immersing myself in the crowds along the Strada Nuova I’m unable to shake off a certain wistful sadness, which lingers for the rest of the day. Late evening sees me in the plasterencrusted confection that’s the Caffé Florian on Piazza San Marco. At this time it’s near-deserted and I have a whole gilded compartment to myself and my multiple mirrored reflections. I muse on the nature of things lost and the irretrievable glories of the past. And then it dawns on me that I am not alone in my gentle reverie; I have a whole city for company. The long goodbye It’s the fussy period surroundings that give the game away. For Venice, the rococo marks the time when the clocks began to run down. Throughout the 18th century the republic’s coffers emptied as Mediterranean trade routes diverted and the Great Powers reshaped Europe to their liking. Knowing there was no tomorrow, Venice chose to party in a bacchanalian swansong of defiance – and found she was rather good at it. So good in fact that nobles and wannabes from across Europe (but England especially) poured in to fill her brothels, casinos and opera houses, to misbehave themselves at her masked Carnevale, to tour her grand sights, and to buy up paintings by Canaletto to ship to family seats back home (soon to be rebuilt in the Neoclassical Left: Venice Ghetto. Right: Santa Maria dei Miracoli. WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM “a provincial outpost of the AustroHungarian Empire, the city ossified, shrunken, and fell back on what she knew best: reviving the tourist trade” Venetian style of Andrea Palladio). Only at the very end of the century did final disaster fall, when Napoleon snuffed out Venice’s millennium of civic independence almost as an afterthought. (When the time came, Venice surrendered ignominiously without a fight, the last doge exiting with the words “I don’t think I’ll be needing this anymore” as he handed over his cap.) Of course, not all of Napoleon’s enemies were so supine, and following his eventual defeat, Venice found herself parcelled out to Austria without any consultation or choice. Today the Canalettos may be valued in the millions, but those 18th century dukes and earls and (towards the end) self-made men had still at root been paying tourists like you and me. Reduced to a provincial outpost of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the city ossified, shrunken, and fell back on what she knew best: reviving the tourist trade and seeing to its needs. Glamorous it wasn’t and, after the glory days, more than a little demeaning; but at least it paid the bills. Hotels, theatres and JULY 08 EDITION restaurants were carefully maintained often refurbished in the swaggering Biedermeier style of the victor’s Mitteleuropa. The rest was left to sink back into the swamp. Then, as the years became decades, the clocks stopped ticking at all. Sipping a caffè corretto fortified against the damp with a shot of grappa, I smile slyly now, realising I’ve got her well and truly fingered. Much as modern Greece plays homage to Classical Athens but lives from day to day as Levantine Byzantium, Venice has for the past two centuries led a double-life. By day, under the piercing brightness of the Mediterranean sun, she grandstands before the crowds 7 still the Gothic glory of her youth: “La Serenissima”, “Mistress of a Quarter and Half a Quarter of the Roman Empire”. But by night, or in midwinter, or when the damp fog creeps across from the Adriatic (as it had done again today at dusk) comfort is more important than pretence. Pulling her cape close to and retreating indoors, she turns in on herself - an aging Central European dowager snug in her velvet, cosy besides her stove. © A.B. Flint. Top: Tourism has supported Venice for 200 years. Bottom Come bad weather, Venice hunkers down. WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Highlights Venice skyline & Suggested Itinerary Cherry-pick the very cream of Venice’s cultural treasures, while leaving time to sample her secretive quieter corners. Celebrate also the city’s reputation for romance, beguilingly accessible through her most atmospheric bars, hotels and restaurants. Suggested Itinerary Thursday Morning flight to Venice and scenic transfer across the lagoon by waterbus (or watertaxi) to hotel . Lunch. In the afternoon take a waterborne city tour by public vaporetto, including a cruise down Grand Canal. (To create your own tour: combine vaporetti routes 1 to P. Roma, 42 to S. Zaccaria, and 1 back to Accademia for a complete clockwise circuit of the city. Start from the Accademia boat dock.) Enjoy romantic early evening drinks at the Danieli’s Dandolo Bar or Gritti Palace’s Bar Longhi, then follow up with dinner at one of the new wave of bacari showcasing modern Venetian cooking—such as Alle Testiere or Anice Stellato. (Al Covo or Corte Sconta both make good alternatives if you can’t get in.) Friday Start early for St. Mark’s Basilica and Square ahead of the day-tripper throngs. Move on to the Rialto Markets, then lunch at one of the simple eateries nearby (perhaps Bancogiro or Enoteca al Volto). From the Rialto Bridge, leave the crowds behind with an afternoon stroll through the peaceful Cannaregio quarter, taking in Sta. Maria dei Miracoli, I Gesuiti and Madonna dell’ Orto churches, the poignant Ghetto, and the length of the Canale Cannaregio on foot. Return down the Grand Canal by vaporetto 1. Splash out for a celebratory dinner at the Met restaurant (or the old school classic Da Fiore) and finish up in St. Mark’s Square once more for a late night nightcap at Caffé Florian or Gran Caffé Quadri. Saturday Spend the morning visiting the Palazzo Ducale (Doge’s palace) - try to arrive at opening time to avoid the crowds. Break off for a long lunch, then hop on a vaporetto (route 2 from S. Zaccaria) to cross to S. Giorgio Maggiore island and its outstanding Palladian church. Take the lift to the top of the campanile