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Ponte Vecchio
A traveller to Italy can never miss visiting the wonderful Ponte Vecchio. Ponte Vecchio is Europe's oldest wholly stone, closed-spandrel segmental arch bridge built over the Arno River in Florence.
The structure and idea behind the entire architectural piece and the surrounding area is exceptionally splendid and a visit to the bridge would add a real value to a tourist’s itinerary.
Ponte Vecchio is probably the most worldwide celebrated bridge in Florence: the modern architectural structure we can see today consisting of three stone arches, and followed in 1565 to an old wooden bridge built in the ancient Roman times. The first wooden building dates back to 972 and was smashed by a flood in Florence in 1117. The most beautiful architectural part is surely an opening midway of the bridge that offers a stunning view of the river Arno and its shoreline (The shore it’s pretty visible, because there’s not a lot of water in the river!).
The Bridge
Ponte Vecchio is Europe's oldest wholly-stone segmental arch bridge. There are three arches, the main arch of 30 meters, and the side ones of 27. The Medici family, in 1953, prohibited butchers from selling in Ponte Vecchio, thus enforcing the bridge dignity; the butchers were rapidly replaced by gold merchants.
The Shops and the Vasarian Corridor
Today, the bridge stages numerous jewellery shops trading antiquities and gold and silver selections. Above the shops runs the Vasary Corridor, a long passage built in 1565 for order of Cosimo I De' Medici Duke of Florence, which crosses the suspension bridge and link the Uffizi Gallery and Palazzo Pitti.
Ponte Vecchio, during World War II, has been the only Florence Bridge not destroyed by the Nazis during the retreat in the August of 1944; but the Arno flood, the one of 1966, severely damaged the bridge and the jewellery shops.
Ponte Vecchio is really the most evocative route you can take in Florence historical centre: probably one of the most romantic bridges in the entire world. The legend tells that if you lock a padlock and then you throw the key in the water, lovers can reach immortal love!
It was believed that locking padlocks in the structure of the bridge and throwing away the key into the river would unite lovers for eternity. There were numerous padlocks locked to various places especially in the railings around the statue of Cellini. Since this practice would spoil and damage the ancient bridge, thousands of padlocks were removed from time to time. Recently, the government has displayed a penalty of 50 euros for those caught doing this.
The central chamber of the bridge is exposed to an area with vaulted pillars offering a stunning view of the river Arno. During summer, one can see the bridge filled with visitors, street performers and portrait painters making it a highly entertaining and thrilling experience for the tourists. On a clear day, it is a fantastic sight to view the bridge during sunset, which adorns the bridge with golden and yellow hues. Standing over Ponte Santa Trinita, one can have a great view of Ponte Vecchio while it is illuminating the night of Florence.