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Hotel Ville sull'Arno

Rating (Independent)

Cancellation policies apply

1. The courtyard2. Panoramic view3. Double room4. Room with Arno view5. The swimming pool6. The lobby7. The restaurant

Click on an image for a larger view

  Rates are TAX inclusive, per room, and will be charged in Euro (€) Booking Fees

Property Details

Lungarno Cristoforo Colombo , 1
Florence - Lungarno Tempio 50136
Map not available
The four star Hotel Ville sull'Arno Florence boasts a marvellous position located directly on the right bank of the Arno River next to an antique Florentine Villa, only 10 minutes by bus from the historical center and the many stately monuments of Florence like Ponte Vecchio, the Uffizi Palace, the Florence Cathedral, Pitti Palace and many more.

One of the few hotels in the city center of Florence with a swimming pool, Ville Sull Arno's charming group of villas offer a welcoming atmosphere with the combination of old world Florentine charm accompanied with modern facilities for an unforgettable stay in Italy.

The 44 rooms at Hotel Ville sull'Arno are distributed among the 3 villas which make up the Hotel.
All rooms include: air conditioning, satellite TV, direct dial phone, PC/modem connection, Mini bar, Wi-Fi connection in the main Villa and Villino.
Also, 10 of the rooms are connected, an ideal solution for families.
Comfortable Single room for one person including, air conditioning, satellite TV, direct dial phone, PC/modem connection, Mini bar.
Room feature all comfort and the fresh water of the pool and the shady garden of the hotel provide relaxing and refreshing moments during the Summer. Here our guests can taste the specialties of our restaurant, for guest use only.

Restaurant:
Enjoy your first meal of the day in our charming and well-lit restaurant with a complimentary and abundant Breakfast Buffet that includes pastries, cereals, toasts and jams, fresh fruits and yogurt, cold cuts and cheeses, scrambled eggs, coffee, tea, milk and juice.

From 12 midday to 2:00 pm our Restaurant is open for lunch offering a special daily menu as well as a menu a la carte.
Dinner is served from 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm with an evening chef's selection or an a la carte menu.
The restaurant is always open for light snacks, salads and sandwiches and special food items can be ordered on request in advance.

Swimming-pool:
Enjoy moments of relaxing or some water fun with the kids in our lovely swimming pool set in the garden with a view of the River.
One of the few hotels in Florence offering a swimming pool, come on in and enjoy the soothing water and the shady garden of the for relaxing and refreshing moments during the summer.

Free parking in the courtyard
Free Private underground garage
Free Bicycles upon availability
Baby sitting services on request for a fee
Small animals are welcome
Free access to our swimming pool during the opening season.
  • 24 hour front desk
  • Bar / Lounge
  • Concierge
  • Conference/Meeting facilities
  • Dry cleaning / laundry service
  • Lift/Elevator
  • Luggage storage
  • On-site undercover parking
  • Outdoor pool - unheated
  • Pets allowed
  • Porter/Bell service
  • Restaurant/s
  • Room service - limited service
  • Wifi access

Double room

Book & Pay Securely
Comfortable double room including, air conditioning, satellite and cable TV, radio, direct dial phone, PC/modem connection, Mini bar.
Rates are for 2 people. The room caters for a maximum of 3 adults, and a maximum of 2 children but cannot exceed 3 guests in total.

Available bedding configurations:


1 double
or

2 singles
or

+€50.00 1 double and 1 single
Cancellation Policy:
Minimum 24 Hours (1st night)
  (details... )
Cancellations or changes to bookings for this room must be made at least 24 hours prior to the check in date and time or you will be charged the full amount of the first changed or cancelled night.
  • Air conditioning
  • Bath
  • Hairdryer
  • Mini bar
  • Opening windows
  • Satellite / Cable
  • Tea/Coffee Making

Double single use

Book & Pay Securely
Comfortable double room for one person including, air conditioning, satellite and cable TV, radio, direct dial phone, PC/modem connection, Mini bar.
Rates are for 1 person. The room caters for a maximum of 1 adult.

