Bologna porticoes at dusk with terracotta and ochre tones
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Bologna

The city of learned arches and slow-cooked sauces.

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Life happens under 40 kilometers of porticoes, turning the city into a single covered walkway. This is home to Europe's oldest university and the spiritual source of ragù — which is only ever served with tagliatelle, never spaghetti. Look up at the leaning Asinelli and Garisenda towers, then get lost in the Quadrilatero market.

The city has over 40km of porticoes, making umbrellas and sunglasses optional.

The University of Bologna, founded in 1088, is the oldest in continuous operation in the Western world.

Spaghetti bolognese is a fiction. Here, the slow-cooked meat sauce, ragù, is served with fresh tagliatelle.

  • Book your climb for the Asinelli Tower online in advance. Slots fill up quickly, especially for sunset.
  • Lunch is serious and dinner can be, too. For top trattorias, book several days (or weeks) ahead, even for a weekday.
  • Most shops and markets close for a 'pausa' between 1pm and 4pm. Plan your shopping and errands accordingly.
  • That €2-3 'coperto' on your bill at a trattoria is a per-person cover charge for bread and a table, not a service tip. While tipping is never expected, rounding the bill up to the nearest five euros for great service is a welcome gesture.
  • Aperitivo is a ritual. Buy a drink between 6-8pm and you'll often get access to a generous buffet of snacks.
  • With nearly 40km of covered porticoes, you can walk across Bologna's center shielded from rain or sun. Good shoes are essential for exploring these historic walkways, which connect everything from the university to Piazza Maggiore.

Where Things Are

Four neighborhoods to orient your first visit

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