10 Traveler Resources in Castello That You Shouldn't Miss

December 26, 2021 Leonardo Torrence

With its gondolas, canals, amazing restaurants, and unforgettable romantic ambiance, Venice is definitely a city for one's bucket list. Waterfront palazzos, palaces, and churches make drifting down the Grand Canal feel like cruising through a painting. To really experience Venice you must go to the opera or to a classical music performance, nibble fresh pasta and pastries, and linger in the exhibit halls of an art gallery. Label lovers will drool over the high-end shopping in Piazza San Marco.
Restaurants in Venice

1. Museo Querini Stampalia

Castello 4778 Campiello Querini Stampalia, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 271 1411 [email protected] http://www.querinistampalia.it
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4.5 based on 250 reviews

Museo Querini Stampalia

In the heart of Venice, near Piazza San Marco, is one of the most interesting cultural complexes in the city: Palazzo Querini Stampalia, the home of the Foundation of the same name created in 1868 by Count Giovanni.The Library, with around 340.000 volumes for public use, the Museum with its eighteenth century and neoclassical furniture, an area for temporary exhibitions and the new Auditorium designed by Mario Botta are housed there.

Reviewed By 227ianc - London, United Kingdom

A hidden gem in Venice, five minutes walk from the Palasso Grimaldi and roughly half way between Rialto and St Mark on a route tourists don't follow, the Fondazione Querini Stampalia is easy to miss even when you are in the square in front of it due to its discrete entrance from a bridge across the rio. The Foundation is a cultural institution founded in 1869 by Conte Giovanni (Count John), the last descendant of the Venetian Querini Stampalia family. Italian architect Carlo Scarpa, famous for his sensitive modern additions to historic buildings, designed modernist additions historic buildings to create a cultural complex which connects into the historic home of the Querini Stampalia family, displaying historic collections and supporting a variety of different activities and exhibitions. It also houses a loan collection from the Intesa Sanpaolo banking group. For the Biennale, modern art includes interventions and photographs by Roman Opalka in the historic rooms and a major exhibition of the work of the German painter Jorg Immendorff, while there is also an explanatory display on the Count and his library and modern art on display in Scarpa's ground floor spaces at the level of the rio. The admission charge allows admission to all the exhibition and museum areas, plus there is a cafe. There is much more to see than you might appreciate so plan to spend a serious amount of time in this fascinating complex.

2. libreria Acqua alta

Calle Longa Santa Maria Formosa Castello 5176, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 296 0841 http://www.facebook.com/libreriaacquaalta/
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4.5 based on 2,423 reviews

libreria Acqua alta

Reviewed By WaitForIttttt - Hazlet, United States

My husband and I visited Libreria Acqua Alta while visiting Venice for the first time. We're both avid readers and were excited to see a bookshop amidst the beauty of Venice. Libreria Acqua Alta captures the charm of Venice in bookstore form. The books are stacked in boats in the center of shelves of more books. There is a small door that leads to the canal and stacks of books you can climb outside to peer over into the canal. We spent a good amount of time wandering the shelves, which had books in Italian and many other languages (including English). My husband found a copy of one of his favorite books (from the Dragonlance series) in Italian and purchased it to add to our collection. If you love books, Libreria Acqua Alta is most definitely worth a visit while you're in Venice!

3. Scuola Grande di San Marco

Campo dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo, 6777, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 529 4323 [email protected] http://www.scuolagrandesanmarco.it/
Excellent
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4.5 based on 196 reviews

Scuola Grande di San Marco

Reviewed By asiyahnoemik - Pula, Croatia

Already from Calle Larga Giacinto Gallina we saw the outlines of the beautiful Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo. From the last bridge leading to Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo overlooking the facade of Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo and the facade of the Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo we were left breathless, in wonder. Standing in this place and enjoying the beautiful architectural masterpieces is a real privilege. Of course, the rich history of buildings in us evokes admiration and awe. Scuola Grande di San Marco is a Renaissance palace and the former seat of the Venetian confraternities in Sestiere Castello. The Great Brotherhood of San Marco was founded in 1260 and had its headquarters near the now demolished church of Santa Croce (next to Piazzale Roma in Papadopoulos Park). The Dominicans of the church of San Giovanni e Paolo near Castello ceded their land to the fraternity in 1437 to build their new headquarters. Construction work was led by Pietro Lombardo and Giovanni Buora, but the palace burned down in a fire in 1485. Work on the erection of the new and larger palace was entrusted to Mauro Codussi, who built it in 1505, and after that the palace was extended in 1523 towards the Rio dei Mendicanti canal, thanks to the occupation of the architect Jacopo Sansovino. The rich polychrome marble facade of the palace, with numerous reliefs, has an asymmetrical structure that reflects the internal division of space, with a saloon on the left and the so-called hotel lounge (sala dell’albergo) on the right. From the very beginning, the brothers of the School decided to limit the reconstitution of the cycles of paintings, leaving out the vast spaces of the Chapter Room, to dedicate every resource to the smallest walls of the Sala dell'Albergo with a cycle of six canvases dedicated to episodes of life of San Marco. The Hall became one of the most spectacular complexes of the Venetian Renaissance, an attraction for European scholars and experts, thanks to the works of Gentile Bellini ("Sermon of San Marco"), Giovanni Bellini ("The martyrdom of San Marco"), Giovanni Mansueti (" Healing of Aniano "and" Baptism of Aniano "), Paris Bordon (" The fisherman gives the ring to the Doge "), Jacopo Palma il Vecchio (" Saints Mark, George and Nicholas save Venice from the storm "). From 1807 Scuola was turned into a military hospital and it has remained for the entire time of the Austrian administration until today, when it operates as the city hospital Ospedale Civile SS. Giovanni e Paolo.

4. Biblioteca San Francesco della Vigna

Castello 2786, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 523 5341 [email protected] http://www.bibliotecasanfrancescodellavigna.it/it/
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4.0 based on 1 reviews

Biblioteca San Francesco della Vigna

5. Centro Culturale Protestante - Palazzo Cavagnis

Fondamenta Cavanis Castello 5170, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 528 6797 http://www.foresteriavenezia.it/centroculturale.php
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4.0 based on 1 reviews

Centro Culturale Protestante - Palazzo Cavagnis

6. Biblioteca Castello

S. Lorenzo-Castello 5065/i, Venice Italy +39 041 271 0051 http://www.comune.venezia.it/flex/cm/pages/ServeBLOB.php/L/IT/IDPagina/8312
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3.0 based on 1 reviews

7. Ufficio Informazioni Turistiche - Fondamenta San Lorenzo

Fondamenta San Lorenzo Castello 5050, 30122 Venice Italy

8. Biblioteca Pedagogica "Lorenzo Bettini"

Castello 4704/A Campo San Provolo, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 522 0557 [email protected] http://www.comune.venezia.it/content/biblioteca-pedagogica-lorenzo-bettini

9. Biblioteca dell'Archivio generale

Castello 2737/A Campo della Celestia, Venice Italy +39 041 528 9261 http://www.comune.venezia.it/content/biblioteca-dellarchivio-generale

10. Biblioteca " Dante Alighieri " di Venezia

Castello, 2409, 30122 Venice Italy +39 041 244 1595 http://www.marina.difesa.it/formazione-in-marina/formazione_avanzata/ismm/Pagine/Biblioteca.aspx

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