for the most fabulous panorama over the city and lagoon. Continue with a cruise along the broad Canale della Giudecca and then contrasting return down the Grand Canal—travelling in the opposite to Thursday. (Combine vaporetti routes 2 and 1 for a clockwise circuit of Dorsoduro and SS Croce & Polo.) En route, stop off on Dorsoduro’s Zattere waterfront for an ice cream at Gelateria Nico. In summer finish the day with alfresco dinner at Harry’s Dolci or Cip’s Club. (The Danieli’s rooftop restaurant, La Terrazza Danieli, is a further good alternative.) Sunday Check-out after breakfast and stash your bags, then head to the Accademia Gallery for the best of Venice’s art treasures. (This is yet another venue where it pays to arrive as early as possible.) When you’ve had your fill, fortify yourself with a prosecco and a lunch of chicheti bar snacks just round the corner at Al Bottegon. Spend the afternoon exploring the quieter, non-touristy backwaters of western Dorsoduro and Santa Croce—campos Santa Margherita and S. Giacomo Dell’Orio are two atmospheric squares to make for. As you go, include a visit to the Scuola San Rocco for its Tintorettos. When finished, grab a bite to eat, collect your bags, and transfer by waterbus (or water taxi) to the airport for your evening flight home. VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT 8 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Highlights THURSDAY Plaza Catedral 2 1 Grand Canal Cruising the Grand Canal by boat is one of those select travel experiences that’s the stuff of fantasy. With the sun behind you and a breeze in your hair, it really is as breath-taking as you’ve imagined—probably better: every metre of travel unfolds views of fresh majesty, in a seamless bubble of historical perfection. A Grand Canal address has always been Venice’s most prestigious, and the finest façades of the grandest palazzi all dip their toes in its waters, with the Baroque magnificence of Santa Maria della Salute as finale. FRIDAY AM St. Mark’s Square Despite the crowds, no first-time visit to Venice can be complete without seeing Piazza San Marco, her main square—although that’s too prosaic a word for a piece of architectural magic: that’s almost overwhelming given solitude and sympathetic light, and never entirely lost whatever the hustle. Trapezoid in outline, on the eastern side rises the façade of the Basilica San Marco, while the arcaded Procuratie Vecchie and Procuratie Nuove line the north and south sides respectively. A large secondary space, the Piazzetta San Marco, stretches south from the Basilica to the Molo waterfront and lagoon. FRIDAY AM 3 Basilica San Marco More Istanbul than Italy, St. Mark’s is rightly one of Christendom’s most celebrated churches. A summation in stone of 1,000 years of Venetian history, the wild ornamentation, rotundas and pinnacles stand testament to the city’s intimate links with the Levant (and mercantile wealth). With gilt by the acre, Byzantine decoration, and a profusion of copulas, the Basilica’s exterior overwhelms through its exoticism. Inside, the power of the cave-like interior is astounding. Don’t miss the Pala d’Oro and the quadriga (in the Museo Marciano). JULY 08 EDITION 9 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Highlights 4 FRIDAY AM Rialto Markets Not to be confused with the mayhem of gewgaw-sellers around Rialto Bridge, Rialto is an authentic and very good traditional Italian food market, one of the very best in fact—and a slice of real Italy unmatched elsewhere in the city. The market operates in two main adjoining areas. Seafood enjoys pride of place under an arcaded building on Campo della Pescaria. Spilling back away from the canal, along Calle Beccarie, the trading becomes more of a mixed bag. Local specialities include tender little Sant’Erasmo aubergines and writhing laguna morta eels. FRIDAY PM 5 Centro side street Cannaregio on foot Filling all of Venice north of the Grand Canal and west of the Rialto Bridge, the sprawling sestier (quarter) of Cannaregio takes on a variety of moods. Skirted by the city’s worst tourist rat-run (Strada Nuova), elsewhere, it’s serene and gracious, a place of quiet pleasures and self-possessed community—typified most strongly by the original Jewish Ghetto. Mainly residential, Cannaregio is little visited, but amongst broad pathlined canals it offers jewels of the calibre of Santa Maria dei Miracoli and Madonna dell’ Orto churches (and in contrast I Gesuiti—Baroque standard-setter for bad church design in lurid green on white marble). 6 SATURDAY AM Palazzo Ducale (Doge’s Palace) Widely regarded as the finest secular medieval building in Europe, the Doge’s Palace impresses both inside and out. In soft, dusky pink, the lacy exterior projects a serene Gothic harmony that’s as unlikely as it’s inspired. Inside, huge sums were lavished on art and decoration specifically to daunt and awe the likes of the King of France. Suffice to say, compared to him, the modern visitor is the easiest of meat. Of the many highpoints, don’t miss the Sala dello Scudo, Scala d’Oro, Sala del Maggior Consiglio and crossing over the Ponte dei Sospiri (Bridge of Sighs). Nb: Beat the queues by buying (timed) tickets online before leaving the UK. VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT 10 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Highlights 7 San Giorgio Maggiore Standing on its own island, the bright white classicist façade of San Giorgio Maggiore—Palladio’s magnificent Renaissance masterpiece—catches the eye from across St. Mark’s Basin and draws the gaze instinctively to the tip of the pencilslender brick campanile. The return view from just beneath the bells more than repays the favour, with a God-like panorama over the whole watery city, out across the lagoon, and—if the weather’s kind—as far as the glittering snow of the Dolomites. SUNDAY AM SATURDAY PM 8 Accademia Gallery Amongst the elite of Europe’s