Porta Romana and Porta Venezia

On the east side of the city are the triumphal arches of Porta Venezia (north-east) and Porta Romana (south-east) – two of Milan’s city gates originally built as 16th-century Spanish fortifications and repeatedly rebuilt through history. Needless to say, you can head for Venice (east) by one, or for Rome (south-east) by the other.

The area around Porta Venezia is at once commercial, residential, historic and ethnic. To the south-east of the fascist monument Stazione Centrale are Middle Eastern, North African, Senegalese and Indian ghettoes, characterized by textile cottage industries and ethnic food outlets. On course for Monza is Corso Buenos Aires with over 3km of high-street chains and factory outlets.

Also a major traffic artery of Milan, Corso Venezia houses the other end of the retail spectrum with high fashion boutiques carried over from the quadrilatero d’oro. Look up, and there is an entirely different scene: historic aristocratic townhouses, from 15th-century Renaissance residences and 18th-century neoclassical houses to 19th-century neo-Palladian palazzos and turn-of-the-century Liberty façades (including the remarkable Palazzo Castiglioni); right at Porta Venezia is the Hotel Diana, famous for its Liberty features.

On the west side of Corso Venezia is Milan’s second biggest central park, Giardini Pubblici. Built in the 18th century by neo-classical architect Giuseppe Piermarini (who also designed La Scala and the Palazzo Reale), it was extended by Parco Sempione’s architect Alemagna in the next century to include the neo-classical Villa Reale, an ex-royal abode topped with toga-ed statues that now houses the Galleria d’Arte Moderna. The park also contains Milan’s natural history museum Civico Museo di Storia Naturale, the Museo del Cinema and the Planetario Ulric Hoepli. At the south end of Corso Venezia is the Basilica di San Babila, a Romanesque church first built in the 4th century, just at the edge of the commercial centre of Milan.

Porta Romana is situated in the middle of the thoroughfare Corso di Porta Romana, which heads south-east from Piazza Missori in the centro past the University of Milan and through the Piazzale Medaglie d’Oro, where the remains of the old 16th-century Spanish walls and the arch itself lie. While the area is both residential and industrial, Porta Romana is also punctuated by lots of fashionable bars, clubs and restaurants. Their distance away from the more commercial zones of the Centro, Corso Como and Navigli serves as a positive index of how hip a venue is, culminating in a cluster of fashionable establishments at the south end of Via Ripamonti (which splits off from Porta Romana). In between Porta Venezia and Porta Romana and heading due east is Corso di Porta Vittoria – of which several blocks are taken out by the majestic fascist architecture of Palazzo di Giustizia, Milan’s law courts, where some of Italy’s most important court cases are heard. Further east on this road is the historic monument to five very important days in Milan’s history in March 1848 (at Piazza 5 Giornate), when the whole of Milan demonstrated against Austrian rule, capturing the official government buildings and driving out the Hapsburg officials. Now a mighty sculpture and obelisk stand proud in the square in honour of the fallen.


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