Guidebook for Napoli

Gabriella
Guidebook for Napoli

Food Scene

An entire family of pizza chefs, an institution since 1930. One of the best pizzeria in town.
342 habitants recommandent
Gino e Toto Sorbillo
32 Via dei Tribunali
342 habitants recommandent
An entire family of pizza chefs, an institution since 1930. One of the best pizzeria in town.
It's name stems from the combination of 50, which in the cabala stands for bread, and the greek word Kalò, whick means beautiful. Superlative pizza in a charming area.
87 habitants recommandent
50 Kalò
201 Piazza Sannazaro
87 habitants recommandent
It's name stems from the combination of 50, which in the cabala stands for bread, and the greek word Kalò, whick means beautiful. Superlative pizza in a charming area.
Best pizzeria in Vomero. 3 minutes from the apartament.
Pizzeria Sandropizzettata
72 Via Francesco Solimena
Best pizzeria in Vomero. 3 minutes from the apartament.
The stuff of legend, this spartan snack bar makes some of the city's most scrumptious fritture (deep-fried snacks). Crunch away on tempura-style aubergines and spinach, zeppole (doughnuts), frittatine di maccheroni (fried pasta and egg) and supplì di riso (rice balls). Located opposite the funicular, it's a handy pit stop before legging it to the Certosa di San Martino.
17 habitants recommandent
Vomero Fried Food
44 Via Domenico Cimarosa
17 habitants recommandent
The stuff of legend, this spartan snack bar makes some of the city's most scrumptious fritture (deep-fried snacks). Crunch away on tempura-style aubergines and spinach, zeppole (doughnuts), frittatine di maccheroni (fried pasta and egg) and supplì di riso (rice balls). Located opposite the funicular, it's a handy pit stop before legging it to the Certosa di San Martino.
This iconic seaside chalet sells everything from coffee and pastries to crêpes, but the reason to head here is for the brioche con gelato, a sweetened bun stuffed with delectable ice cream and topped with a dollop of panna (cream).
76 habitants recommandent
Chalet Ciro Gelato
Via Orazio
76 habitants recommandent
This iconic seaside chalet sells everything from coffee and pastries to crêpes, but the reason to head here is for the brioche con gelato, a sweetened bun stuffed with delectable ice cream and topped with a dollop of panna (cream).

Essentials

Opens 24h every day
35 habitants recommandent
Carrefour Market
28 Via Raffaele Morghen
35 habitants recommandent
Opens 24h every day
Hospital Antonio Cardarelli
9 Via Antonio Cardarelli
Carabinieri Napoli-Vomero Company
7 Via Vincenzo Gemito
Police
Carrefour Market H24
79 Via Gino Doria
h24

Getting Around

Metro Line 1
18 habitants recommandent
Quattrogiornate station
18 habitants recommandent
Metro Line 1
Metro Line 1
18 habitants recommandent
Vanvitelli station
18 habitants recommandent
Metro Line 1
Metro Line 1
9 habitants recommandent
Medaglie D'Oro station
9 habitants recommandent
Metro Line 1
34 habitants recommandent
Piazza Fuga station
10 Via Renato Lordi
34 habitants recommandent
Central station and last stop of metro line 1. Circumvesuviana train to Pompeii and Sorrento
91 habitants recommandent
Napoli Centrale station
Piazza Giuseppe Garibaldi
91 habitants recommandent
Central station and last stop of metro line 1. Circumvesuviana train to Pompeii and Sorrento
Hydrofoils and ferry boats for Ischia, Capri and Procida
122 habitants recommandent
Molo Beverello
Molo Beverello
122 habitants recommandent
Hydrofoils and ferry boats for Ischia, Capri and Procida
It won the 2013 LEAF Award as "Public building of the year"
106 habitants recommandent
Toledo station
106 habitants recommandent
It won the 2013 LEAF Award as "Public building of the year"