art galleries, the Accademia offers a dizzying panorama of Venice’s bravura aesthetic accomplishment, providing a benchmark from which to judge the rest by (or simply a single-stop overview), with top-ofform examples of the work of all the masters from the early middle ages to the fall of the Republic. Key rooms include 4 & 5 (Renaissance treasures by Mantegna, Giovanni Bellini and Giorgione), 10 (titanic works by Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese), and 20 & 21 (Gentile Bellini and Carpaccio— especially the ‘St. Ursula’ cycle). Nb: Beat the queues by buying (timed) tickets online before leaving the UK. SUNDAY PM 9 Scuola San Rocco San Rocco is the Big Daddy of Venice’s scuole (secular chapter houses), the city’s most characteristic institutions. Dedicated to the patron saint of plague protection, the foundation was unsurprisingly never short of a bob or two—and it shows. From the street the ostentatious marble façade screams wealth. Inside, the decoration reaches an acme of extravagance even the Palazzo Ducale can’t match. Up a fabulous barrel-vaulted staircase, the wrap-around work by Tintoretto is set off by panelwork and florid ceiling. In its own room is Tintoretto’s most powerful canvas, ‘The Crucifixion’, which reduced Ruskin to memorable hysteria. JULY 08 EDITION 11 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Hotels ...where to stay in style and comfort Ca’ Pisani Bedroom and entrance (above) Need to know • Always book your chosen hotel as far in advance as possible. This is particularly important at weekends (when minimum night booking restrictions often apply.) • Almost infinite demand coupled with strictly limited supply mean a hefty premium in Venetian room pricing; less excusably it also provides an enormous temptation towards sagging standards and indifferent service—the best hotels in all categories stand out in large part by rising above this. A.B. Flint Choice Hotel Ca’Pisani (Premium). A fresh take on the Venice luxury hotel experience that deploys a contemporary homage to the Jazz Age behind 13th century palazzo walls. Conveniently located in arty Dorsoduro, with lots of comforts and an unusual sense of space, Ca’Pisani makes a highly enjoyable base. Highly designed, the interior isn’t remotely related to the period piece of historical retrospection that might be expected. Instead, the decor heroically adopts the manifesto of the early 20th century Italian Futurist movement—as reinterpreted from the century’s very end. The result hovers somewhere in 1930s or ’40s, with a powerful, muscular Art Deco presence that explodes with angular energy. On each floor, the main space—of impressive proportions—serves as a lounge, pepped with pieces of contemporary art. Grandest is the piano nobile which opens to the balcony at front. On the top floor, there’s a steam bath and solarium terrace with wide city views. By Venetian standards most guestVENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT rooms are generously-sized. Interiors are a palette of browns, creams and tans highlighted with black, silver-chrome and shots of fire-glow orange. Jacuzzi baths come standard, whilst superior rooms have walk-in showers as well. The hotel’s restaurant, La Rivista—a witty bar-bistro in lucite and zinc—serves classy and inventive light north Italian food. Too clever (or poor) for the Cipriani or Gritti Palace, Ca’ Pisani’s sharply stylish guests are an eclectic, international group more in step with the Guggenheim than the Accademia—but fully au fait with both. As often in Venice, service is a relative weakness: polite and efficient, but sadly not very Italian. In such a well-designed hotel, it’s disappointing to find the character ironed out of front-of-house; such cool correctness wouldn’t be out of place in London or Frankfurt. Facilities: Lounges, bar-bistro, steam bath, solarium. No vehicle access. Room recommendation: Corner rooms for double aspect, first floor for high ceilings. 12 • The city’s historic building stock adds its own legacy of cramped bedrooms and idiosyncratic plumbing. • Unless prominently advertised, your room almost certainly won’t have any view to speak of—even for canal- or lagoon-facing hotels. If a view is important, check very carefully exactly how full, close and unobstructed it will be, and be prepared to pay. • Outrageously expensive breakfasts are another quasi-scam, particularly at some of the elite hotels. Either get a breakfast-inclusive rate or head round the corner for breakfast in a local bar at a tenth the price. • Despite all this, it’s emphatically worthwhile being based in Venice proper rather than commuting from the mainland or Lido. Choose wisely and you’ll have a memorable stay. Hotel Ca’Pisani, Rio Terà Foscarini, Dursoduro 979, 30123 -Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Hotels Value Choice Locanda Orseolo (Expensive). Hidden away in a private courtyard off an unobtrusive side alley, the Orseolo takes a bit of finding. Once tracked down, however, the location’s extremely central, just two minutes walk from St. Mark’s Square— although you’d never guess from the quiet. But what really sets this unpretentious family-run establishment apart is, well, the family. If being clutched to the bosom of a larger-than-life Italian household fills you with terror, fear not: the welcome, although breathtakingly warm, falls safely short of smothering, while the extraordinarily helpful attitude of the staff—from manager to night porter—remains just the right the side of obsequious. Once adapted to the friendliness, you’ll find a small, traditional hotel one step up from a pension. The modestlysized guestrooms are dressed with oldfashioned theatricality—Murano light fittings and lots of rich red drapes and gold swag, but plasma TVs also; and mine even managed a canal view (not to be sniffed at in Venice). Bathrooms could be bigger, however, and the showers could do