Venice World

Venice World

Island Tours itinerary

If you are well organised, Murano, Burano and Torcello can be visited in one day. Or if you have more time, you can dedicate one day to Murano and Burano, and then visit Torcello the day after.

Murano

The island of Murano became famous in 1291. That year, the glass production was transferred from the old city centre to Murano for fear of fires in the kilns.

To get to the “glass island” you must go to Fondamenta Nuove where you can take motor boat 41 or 42. They reach the glass island in roughly 10 minutes. You will catch a glimpse of the San Michele island while traveling between le Fondamenta Nuove and Murano. This is Venice’s cemetery where famous people such as Stravinsky and Diaghilev are buried.

Once you get to Murano, disembark at Colonna. Walking along the Fondamenta dei Vetrai, you can see the famous kilns lined up one after the other. Some of these are open to the public - choose one and watch the expert master glass blowers create an object in glass. You can buy blown glass object directly from the kilns. One of the oldest glassworks is Venini, a company that exhibits its own work in many Museums of Modern Art around the world.

Just before the Vivarini Bridge you will see the Church of San Pietro Martire on your left, where there are frescoes by Bellini, Tintoretto and del Veronese. Cross over the bridge and walk along the Fondamenta Cavour. This is where the Glass Museum is located, housing 4000 pieces showing the development of glass blowing techniques over the centuries. One of the items on display is the wonderful Barovier cup, made from enamel-painted blown glass and decorated with allegorical figures.

Just a short walk from the museum is the Basilica dei Santi Maria e Donato, built in the 8th century. Here you can admire the Vergine Orante, a splendid mosaic depicting the Virgin Mary.

Burano

Burano can be reached from the Fondamenta Nuove or from the Murano Faro stop, taking the LN line.

Burano is one of the prettiest islands in the lagoon: like a miniature Venice where all the houses are painted in bright colors. Burano is famous for its lace work, an art carried out since the sixteenth century and for which it is famous worldwide.

As soon as you get off the vaporetto, walk along Via Marcello and then turn right to the Fondamenta di San Mauro: You will soon come to Via Baldassare Galuppi which opens onto the square with the same name. Here you will find the Lace Museum, where you can see very old pieces of lace and can watch the various stages of work carried out by experts.

In the square there is also the Church of San Marino, which houses the “Crocefissione” painting by Tiepolo and Palazzo del Podestà.

We advise you to pop into a cake shop on the island to taste the famous bussolai buranelli.

Torcello

It is possible to reach the island of Torcello from the Fondamenta Nuove, taking the line N vaporetto, or by taking the line T motor boat from Burano.

Torcello is an extremely romantic and charming place. Venetians love to go there occasionally, attracted by its calm and lushness. Unlike Murano and Burano, Torcello is practically uninhabited and still has a lot of archeological proof of its glorious past.

From the wharf, walk along the pleasant Fondamenta dei Borgognoni where you will immediately see the famous Ponte del Diavolo (the Devil’s Bridge). Further on there is Piazza Torcello, with its original grass flooring, where you can see the wonderful ancient Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta. The interior of the church boasts a wonderful mosaic of the Universal Judgement. There is also the pretty Church of Santa Fosca in the square, and in front of it the famous sedia di Attila - the throne on which the tribunes once sat to administer justice.

A short distance away we find the Estuario Museum containing some interesting archeological finds from the Roman, Byzantine and Medieval periods.

If you have the time, we recommend a romantic dinner at the Locanda Cipriani, one of Hemingway’s favourite places.

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