Venice: Hotel
Places and attractions in the Hotel category
Categories
- Palace
- Church
- Gothic architecture
- Vernacular architecture
- Baroque architecture
- Museum
- Sacred and religious sites
- Architecture
- Historical place
- Art museum
- Renaissance architecture
- Art gallery
- Bridge
- Romanesque architecture
- History museum
- Specialty museum
- Square
- Mauro Codussi
- Monuments and statues
- Baldassarre Longhena
- Titian
- Theater
- Island
- Unesco
- Hotel
- Neighbourhood
- Neoclassical architecture
- Concerts and shows
- Shopping
- Palladian architecture
- Opera
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Library
- Forts and castles
Scala Contarini del Bovolo
15th-century palace and spiral staircase Nestled in the labyrinthine heart of Venice, not far from the bustling Rialto Bridge, stands the Scala Contarini del Bovolo – a spectacular example of Venetian architecture that combines the grandeur of a palace with the whimsy of a fairytale.
Palazzo Bembo
Palazzo Bembo is a palace in Venice, Italy, on the Grand Canal, close by the Rialto Bridge and next to the Palazzo Dolfin Manin.
San Geremia
18th-century church and St Lucy's relics San Geremia is a church in Venice, northern Italy, located in the sestiere of Cannaregio. The apse of the church faces the Grand Canal, between the Palazzo Labia and the Palazzo Flangini.
Taverna San Lio
San Lio is a church located on the campo of the same name in the sestiere of Castello.
Palazzo Barbarigo della Terrazza
The Palazzo Barbarigo dalla Terrazza is a Renaissance-style palace on the Grand Canal, across the Rio San Polo from the Palazzo Cappello Layard and adjacent to the Palazzo Pisani Moretta in the sestiere of San Polo, in Venice, Italy. In 2015, it housed the Centro Tedesco di Studi Veneziani.
Hotel Alla Fava
Santa Maria della Fava, also originally known as Santa Maria della Consolazione, is an ancient Roman Catholic church in the sestiere of Castello in Venice, Italy.
Hotel San Samuele
San Samuele is a church in Venice, northern Italy. It is located in the eponymous campo near Palazzo Grassi and Palazzo Malipiero. The facade is set back on the campo, but faces and is visible from the Grand Canal. It is named after the Biblical Samuel, because in the interior are housed relics traditionally attributed to him.