with modernising. On the ground floor, a plush pockethandkerchief lounge squeezes an internet terminal beside a small library and cosy fireplace. Beyond is a simple breakfast room where in the morning a fairly utilitarian cold buffet is served, improved by tasty eggs cooked to order. Facilities: Lounge, breakfast room, internet, minibar, no vehicle acccess. Ca Maria Adele contemporary in styling, but decoration and furnishing nonetheless take their cue from traditional Venetian aesthetics (some rooms are small). ‘Themed’ rooms are more fantastical, culminating in the scarlet and white damasked drama of the Doge’s Suite. Public spaces are beautifully presented in understated modern style. Facilities: Lounge, canal-facing terrace, breakfast room (no restaurant). No vehicle access (but water taxi dock). Ca Maria Adele, Rio Terrà dei Catecumeni, Dorsoduro 111, 30123 - Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com Gritti Palace Hotel (Premium). The grande dame of San Marco hotels, with a privileged position on the Grand Canal inside a 16th century palazzo so exquisite that it’s a clear stand-out even in such extraordinary surroundings. Often compared with the Danieli, both hotels set out to offer expansive historical opulence in a heavily traditional and specifically Venetian style. Unfortunately, the comparison extends to the variable staff attitude, out-of-touch management, unpredictable failings in upkeep and brazen price-gouging often experienced in both. The Gritti Palace nonetheless comfortably outpoints its rival for Locanda Orseolo, Corte Zorzi, San Marco 1083, Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com Further hotels of interest Ca Maria Adele (Premium). This contemporary boutique within a Renaissance palazzo pulls off the difficult trick of serious style and superb personal service at the same time. Occupying a quiet canalfacing position in arty eastern Dorsoduro, just round the corner from Salute church, Ca Maria Adele is only one stop by vaporetto from the sights of Piazza San Marco. The simpler ‘deluxe’ guestrooms are JULY 08 EDITION Orseolo 13 Gritti Palace WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Hotels its cosier intimacy, quieter setting, and a certain lingering panache. If it’s got to be one of the two, make it the Gritti Palace; but accept in advance that it won’t in any normal sense of the word represent value for money. Facilities: Restaurant, canal-side bar with terrace, lounges. No vehicle access (but water taxi dock). Hotel Gritti Palace, Campo Santa Maria del Giglio, San Marco 2467, 30124 - Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com this is a truly excellent hotel (very much of the white-gloved old school), you’re still a boat ride from anywhere—popping round the corner to a little trattoria is hardly an option. If you’ve come to experience Venice, experience her properly and stay in the heart of the city. If you’re looking for Big Romance, well then that’s a different matter—but in that case dig deep for a suite, ideally in the adjoining Palazzo Vendramin or Palazetto Nani Barbaro; many of the mere rooms don’t live up to the public areas. Romancing or not, a visit for lunch or dinner is definitely worthwhile. Nb. the Cipriani is closed during winter and early spring. Facilities: Restaurants (3), bars, lounges, gardens, gym, pool, tennis courts, sauna, solarium, complimentary launch service to San Marco. No vehicle access (but water taxi dock and marina). Hotel Cipriani, Giudecca 10, 30133 - Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com The Cipriani occupies the tip of Giudecca island, seen here from San Giorgio Maggiore. Hotel Cipriani (Premium). One of the iconic hotels of the world, never mind Italy. Essentially what you’re paying for—apart from a hefty premium for the prestige—is fabulous service and the sybaritic pleasure of chilling out on the garden terrace beside Venice’s largest pool (wickedly decadent over a sumptuous breakfast with St. Mark’s across the lagoon as a backdrop). And yet; while there’s no disputing Hotel Londra Palace (Premium). This top-notch conventionally-styled hotel, with superbly convenient location and plentiful lagoon views, offers better value for money than most of its comparables, and a better experience to boot. Without the weight of expectations of more famous rivals, the comfortablysized Londra Palace delivers a consistently classy stay under enthusiastic management overseeing personable and efficient staff. Occupying a 19th century waterfront palazzo (in which Tchaikovsky wrote one of his symphonies), the public rooms are modern and light; attractive if not adventurous. Guestrooms are fairly traditional with comfort colours, good bathrooms and (for Venice) aboveaverage dimensions. The lagoon-facing breakfast terrace is a further plus. Facilities: Restaurant, bar, terrace, lounges. No vehicle access (but water taxi dock). Hotel Londra Palace, Riva degli Schiavoni, Castello 4171, 30122 - Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com Locanda Novecento (Expensive). Mixing dreamy art nouveau mannerisms, exotic Levantine furnishings and indulgent Fortuny fabrics, this immensely stylish intimate boutique comes with wonderful service and a refreshing lack of attitude. Most importantly, the opulent character creates an atmosphere that’s as warmly inviting as it is evocative—more than a hint of steamer trunks and adventure just round the corner. In the heart of San Marco sestier, it’s only 10 mins walk to Piazza San Marco and 5 mins to the Accademia. Yet set on a quiet side-street leading down to the Grand Canal, Novecento enjoys a peaceful setting with hardly any passing pedestrians. As befits a family-run locanda (inn)— albeit a hugely stylish contemporary reinterpretation of the concept, the Novecento offers all the simple necessities to a high level of comfort (and bravissimo Novecento VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT 14 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Hotels taste), but makes no attempt to match the facilities of a grand hotel—thus no restaurant, gym, spa etc. Service standards, however, are exemplary, guest care is delivered with friendliness, thoughtfulness and not a trace of attitude—even from the pony-tailed male receptionist with the looks of a Milan model. The ground floor is occupied by an immediately welcoming lounge softly lit through art nouveau stained glass—a smiling gilt Khmer dancer sets the tone. To the rear, a small walled courtyard is set out with tables and chairs surrounded by plants. Bedrooms are individual; but in keeping with the overall character have a period aura. They are finished to a very high standard of design—first opening of the door is likely to yield a coup de theatre. The most significant criticism is in the size of some of them (the bathrooms especially). Although without a restaurant, there’s an honesty bar, and breakfast is served in the lounge or courtyard garden. Facilities: Lounges, honesty bar, garden courtyard. No vehicle access, water taxi dock a short walk. Locanda Novecento, Calle del Dose, Campo San Maurizio, San Marco 2683/84, 30124 Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com Locanda La Corte (Mid Price). A competently-run, straightforward pension in a La Corte venerable palazzo on an agreeably off-thebeaten-track side canal running through western Castello (but still a handy enough location for the main sights). By Venetian standards relatively economical, there are few frills, and rooms are traditional and rather small, but none- JULY 08 EDITION Pensione Accademia theless clean and presentable. The charming palazzo courtyard is an enjoyable bonus for breakfasts and drinks in fine weather. Facilities: Lounge, breakfast room (no restaurant), courtyard. No vehicle access (but water taxi dock). Locanda La Corte, Calle Bressana, Castello 6317, 30122 - Venezia, Italy. of repeat guests, the Accademia books up a long way forward. Facilities: Breakfast room (no restaurant), bar, lounge, garden. No vehicle access (but water taxi dock). Pensione Accademia—Villa Maravege, Fondamente Bollani, Dorsoduro 1058, 30123-Venezia, Italy. Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com Booking—see www.weekendblueprint.com Pensione Accademia (Mid Price). A longstanding and smoothly-run favourite, particularly popular with Brits of a certain age and scholarly bent—often on their fourth or fifth visit. Housed in a pretty 17th century villa in Dorsoduro, the Accademia boasts leafy gardens front and back and its own water taxi dock just off the Grand Canal. Defiantly old-school, it’s all well-kept and in good taste, with vases of fresh-cut flowers in the reception hall and neatly clipped shrubs outside. Public rooms, including traditionally elegant if slightly dated lounges and a bar, are spacious. Guestrooms are smaller and fairly bland (with noisy plumbing in some cases); some boast Grand Canal views of variable directness. One slight oddity is the lack of power points in the rooms, a nuisance in an age of mobiles and laptops. (A fiddlesome—and in my room nonfunctioning—charger contraption is provided instead.) Careful service is big on ceremony, less strong on smiles. With large numbers 15 N.B. There are over 600 hotels in Venice and its mainland suburbs. Amongst the better-known hotels I considered but decided not to feature are Hotel Danieli, Westin Europa & Regina, Bauer Il Palazzo, Bauer Hotel, Hotel Monaco & Grand Canal, San Clemente Palace, the Charming House hotels (DD724, 694 and IQs), Locanda Sturion and Pension Bucintoro. This is not necessarily an adverse reflection on standards as choices are based on many factors including location, ambience, quality within class, service, facilities and my personal taste. Hotel prices: Budget: below £60, Modest: £60£100, Mid Price: £100-£140, Expensive: £140-200, Premium: £200+; prices are per double room at the time of year and type of room (standard unless specified otherwise) recommended. Prices are for guidance only, please check with hotel for further details. WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Eat & drink ...authentic atmosphere, local flavours, outright excellence Treviso radicchio a local speciality Cipriani Hotel restaurants (Premium). Enjoy the lazy luxury ambience of the Cipriani Hotel over an indulgent meal. The hotel’s flagship dining is the very formal jacket-and-tie Cipriani Restaurant, with summer-only terrace. However the less stuffy (but still smart) Cip’s Club, with idyllic over-the-water terrace looking across the channel to St. Mark’s Square, might make a more memorable option—especially if the weather’s fair and you can secure a terrace table. The modern Italian menu features a selection of pasta, meat and seafood dishes. Closed winter. Reservations required. Hotel Cipriani, Fondamente San Giovanni 10, Venice (vap.: Zitalle, or free boat shuttle from Piazza San Marco for restaurant guests). t. +39 041 520 7744. Met (Premium). Currently Venice’s Michelin-starred standard-bearer, under chef Corrado Fasolato the Met cooks sumptuous modern interpretations of Venetian classics, making full use of both local ingredients and the more exotic flavours that used to pass through the city in its trading heyday. Thus, traditional local sardines in saor re-emerge as anchovies with a red onion confit in cream and balsamic vinegar, while the time-honoured staples bacalao (salt cod) and polenta are combined with a topping a fresh cod and dusting of cacao. Part of the Metropole Hotel, the opulent and mildly retro dining room is cocooned in rich fabrics and splashes of deep colour, while a pianist accompanies dinner. Service is prompt, but perhaps a little officious and—unexpectedly for such an elevated establishment—slightly awkward. Before the Met’s arrival, Venice’s undisputed culinary crown rested with Da