Rialto Bridge | Venice for Visitors (2024)

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Ponte di Rialto

Rialto Bridge | Venice for Visitors (1)

By DurantImboden

The Piazza San Marco may be more famous, but thePonte di Rialto (Rialto Bridge) isthe true heart of Venice. The current structure was built in just three years, between1588 and 1591, as a permanent replacement for the boat bridge and three wooden bridgesthat had spanned the Grand Canal at various times since the 12th Century. It remained theonly way to cross the Grand Canal on foot until the Accademia Bridge was built in 1854.

The Rialto Bridge's 7.5-meter (24-foot) arch was designed toallow passage of galleys, and the massive structure was built on some 12,000wooden pilings that still support the bridge more than 400 years later.

Thearchitect, Antonio da Ponte ("Anthony of the Bridge," appropriately enough),competed against such eminent designers as Michelangelo and Palladio for thecontract.

The bridge has three walkways: two along the outer balustrades, and a wider centralwalkway leading between two rows of small shops that sell jewelry, linens, Murano glass,and other items for the tourist trade.

(Warning: The bridge consists primarily of steps,making it a challenge for tourists with strollers or wheelchairs.)

Over the centuries, the Ponte di Rialto has earned both praise and scorn from critics.Consider this description from Ian Littlewood's Venice: A Literary Companion:

"The bridge of the Rialto has had a mixed press. In the judgement of theVenetians, says Moryson, it 'deserves to be reputed the eighth miracle of the world.'Coryate, while deploring the 'vicious and licentious varlets' who worked the traghettounderneath it, was in agreement--'the fairest bridge by many degrees for one arch thatever I saw, or heard of.' But then both Moryson and Coryate were there within a few yearsof the bridge's completion. Others have since been less charitable, condemning it astop-heavy and ungraceful. The dispute is academic. Like the Eiffel Tower, the Rialto hasacquired a symbolic status that puts it well beyond the reach of aesthetic judgements."

In The World of Venice, Jan Morris paints an affectionatepicture of the Rialto Bridge:

"Structurally, it was a complete success--during rioting in 1797 theyeven fired cannon from its steps, to dispel the mobs; and for myself, I would not change astone of it. I love the quaint old figures of St. Mark and St. Theodore, on the stationside of the bridge. I love the Annunciation on the other side, angel at one end, Virgin atthe other, Holy Ghost serenely aloft in the middle. I love the queer whale-back of thebridge, humped above the markets, and its cramped little shops, facing resolutely inwards.I think one of the great moments of the Grand Canal occurs when you swing around the bendbeside the fish market and see the Rialto there before you, precisely as you have imaginedit all your life, one of the household images of the world, and one of the few Venetianmonuments to possess the quality of geniality."

Reaching the Rialto Bridge:

It's hard to miss the Ponte di Rialto. From the train station or the Piazzale Roma,simply follow the signs to "Rialto." The same applies if you're walking from thePiazza San Marco. (Just head for the clock tower, cut through the arched passage, andfollow the upscale shopping streets known as the Mercerie until you reach theGrand Canal, then turn right and walk two blocks to the bridge.)

Another option is to approach the bridge by vaporetto, or waterbus. The No. 1 local stops at Rialto on its way up or down the Grand Canal; forinformation on other boats, see our VeniceVaporetto Routes article.

If you need a place to stay in the area, see theRialto listings in ourVenice Hotel Directions or check the maps in ourillustrated article, Hotels on the GrandCanal.

More Rialto Bridge photos:

Rialto Bridge | Venice for Visitors (2)

Old Venice meets New Venice in this photo of a package-deliveryboat on the Grand Canal.

Rialto Bridge | Venice for Visitors (3)

The Rialto Bridge's balustrades are packed with tourists andpicture-takers on the Saturday of a holiday weekend.

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Don't let the crowds discourage you--if you're patient, you caneasily grab a spot along the railing.

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The views from either side of the Rialto Bridge are spectacular,with a constant stream of boats and barges traveling up and down the GrandCanal.

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On the inside of the bridge, within the double row of stonearches that provide much of the bridge's structural strength, shopkeepers selljewelry and souvenirs from stalls that have catered to vistors and locals sinceVenice's heyday as the most important trading center in Southern Europe.

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At night, the best views of the Rialto Bridge are from theNo. 1 vaporetto. (Get a seat in the openstern area, or up front if you're on one of the older water buses with seating inthe bow.)

Also see:
Rialto FoodMarkets

About the author:

Rialto Bridge | Venice for Visitors (8)Durant Imboden haswritten about Venice, Italy since 1996.He covered Venice and European travel at About.com for 4-1/2 years before launchingEurope for Visitors (includingVenice for Visitors) with CherylImboden in 2001.

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