The following bedding is provided:


1 double
Cancellation Policy:
Minimum 24 Hours (1st night)
  (details... )
Cancellations or changes to bookings for this room must be made at least 24 hours prior to the check in date and time or you will be charged the full amount of the first changed or cancelled night.
  • Air conditioning
  • Bath
  • Hairdryer
  • Mini bar
  • Opening windows
  • Satellite / Cable

Single Room

Book & Pay Securely
Comfortable Single room for one person including, air conditioning, satellite and cable TV, radio, direct dial phone, PC/modem connection, Mini bar.
Rates are for 1 person. The room caters for a maximum of 1 adult.

The following bedding is provided:


1 single
Cancellation Policy:
Minimum 24 Hours (1st night)
  (details... )
Cancellations or changes to bookings for this room must be made at least 24 hours prior to the check in date and time or you will be charged the full amount of the first changed or cancelled night.
  • Air conditioning
  • Bath
  • Hairdryer
  • Mini bar
  • Opening windows
  • Satellite / Cable

Business Facilities

An Internet point is available for our guests in the lobby equipped with a computer always on line. Wi-fi is also available in the main Villa and Villino.

Meeting facilities:
Hotel Ville Sull'Arno's meeting rooms provides natural light with a seating capacity of up to 16 people in table style seating and up to 25 people in theater style seating.
Complete stationery is provided along with video projector, white board, and flip chart.
Set ups for video conferences are available for a fee on advance request.
 

 
Check In 1400hrs
Check Out 1200hrs
Getting There From the Pisa Airport 'Galileo Galilei':
take the highway A11 heading South (direction: Rome), and take the "Firenze Sud" exit.

From the Florence Airport 'Amerigo Vespucci':
reach the "Viali di circonvallazione" (a ring road around the center of Florence), and head South towards Piazza della Libertà. Stay on the ring road, passing Piazzale Donatello, then Piazza Beccaria, until you reach the river Arno. Then take a left running along the river, the Lungarno Pecori Giraldi, and drive on, until you see the name of the street changing first to Lungarno del Tempio, and then to Lungarno Cristoforo Colombo.
The Hotel Ville sull'Arno will be on your right, close to the Da Verrazzano Bridge.
From either Northern or Southern Italy, we recommend you should take the "Firenze Sud" exit of the highway A1.

From the 'Firenze Sud' exit:
after the toll gate, go straight and follow the signs for "centro città". When you get on the bridge on the river Arno, take a left at the streetlight and keep driving on the Lungarno, the street running along the river, which is there called Lungarno Aldo Moro. After the second streetlight the Lungarno's name becomes Lungarno Cristoforo Colombo. The hotel will be on your left (on the river side), just before the streetlight at the crossing with the Da Verrazzano Bridge.
Parking Free parking in the courtyard
Free Private underground garage
Things To Do Main atttractions:

PONTE VECCHIO:
If you are a guest at our Hotel Ville Sull'Arno, of course you will enjoy a front seat view of the River Arno and when taking a leisurely stroll into Florence, just turn left when exiting the Hotel and go straight on to Ponte Vecchio on the River. The Arno River runs approximately 240 kilometers long through various provinces of Tuscany, being the largest river in the region. In the past, the city of Florence was regularly flooded by the water from this river even as recent as the famous flood of 1966. Since then new dams have been built which have greatly alleviated the risk of floods.
The original old bridge "Ponte Vecchio", which connects the right and left river banks of Florence, dates back to the Roman era and was originally done in wood built on stone piers. The medieval bridge we see today was however, done after a great flood in 1333 which destroyed the original. Rebuilt over a span of over 200 years, much of it is accredited to the Florentine architect Taddeo Gaddi.
Ponte Vecchio consists of three segmental arches with the main arch having spanning at 30 meters and the two side arches spanning at 27 meters each.
Today the bridge is characterized also by the many shops, primarily jewelry shops, that line it. This is not new though for it has been since medieval times that blacksmiths, butchers, and tanners set up shop here, catering mostly to the many soldiers who crossed it.
Commerce on the bridge took a change when the Medici family moved into the area in the later half of the 1300's not long after the devastating black plague of 1348, which radically decreased the population. For the next century, things began to change drastically due to the wealth and influence of the Medici's and by the late 1500's, the butcher shops, which led to an acceptable polluting of the river, where forced out and instead replaced by new shops consisting of primarily goldsmiths and artists. The shops and prestige of Ponte Vecchio increased continuously and around the same time, in 1565, Cosimo I de Medici had the monumental " Vasari Corridor" built by the great Florentine architect Giorgio Vasari. The corridor runs one kilometre in length above the Arno River and connects Palazzo Pitti to Palazzo Vecchio. The private and exclusive corridor, which contains an exquisite collection of art, allowed members of the Medici family to move freely between their private residence in Pitti Palace to Palazzo Vecchio.