Fiore, squirreled away amongst the back alleys of San Polo. Serious and formal, VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT Da Fiore remains a good choice for top quality traditional Venetian dishes. Met Restaurant, Riva degli Schiavoni, 4149 Venice (vap.: S. Zaccaria). t. +39 041 520 5044. Alla Testiere (Expensive). Full of atmosphere, this is one of the liveliest of a modern generation of Venetian bacari that really cares about its cooking. Diners crowd into the small shopfront dining room to enjoy a seafood-based menu that changes according to the day’s catch. While the simple grilled fish is excellent, dishes get considerably more creative, with hints of the Levant enlivening the spicing. High-ish prices reflect the accomplished cooking and choice ingredients (but remain good value compared to competitors). Alla Testiere is by now well-known amongst food-loving visitors, which makes getting a reservation sometimes difficult—despite two evening sittings (the second is more relaxed). If you’re out of luck, try Corte Sconta or Al Covo, both worthwhile alternatives. Reservations required. Alla Testiere, Calle del Mondo Novo 5801, Venice (vap.: S. Zaccaria). t. +39 041 522 7220. Anice Stellata (Expensive). Despite its out of the way location and simple exterior, this new wave bacaro is an excellent place to sample skilled modern Venetian cooking that for inspiration draws consciously on the traditional canon of the city’s past. Naturally, emphasis is on using prime local ingredients: frutti di mare from the lagoon and locally caught Adriatic fish feature prominently, but even the freshly- Met 16 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Eat & drink Need to know • Venice has too many visitors and too few residents to be one of Italy’s top gastronomic centres. Just a few years ago, eating out was largely an exercise in damage limitation to both gullet and wallet—often at the same sitting. Thankfully, things have radically improved since then, with the arrival of a new wave of enthusiastic young artisan chefs keen to shine on an increasingly competitive stage. Whilst Venice may not yet be a gourmet destination, it’s certainly now possible to dine well and even interestingly. • Most of Venice’s most rewarding choices are bacari. In their original form (and there are still some good ones around), these were spit-andsawdust bars serving local wine and tapas-style cicheti at the bar. But like gastro-pubs in Britain, the new-wave of bacari offer sit-down meals and the most celebrated are teetering on the brink of full-blown restauranthood. In contrast, hotel dining is usually poor. With a handful of honourable exceptions (notably the Met), the experience varies from safely dull to dire. • The best bacari and restaurants are hidden away in the backstreets or lie towards the residential edges of Venbaked bread tastes outstanding. Echoing the approach to cooking, the dining area is plainly equipped with simple wooden furniture in partitioned backrooms beyond a simple bar. Both bar and restaurant draw large crowds of smart young professionals, as well as a trickle of well-informed visitors. If you’re not up for a full meal, the bar’s decked with exquisite cicheti. Reservations recommended. Anice Stellato, Fondamenta della Sensa 3272, Venice (vap.: Mad. dell’Orto / S. Marcuola). t. +39 041 720 744. Bancogiro (Expensive). A popular new wave bacaro with a great Rialto location. The colonnaded front faces into bustling Campo San Giacometto di Railto, whilst tables outside at the rear look out onto the Grand Canal. At ground level there’s an enthusiastically-run wine (and cheese) JULY 08 EDITION ice. The tourist thoroughfares of the centre are without redemption— given over to lowest common denominator pizza and pasta joints fronted by predatory waiters. • Given a good chef, Venice has all the natural ingredients for a great cuisine and, in the Rialto, one of Italy’s finest markets. The lagoon provides both the trademark seafood and the preferred carb—top quality risotto rice, whilst super-fresh Mediterranean vegetables grow abundantly on the market-gardening island of St. Erasmo. Within sight on a clear day, the foothills of the Dolomites supplement these staples with rich lamb and beef, cheeses and other dairy produce. • When it comes to drinking, Venice’s hinterland, the Veneto, is one of Italy’s leading wine regions. Apart from still wine, Venetians consume the local sparkling prosecco in quantity, as well as indulging in a spritz—wine, vermouth and soda water—at any time of day. • Nb: Venice’s better restaurants are heavily oversubscribed, particularly at weekends. It is almost essential to book as far in advance as possible— up to a week or two for the very best or to get terrace tables. bar, that also does a good selection of chicheti. Upstairs a small restaurant squeezes in a handful of tables (views from some). Food is a daily-changing and creative modern Italian menu, with particular emphasis on market-fresh fish and seasonal vegetables. Reservations strongly recommended if dining. If you’re looking for something a little gutsier in this area, seek out the stand-up All’ Arco for offal chicheti, or for the less hard-core, the snug and cosy Cantina do Mori round the corner. Either eat inside the formal, civilized dining room, or, much better, outside on a broad waterfront terrace that faces Venice across the water. The alfresco experience is best at dinner, when the soft light of the setting sun is joined by a tracery of fairy lights. (There’s an awning if it showers, but bring wraps against the evening chill and, in summer, protection against mosquitoes if no breeze.) Although the quiet waterside location is the main draw, the food is enjoyable too. Good without scaling any great heights, Harry’s menu delivers carefully prepared, grown-up Italian comfort food—melting risottos, baccalà mantecato (creamed salt cod) and rich zabaglione