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    Teatro di Ostia

    4.6 (33 reviews)
    Closed 9:00 am - 7:00 pm

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    Capitolium Temple
    Richard C.

    Pompeii too far? Too crowded? Far too crowded? Ostia Antica is a splendid option and much more manageable than the vastness of Pompeii. The ancient port city of Rome, Ostia Antica is an easy metro ride from Rome. And all you need is a metro ticket to ride all the way so the trip is extremely inexpensive. The stop is only about a hundred yards or so from the gates of ancient Ostia...and sort of in the middle of nowhere, but signs point out the location. A couple of restaurants line the road in case you are hungry. There is also a restaurant located on the grounds of the ruined city and the food is actually fairly decent. A museum and bookstore are located near the restaurant also, but I wouldn't spend your time in the museum when the open air city is a museum in itself. Get a map...it is easy to get lost in the maze of ancient streets and you'll also want to know what you are looking at. Like Pompeii, large chunks of Ostia are still waiting for excavation, but what you can see? At the entrance you'll stroll past the columbariums (small pigeon-holed structures) which once held the cremated remains of Ostians. Yeah, first stop is the cemeteries which once lined the roads outside of Roman cities. Continue past apartment buildings, neighborhood baths with windows to chat with neighbors strolling by, a nicely preserved theater, the forum with its main temple, shops and cafeteria, private homes with their marble toilets. Truly wonderful. In winter, which is when I travel to Rome, Ostia can be virtually empty. Last time I was there, there were about five people and no guards. I was free to wander the backstreets at my leisure, even pausing once to kick at same grass and finding there was a beautiful mosaic under the turf and mud!!! Warning...give yourself time. Ostia is large and it takes an entire day to do it right and enjoy yourself. If you don't want to eat at the restaurants, bring a picnic meal with you and dine amongst the ruins. Love this place...

    Jason L.

    Visited this place a few days ago, so much to see here and not overly busy, which makes a change for Rome. Entry to here was quite cheap with a cafe, shop and toilet located inside the complex. There are taps around the site and a few places to buy drinks. There is a Main Street running through the town. It is more fun to explore I found, with lots of houses, caves and buildings that are all accessible to the public. There is a lot of information available on at each exhibit although I would recommend a tour guide if you are visiting here with little knowledge about the site. The amphitheatre is very impressive with much of it still intact, you must take time to see it if you are visiting here. Definitely worth a visit, just watch out for the uneven pathways and crumbling stairs.

    Qype User (amy291…)

    I've went there once, when my former class had it's study programm in Rome, must have been May 2007. I loved it! No large signs that it's forbidden to step off the sidewalks, no big red lines you weren't allowed to cross. Acutally, you can walk through the old, ancient buildings the way you'd like to. The feeling of history surrounds one.

    Qype User (Gierri…)

    Great amount of history in one field trip! From the buriel grounds to the baths, the crumbling architecture is spectacular. There are so many things to see here; a necropolis, an ancient marketplace where merchants would sell their wares, a theater for plays and games, the social grounds, a fire department, and the tile mosaics on the ground seem to be everywhere. Our tour guide told us that the floow of the theater could be filled with water for water games this must have been a spectacular event! This is an all day event so be prepared to spend the day. There is a shop on-site as well as a restaurant and coffee shop. We didn't eat there but the food we saw others eating looked good.

    Great example of Roman city planning
    Kristen R.

    Ostia Antica is a nice side trip on the outskirts of Rome, for about 11 euros a person plus the cost of a Metro ride. There aren't many tourists here, so it's a great location to take pictures of the ruins. It's a great look into an ancient Roman city, seeing how street planning worked in those times. I absolutely adored seeing the theater there. Plan to spend at least half a day here if you really like to walk about and see Roman ruins.

    Mosaic bath floors built BC
    Jess N.

    This is a really cool piece of Rome history! This is the first port city in Rome on the Tiber river. Built in ~700 BC, the ruins are still partially intact today. The coolest thing that amazed me was the outdoor amphitheater with seating for thousands and the beautiful mosaic tile floors that are still intact today (in the bathhouses). And the ancient toilets that are still there! It's so cool how the ancient Romans used aqueducts for their water needs. The opulence of the buildings can be seen today still. There was a lot of decoration used on the buildings and the buildings themselves were a work of art. A lot of the public buildings had commerce on the main level and then living quarters above. There's little signs on the paths that help direct you around to the different parts of this town. It was much larger than I had originally figured and the walking tour around the city took us a couple of hours. They have a little cafe to get food and drink and a nice place to sit and enjoy it either inside or out on a patio. There's a gift shop too. There's a particular book in this shop that caught my eye. It has overlay pages included to show you what a ruin looked like in its heyday. They include a picture of the current ruin and then you lay the transparency over the top to see what it historically looked like. This is super cool for visual people. The ruins have been preserved, but it's sometimes hard to imagine what might have been thousands of years ago.

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    9 years ago

    Molto bella!!!! Bring comfortable shoes(like hiking shoes) because the road is very steep.

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    14 years ago

    If you cant make it to Pompei then check out this place. Its only 45 minutes or less by train outside of Rome. Totally worth it.

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    Teatro di Ostia Reviews in Other Languages

    Review Highlights - Teatro di Ostia

    Like Pompeii, large chunks of Ostia are still waiting for excavation, but what you can see?