UFFIZI PALACE AND GALLERY:
The Uffizi Palace dates back to 1560, when Cosimo I of the Medici Family was in full reign in Florence. This palace, as well as many others in Florence from the same period, was done by the famous Florentine architect Giorgio Vasari and carried on by Buontalenti who designed the Tribune.
The horse shoe structure, that makes up the Uffizi, stretches from Piazza della Signoria to the Arno and is connected by a passageway to Palazzo Vecchio, also in the same Piazza. It is then connected to Pitti Palace by the Vasari Corridor which passes above the Arno River.
The word Uffizi means offices and in fact, the palace was built to house the offices of the judges who administered government in Florence. The offices are found all above ground level on a second floor whereas on the first floor ground level, art workshops and studios were created for local artisans who worked with materials in glass, ceramics, metals and stones.
The Uffizi Palace also hosts an art Gallery that was originally created to gather the numerous paintings, mostly accumulated by the Medici family found, around the palace. The Uffizi Gallery, opened to the public in the 16th century, is now one of the most famous, and oldest, art museums in the world. Its creation began with Francesco I of the Medici's when he enclosed the Gallery on the second floor, with huge windows and began the arrangement of the collection, acquired over the years by the Grand Ducal, which included statues, paintings, jewelry, weapons, medals, and instruments.
World renowned artists like Cimabue, Giotto, Caravaggio, Raphael, Botticelli, and Michelangelo have their painting exhibited here.

PALAZZO VECCHIO:
Set in Piazza della Signoria in the historical center of Florence, the Gothic Palazzo Vecchio is one of the most admired municipal buildings in all of Tuscany. Once called Palazzo Signoria, as like the piazza it sits in, Palazzo Vecchio has also been called by other names throughout the times including Palazzo del Popolo (People's palace), Palazzo dei Priori ( Priors Palace), and Palazzo Ducale (Ducal Palace).
Its role, however, has always been that of a government building serving as a seat for numerous leaders. The plan of Palazzo Vecchio was designed in 1299 by Arnolfo di Cambio, noted Florentine architect and sculptor and designer of the famous Florence Dome, but carried out and finished by other architects and artists after his death in 1310. It was originally built on the ruins of two other palaces found in the piazza, Palazzo dei Fanti and Palazzo dell'Esecutore di Giustizia owned by the Florentine Uberti family.
An ancient bell tower that existed as well, was built into the facade of Arnolfo's plan and accordingly named Torre d'Arnolfo after the architect himself.
After its beginning, Palazzo Vecchio also saw its share of major renovations throughout the years the first being in 1440 under Cosimo I of the Medici's adding renaissance decorations to one of the halls and the first courtyard designed by Michelozzo. During the Republic era under the Savonarola, the Hall of Five Hundred was put in.
When Cosimo I decided to take up residence here between 1540 and 1550, he had the artist Giorgio Vasari enlarge the palace almost doubling it in size with the new addition in the back. When Cosimo moved to the grander Pitti Palace, he officially changed the name to Palazzo Vecchio (meaning old palace). The palace also includes an over hanging walkway which leads to the Uffizi, going over Ponte Vecchio and to Pitti Palace.
Later, when Florence had become the capital of the kingdom of Italy, Palazzo Vecchio regained importance. Today it remains a symbol of local government and still houses the office of the mayor and the City Council.
Much of the building today is a museum which can be visited by the public. A replica of Michelangelo's David stands outside the entrance. The original was moved to the Academia Gallery in the late 1800's. Next to the David find the statue of Hercules and Cacus done by Baccio Bandinelli.
The first floor is composed of 3 courtyards, with the monumental stairs among them done by Vasari to sustain the second floor. The most imposing chamber in Palazzo Vecchio is the Salone dei Cinquecento, decorated with exquisite frescoes depicting battles of Florence over Siena and Pisa and ceilings painted by Vasari and his pupils. The studiolo is also found on the first floor along with the "Quartieri monumentali" (monumental quarters) These rooms are used by the mayor and his staff and are not accessible to the public.
The second floor contains the Apartments of the Elements, Terrace of Saturn, The Hercules Room, the room of Jupiter, the Room of Cybele, The Ceres Room, the Sala Verde (green room) called so because of the color of the walls, the Room of the Sabines, called so because of the ceiling decoration, the Dining Room, the Room of Penelope, the Private Chambers of Eleanor, the Sala dell'Udienza (Audience chamber), the Chapel of the Signoria, dedicated to Saint Bernard, the Sala dell'Orologio, the Stanza del Guardarobe known as the Hall of Wardrobe and Geographical maps where the Grand Dukes kept their precious belongings and the walls are decorated with maps of esteemed value and scientific interest, the Old Chancellery, and the Study used by Cellini for restoration work on the treasures of the Medici princes.