all feature. Service is well-bred, courteous and dependable. Outside mealtimes, it’s possible to use Harry’s Dolci as an upmarket pasticceria and stop by simply for coffee and cake. Closed winter. (A more central—and expensive—alfresco fine dining alternative is the Danieli Hotel’s rooftop La Terrazzo Danieli.) Reservations strongly recommended. Harry’s Dolci, Fondamente San Biagio 773, Venice (vap.: Palanca). t. +39 041 522 4844 / 520 8337 Enoteca al Volto (Mid Price). Perhaps because it counts Sir Elton John as one of its regulars, this backstreet hole-in-thewall feels no need to put a sign above the door. Whatever the reason, the wooden, cave-like interior hides a very superior selection of cicheti drawing in the cognoscenti as much as the recherché collection of wines. Morsels such as anchovies, olives and Bancogiro, Campo San Giacometto di Rialto 122, Venice (vap.: Rialto.) t. +39 041 523 2061. Harry’s Dolci (Expensive). A scion of Harry’s Bar (not recommended), this smart restaurant is in an isolated position at the western end of Giudecca island. 17 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Eat & drink Caffé Florian Al Bottegon boiled eggs start out familiar enough, but soon the offerings stray on to exotica such as slivers of spleen and strange little meaty chews that remain unidentified. More substantial meals are served in the plain little black room, cooked in traditional style from whatever looked freshest at the Rialto Market that morning. Although unvarnished, al Volto’s not undiscovered, giving it an odd sort of beach-shack-comes-to-the-city chic. Enoteca al Volto, Calle Cavalli, 4081, Venice (vap.: Rialto.) t. +39 041 522 8945. Al Bottegon (Modest). An old-fashioned wine-bar bursting to the wooden rafters with the character of workaday Venice. Local workers and students congregate inside the stand-up only bar area, spilling outside in decent weather. Although mainly a place to drink, there are tasty panini and chicheti lined up on the bar and a wide selection of wine to buy by the bottle. Also known (officially) as the Cantina del Vino gia Schiavi. Cantina del Vino gia Schiavi, Fondamente Nani 992, Venice (vap.: Zattere). t. +39 041 523 0034. Caffé Florian. The most famous café on Europe’s most famous square. It ought to be terrible, but it isn’t. (Although, admittedly, it is terribly expensive.) Like a Fabergé egg, the gilded, carved and marbled interior is a wonder of intriVENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT cacy, all parcelled up into a honeycomb of bijou compartments. Pick one and sip on a cappuccino or nibble English-style afternoon tea in cosseted intimacy. Outside, the chairs are drawn up for that near-perfect view. Best times are early in the morning (from 10:00 am) before the crowds build up, and again late in the evening, when the square is magical (and the interior warmly welcoming if it’s cold outside). Avoid sitting out whilst the orchestra’s playing or you’ll be heftily surcharged for the recital of Lloyd Webber easy-listening favourites. Around the square, the Gran Caffé Quadri and Caffé Lavena are further famous old cafés, the last being a little cheaper. An impressive alternative is the Gritti Palace Hotel’s Bar Longhi. Snug inside with rich reds and period furniture, the bar boasts its own fabulous private terrace jutting out into the Grand Canal. Hotel Danieli, Riva degli Schiavoni 4196, Venice (vap.: S. Zaccaria). t. +39 041 522 6480. Restaurant prices: Budget: below £5, Modest: £5£10, Mid Price: £10-£15, Expensive: £15-25, Premium: £25+; prices are for typical main course at dinner. Prices are for guidance only, please check locally for further details. Caffé Florian, Piazza San Marco 56, Venice (vap.: Vallaresso). t. +39 041 520 5641 Dandolo Piano Bar (Danieli Hotel) It’s worth the high prices to ogle your amazing surroundings at the Danieli Hotel’s hyper-plush lobby piano bar. Seated comfortably in a well-padded club-chair, take in original Murano chandeliers high overhead and walls adorned with Fortuny silks. The space, originally a courtyard, is a merchant prince’s dream with a fabulous balustraded 14th century staircase, and gilded 18th century furnishings wherever you look. For what it’s worth, the Dandolo claims to have concocted its first Bellini whilst Harry was still in short trousers. 18 Dandolo Piano Bar (Danieli Hotel). WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM St. Mark’s Square and Doge’s Palace Weekend planning Weekend basics Planning checklist Break length Off work Flight (London) Transfer 3 nights 2 days 2 hrs 10 mins from 30 mins (watertaxi / waterbus) Before departure you will need to arrange... Time zone Currency Paperwork UK+1 Euro (£1 = €1.27 approx.) Passport (UK & Irish citizens) To check prices and build your own weekend: see www.weekendblueprint.com Sample prices Low: £278 per person (easyJet/ Pensione Accademia (Sept)). • Flights (Thurs out, Sun back) • Hotel (3 nights) • Advance Purchase museum tickets When to High: £572 per person (BA/Hotel Ca’ Pisani (July)). go 5 0 30 Departures Max/Min 20 Gatwick, Heathrow, Stansted, Belfast, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham EM, Dublin, Shannon Temp. °C 10 0 6 Rain (Inches) 0 Books & maps Sunshine Recd. Guide R Venice (Time Out Guide) JULY 08 EDITION Hours/day 12 6 0 Venice (Michelin Green Guide) Recd. Guide (Cultural Sights) Recd. Map 3 J F M A M J J A S O N D Guidebook maps sufficient 19 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Travel choices For current best prices and to book, see www.weekendblueprint.com Vaporetto London departures On arrival EasyJet flies twice daily from Gatwick. Alternatively, British Airways flies Gatwick to Venice twice daily (up to 4 x daily summer), while bmi flies daily from Heathrow. All of these airlines use the modern Venice Marco Polo Airport on the edge of Venice lagoon (12 km from the historic island city centre by road, 10 km across the water). Ryanair flies 3 x daily from Stansted to Treviso airport (32 km inland from Venice, bus connecting with all flights takes approx. 