Sightseeing

80 habitants recommandent
Via Partenope
Via Partenope
80 habitants recommandent
16 habitants recommandent
Largo San Martino
Largo San Martino
16 habitants recommandent
Envisaged as a 16th-century monument to Spanish glory (Naples was under Spanish rule at the time), the magnificent Palazzo Reale is home to the Museo del Palazzo Reale , a rich and eclectic collection of baroque and neoclassical furnishings, porcelain, tapestries, sculpture and paintings, spread across the palace's royal apartments.
408 habitants recommandent
Palais royal de Naples
1 Piazza del Plebiscito
408 habitants recommandent
Envisaged as a 16th-century monument to Spanish glory (Naples was under Spanish rule at the time), the magnificent Palazzo Reale is home to the Museo del Palazzo Reale , a rich and eclectic collection of baroque and neoclassical furnishings, porcelain, tapestries, sculpture and paintings, spread across the palace's royal apartments.
Built by the Normans in the 12th century, Naples’ oldest castle owes its name (Castle of the Egg) to Virgil. The Roman scribe reputedly buried an egg on the site where the castle now stands, warning that when the egg breaks, the castle (and Naples) will fall. Thankfully, both are still standing, and walking up to the castle's ramparts will reward you with a breathtaking panorama.
445 habitants recommandent
Château Ovo
3 Via Eldorado
445 habitants recommandent
Built by the Normans in the 12th century, Naples’ oldest castle owes its name (Castle of the Egg) to Virgil. The Roman scribe reputedly buried an egg on the site where the castle now stands, warning that when the egg breaks, the castle (and Naples) will fall. Thankfully, both are still standing, and walking up to the castle's ramparts will reward you with a breathtaking panorama.
Traverse five centuries along Naples’ engrossing Bourbon Tunnel. Conceived by Ferdinand II in 1853 to link the Palazzo Reale to the barracks and the sea, the never-completed escape route is part of the 17th-century Carmignano Aqueduct system, itself incorporating 16th-century cisterns. An air-raid shelter and military hospital during WWII, this underground labyrinth rekindles the past with evocative wartime artefacts
171 habitants recommandent
Tunnel Bourbon
4 Vico del Grottone
171 habitants recommandent
Traverse five centuries along Naples’ engrossing Bourbon Tunnel. Conceived by Ferdinand II in 1853 to link the Palazzo Reale to the barracks and the sea, the never-completed escape route is part of the 17th-century Carmignano Aqueduct system, itself incorporating 16th-century cisterns. An air-raid shelter and military hospital during WWII, this underground labyrinth rekindles the past with evocative wartime artefacts

Arts & Culture

1008 habitants recommandent
Museo Cappella Sansevero
19/21 Via Francesco de Sanctis
1008 habitants recommandent
Naples' National Archaeological Museum serves up one of the world’s finest collections of Graeco-Roman artefacts. Originally a cavalry barracks and later seat of the city’s university, the museum was established by the Bourbon king Charles VII in the late 18th century to house the antiquities he inherited from his mother, Elisabetta Farnese, as well as treasures looted from Pompeii and Herculaneum.
796 habitants recommandent
Musée archéologique national de Naples
18 Piazza Museo
796 habitants recommandent
Naples' National Archaeological Museum serves up one of the world’s finest collections of Graeco-Roman artefacts. Originally a cavalry barracks and later seat of the city’s university, the museum was established by the Bourbon king Charles VII in the late 18th century to house the antiquities he inherited from his mother, Elisabetta Farnese, as well as treasures looted from Pompeii and Herculaneum.
This evocative guided tour leads you 40m below street level to explore Naples' ancient labyrinth of aqueducts, passages and cisterns. The passages were originally hewn by the Greeks to extract tufa stone used in construction and to channel water from Mt Vesuvius. Extended by the Romans, the network of conduits and cisterns was more recently used as an air-raid shelter in WWII. Part of the tour takes place by candlelight via extremely narrow passages
687 habitants recommandent
Napoli Sotterranea
68 Piazza San Gaetano
687 habitants recommandent
This evocative guided tour leads you 40m below street level to explore Naples' ancient labyrinth of aqueducts, passages and cisterns. The passages were originally hewn by the Greeks to extract tufa stone used in construction and to channel water from Mt Vesuvius. Extended by the Romans, the network of conduits and cisterns was more recently used as an air-raid shelter in WWII. Part of the tour takes place by candlelight via extremely narrow passages

Parks & Nature

Musée national de la céramique Duca di Martina à la Villa Floridiana
77 Via Domenico Cimarosa
166 habitants recommandent

Entertainment & Activities

One of Italy's top opera houses, the San Carlo stages opera, ballet and concerts.
362 habitants recommandent
San Carlo Theatre
98 Via San Carlo
362 habitants recommandent
One of Italy's top opera houses, the San Carlo stages opera, ballet and concerts.