Monti, Esquiline and San Lorenzo

Stepping back from the Centro Storico are the layers of Rome that most visitors rarely experience. The Esquiline hill rises from beside the remains of the Roman Forum up to Termini station with Monti on one side and the sleazy chic of San Lorenzo towards the north-east.

Behind Trajanís Market is the delightful neighbourhood of Monti, fast becoming one of the hottest addresses in Rome. So-called because of its undulating landscape of steep cobbled hills, it was once the ëSuburraí in ancient times, a seething, sweaty, noisy pit, home to the urban poor. Now it’s an affluent residential neighbourhood; while the Via dei Serpenti and Via del Boschetto quietly pulsate with trendy cafés, bars and boutiques, Monti still retains a calm and distinctively local flavour.
The Colosseum can just be glimpsed at the end of Via dei Serpenti, especially dramatic when illuminated at night. This is a quiet area and home to one of Rome’s best new boutique hotels, the Hotel Capo d’Africa.

Up the Esquiline hill and along the flank of Termini station was once filled with ancient ruins and palatial Renaissance villas, but the reunification of Italy in 1870 brought urban planners from Piedmont who swept away the carpet of historical grandeur to make way for a grid like city plan resembling Turin.

Despite various cultural initiatives insisting that the area is undergoing something of a regeneration, it still feels rather slummy, and has something of the immigrant ghetto about it, with wholesale Chinese shops and budget one-star accommodation. The arrival of the monolithic ES hotel (now the Radisson SAS) with its glamorous rooftop pool has kick started these pretensions of rehab, but the immediate locality is less than picturesque and frequented by questionable nocturnal characters. South of the station is distinctively more salubrious, with the ultra luxuriant Hotel Exedra in Piazza della Repubblica.

Just beyond the shabby patch of land north of the station to the east of the city is lively, artsy San Lorenzo. Until recently a no-go area of shady low-life and drug dealers and still badly scarred from consistent bombings in World War II, San Lorenzo is one of the most interesting neighbourhoods in Rome. Ferociously proletariat and left wing in the ’50s and ’60s, the area has always been home to artists and socialist intelligentsia, most famously cinematographer and writer Pier Paolo Pasolini.

Little has changed today, and a bohemian brigade of graphic designers, artists and writers have occupied the area’s desirable loft accommodation and frequent the neighbourhood’s clutch of superb restaurants. Eateries Uno e Bino, Vinarium and Arancia Blu are highly recommended as is the more rustic working-class fodder at Pommidoro and perennial favourite Tram Tram along the tram tracks. Most places are open well into the night, accommodating the bohemian night owls with their irregular timetables.

San Lorenzo is certainly worth a visit for dinner, but don’t be appalled by its down-at-heel appearance. It’s an area that oscillates violently between grungy on one corner and sophisticated and refined on the next. This is what gives it a cultural edge and makes for a refreshing antidote to the chequered table cloths and cloying tourism in the Centro Storico.


Find a...