1 hr. to Venice’s Piazzale Roma). Airport Transfer. Waterborne transfers from Marco Polo airport are by public waterbus or (very expensive) water-taxi. By land, there are express and local buses, as well as conventional taxis; but note that all forms of road-based transport will only get you as far as the Piazzale Roma car parks on the edge of the historic city—itself a waterbus or water-taxi ride from your hotel (or long, difficult walk with luggage). • Waterbus. Services are run every 30 mins by Alilaguna, which operates two (blue and red) routes to various parts of Venice via Murano and Venice Lido. Journey times vary from 40 to 80 mins depending on the destination. Tickets are sold in the arrivals hall. A courtesy bus shuttles from the terminal to the landing stage every 5-10 mins. London flight recommendations LGW = Gatwick, LHR = Heathrow From EZY5263 LGW (S) BA2582 LGW (N) BD467 LHR (1) Dept 08:00 07:30 11:05 Arr. 11:10 10:40 14:20 To EZY5268 LGW (S) BA2589 LGW (N) BD468 LHR (1) Dept 21:40 20:35 15:00 Arr. 22:45 21:50 16:20 Outbound to Venice (Thurs) easyJet BA bmi Return from Venice (Sun) easyJet BA bmi • Water-taxis. Available for hire within Venice and for transport to and from Marco Polo airport. Services are organised centrally by the Consorzio Motoscafi Venezia (t. +39 041 5222303 and desk in airport arrivals hall). Except from the airport, water-taxis must be booked in advance. Journey times from the airport are from around 30 mins, and have the advantage of, in many cases, being able to take you directly to your hotel. Operators have a fairly sharkish reputation, so be very clear on charges and extras before setting off. City Transport. Waterbuses (known variously as accelerati, vaporetti or motoscafi) run regular services around the city’s rim, up and down the Grand Canal and Canale di Cannaregio, and to and from Giudecca, as well as to other islands in the lagoon. Services are generally frequent (every 5-20 mins), but you can still end up with a significant walk if your destination is buried deep in the heart of the city. Pay-as-you go fares are complex. The simplest solution is to buy 24 hour passes (‘biglietti 24 ore’) as required—valid for almost all routes (not airport), available from most boat docks and tabacconists. Stamp to validate on first use. Regional & Irish options Belfast, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham EM, Dublin, and Shannon all have direct flights to Venice—either Marco Polo or, in the case of Ryanair flights, Treviso airport. Services are operated by easyJet, Jet2, Aer Lingus and Ryanair. In addition, bmi offer through-ticketed services (via Heathrow) from a wide range of regional airports including Durham Tees, Edinburgh and Glasgow. Gondolas. Useless for getting around, inordinately expensive (always negotiate in advance) and production-line tourism at its most cynical. If you still want to set foot in a gondola, try one of the short traghetti crossings across the Grand Canal Carbon Offset Round-trip CO2 emissions typically 200 kg pp. Offset cost from £1.42 through the CarbonNeutral Company (www.carbonneutral.com). VENICE FIRST TIME W/E BLUEPRINT 20 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM Miscellanea Weekend Blueprint? Who is A.B. Flint? Weekend Blueprint is a small and enthusiastic business designing boutique, ready-planned weekends for travellers to book for themselves using leading online travel agencies and other best-value suppliers. The service saves time and money, and offers a growing range of extraordinary short break experiences. Some people love cars, others horses, a few even grow marrows. For me, it’s travel – always has been, always will be. But it’s not enough to go and come back. I need to tell the world what’s out there: the smells, the sounds, the adventure. I also want, in some small way, to help people understand other cultures and, in doing so, perhaps to look again at their own. (Go on a long enough journey and the strangest sight you’ll see is your own homecoming front door: familiar but strange, you’ll notice the number is crooked, but also see anew the prettiness of the fanlight stained glass.) In 25 years and more of travel I've been lucky enough to savour some of the most intense experiences this planet has to offer - whether searching out the Ark of the Covenant on the dusty plains of Ethiopia, watching a jungle sun-rise over Bohol’s Chocolate Hills or simply camping on the sands of Britain’s remotest beach, I've loved it all. Along the way I've explored around 90 countries on six continents and clocked up over half a million miles on the road. The environment is important, but so is travel's interchange of cultures, peoples and ideas. Since 2006 I've carbon-offset all my flights, but I will continue to set out. I am a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and speak French, Spanish, German and Russian. Home is a converted village pub an hour from both Heathrow and Gatwick shared with my wife and two young sons. Hotel prices Indicative prices per double room. (Based on standard room unless our recommendation is for a specific alternative.) Budget Below £60 Modest £60—£100 Mid Price £100—£140 Expensive £140—£200 Premium £200 + Weekend Styles Activity. Get out there and get involved. No prior experience required. Discovery. Rekindle the explorer in you - culture, history, natural wonders and pure travel. Getaway. Leave the washing-up behind and grab an easygoing change of scenery away from home. Hideaway. Magical places to stay. Shut out the world and recharge mind, body and soul. Alexander Flint Liked this, why not try... JULY 08 EDITION 21 WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM A.B. FLINT TRAVEL DESIGN WWW.WEEKENDBLUEPRINT.COM SHORT BREAKS FOR INDEPENDENT TRAVELLERS