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    Auditorium Parco della Musica

    Auditorium Parco della Musica

    4.5(37 reviews)
    24.3 kmFlaminio
    €€

    The major classical music venue for Rome…read more The music that is booked there is a mix. Much of it is outstanding. We have heard magic. We have heard "leave-while-you-cans". * * * Architectually, the complex is an epic fail. Italy has tremendous architecture. The Citta Della Musica most assuredly does not make the A list. * * * The Auditorium Complex was meant to be a cross between London's South Bank and London's Barbican. It is like the South Bank because there are many concert halls involved in related buildings. It is like the Barbican because the complex is Brutalist. Make that failed Brutalist. Brutalism when it works combines two fascinating aspects. 1) An exterior profile that is striking and powerful. You can't get the basic shape out of your mind. 2. Complex interweaving interiors that are non-linear, difficult to manoever, but expose interlinkages of space in non-trivial surprising ways. Rome's Citta della Musica flunks majorly on both counts. 1 Elaborated) The profiles are three egg concrete egg shapes. They look like every basketball stadium you have seen in the United States. Nothing new or exciting in the shape. The architect did not allow for what water would do to the concrete. So what was once new and resplendent and white is now gray and dingy. On a powerful form such as Boston City Hall or the Barbican, Vertical sharp ridges on the walls or other parallel forms draw water away from the concrete allowing the concrete to maintain its original color. Plus the form is bold enough to be interesting regardless of the color of the concrete. Here you just get Cleveland blah. 2 Elaborated) There is no real twisting or turning of forms. Just inconvenience with no spatial discovery. The snack bars for all of the many halls is on the far right of the complex. So for many shows, refreshments are simply too far away to get. There is no great discovery in having to walk through three identical lobbies to get to water when you are thirsty. Most of the halls involve mandatory climbing of endless stairs. And I do mean endless. And I do mean mandatory. Anyone who has been to an old school concert hall like Carnegie Hall and has bought the cheap seats knows all about climbing endless stairs to get to your seat. Nothing new or innovative here. 3) The two plusses - credit where credit is due. 3a) The lobbies are in beautiful red brick. They are high, deep, and expansive. Those are wonderful public spaces. 3b) The acoustics are outstanding. Most of the great European symphony concert halls have great acoustics. So this is not so distinctive. Still, there are some surprisingly dead concert halls in the United States. * * * For the right performance of a Haydn symphony, a Strauss tone poem or a Szymanowski concerto, none of the failed Brutalism will matter. Music assuages the imperfections of architecture.

    WOW. This place is just so stunning. What a beautiful hall to listen to music in. I actually had…read morethe honour of performing here once and was wowed by the acoustics. It is probably one of the best concert halls I have ever been in. The architecture is simply amazing. Do take the time to explore around here as there are cafes, stores, etc. that you can look around in prior to the event/concert you are attending. I wish I had more time to stay in the hall and fully soak in how great it was. Do not pass on an opportunity to come here if one comes up.

    Photos
    Auditorium Parco della Musica
    Auditorium Parco della Musica
    Auditorium Parco della Musica - Front row (The National)

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    Front row (The National)

    Cirque du Soleil - Amaluna - Yelp night Behind The Scenes!

    Cirque du Soleil - Amaluna

    3.9(450 reviews)
    26.2 km

    Waaaah! Amaluna. Ama-was-really bored! Ama want my $126 back too!…read more What a letdown. I've seen four Cirque du Soleil shows and this one doesn't even seem to be good enough to put the Cirque du Soleil name on it. The show isn't cohesive at all. It's just one act after another, all talented, and they all do something interesting and impressive for about a minute or two, and then spend the next ten or fifteen minutes doing it again, and again, and again. Enough already. The music was upbeat and I think it gave the allusion that the show was better than it really was. Oh man, this was bad. I was so glad when the show was finally over. You know it's bad when a show features someone balancing bones for fifteen minutes. I wish I was kidding about that. I was thinking of being generous and giving it three stars but I don't what Cirque du Soleil throwing these sub-par shows at us and knowing we'll still go because of their name. Another thing is they were way too lax with people taking photos during the show They were even using flash! Not good! Not safe either. It's not cheap to see this show, but the Cirque de Soleil shows are usually worth it. Not this one. One good thing about the San Pedro venue where I saw it is that free street parking can easily be found just a five-minute walk away...which is great because I couldn't wait to get the heck out of there.

    This show was full of so many talented people. I loved…read moreseeing all the different acts and listening to the rocking band. The reason I'm not giving it 5 stars is because of our seats. We were not in the very center, but we weren't in nose bleed seats either. From our seats we could not see the very front part of the stage. It was obstructed by one of the tent poles. It would have been nice if the web site had mentioned this before purchasing our tickets.

    Photos
    Cirque du Soleil - Amaluna - Sandwich Chef from Tapis Rouge

    Sandwich Chef from Tapis Rouge

    Cirque du Soleil - Amaluna - My favorite performer, Lili, the Balance Goddess.

    My favorite performer, Lili, the Balance Goddess.

    Cirque du Soleil - Amaluna - The Balance Goddess, Lili

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    The Balance Goddess, Lili

    Teatro di Ostia - landmarks - Updated June 2026

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