PIAZZA DELLA SIGNORIA:
Piazza della Signoria is found in the heart of the historical center of Florence and id one of the most visited piazzas of the city by both tourists and locals alike. The creation of this L-shaped square dates back to 1268 when the Guelph party gained control again over the Ghilbelines who dominated Florence up until 1250. The two parties, which divided Florence, had been fighting for power since 1215. Before then, in the original Roman town called Florentia, the square was already popular and included a theater, roman baths, and various workshops discovered from excavations in the 1980's.
So, in 1268, the Guelphs tore down all property of their rivals on the site including the towers which belonged to the Foraboschi and Uberti familes, and the land remained neglected up until 1385 when it was paved for the first time. The piazza gets its name from the dominating palace found there; Palazzo della Signoria, now called Palazzo Vecchio. The palace was designed by Arnolfo Di Cambio at the turn of the 1300th century for government offices. The piazza is also noted for the famous Bonfire of the Vanities, not the film by Brian De Palma, but the burning of what were considered vanities like books, fine clothing, art and poetry in 1497 by the Dominican priest Girolomo Savonarola and his followers. The priest, who ruled Florence from 1452 to 1498 was later burned in the same spot where he held the fire marked in front of the fountain of Neptune by a marble plaque.
The L-shaped square hosts other famous buildings including the Uffizi and Loggia dei Lonzi with 15 gothic statues lining the roof, the most noted being that of Benvenuto Cellini's Perseus with the head of Medusa in hand.
Other statues worth noting in Piazza della Signoria include a replica of David by Michelangelo (the original was moved to the Academia Gallery in 1873), and the equestrian statue of Cosimo I de'Medici.

FLORENCE DOME AND CATHEDRAL:
The picture perfect symbol of Florence, the Cupola of the Cathedral of Florence, Santa Maria del Fiore, is without a doubt the most noted monument in Florence.
The Cathedral we see today, is the third cathedral built on the same sight of the original two, dedicated to Santa Reparata which remained active in Florence for nine centuries, until orders were given to demolish it in 1375 because, although it was big, it was too small for the population of what the city had become.
Designed by the architect Arnolfo Di Cambio in 1296, the dome was not entirely completed until 1462 due to problems with the original plan by Di Cambio. The original cupola that he had designed was not able to sustain the enormous cathedral, with its 45 meter roof space, with the usual method of permanent scaffolding. The problem was resolved by Brunelleschi in 1418, when he had already been working on the project for nearly 9 years, after winning a competition with his shrewd expertise in construction techniques used by the ancient Romans. His final inspiration came from his study of the cupola on the Pantheon which was also carried out with a double wall without scaffolding. The requisites were that it had to be octagonal, measure 46 metres in diameter at the base, built without scaffolding and appear to be at least double in size.
In 1423, when he was 46 yrs. old, his design won and he was given complete charge of finishing it.
The task, which formed the basis of Renaissance architecture, was carried out by Brunelleschi and was finished in 1434, later completed by the lantern in 1436 and the four tribunes in the apse shortly after in 1438. Applications on the lantern were made in 1461 and the great copper sphere, cast in the workshop of renown Florentine sculptor Andrea Verriocchio, was placed on the top in 1474.
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