Milano
HIGH FASHION IN THE QUADRILATERAL
BETWEEN LA SCALA AND SFORZA CASTLE
NEAR MILANO CENTRALE TRAIN STATION
Map: Hotels & Restaurants in Milan
EATING NEAR VIA BRERA AND VIA DANTE
IN NAVIGLIO GRANDE (CANAL DISTRICT)
Map: Train Connections from Milan
For every church in Rome, there’s a bank in Milan. Italy’s second city and the capital of the Lombardy region, Milan is a hardworking, style-conscious, time-is-money city of 1.3 million. A melting pot of people and history, Milan’s industriousness may come from the Teutonic blood of its original inhabitants, the Lombards, or from its years under Austrian rule. Either way, Milan is modern Italy’s center of fashion, industry, banking, TV, publishing, and conventions. It’s also a major university town, a train hub, and host to two football (soccer) teams and the nearby Monza Formula One race track. And as home to a prestigious opera house, Milan is one of the touchstones of the world of opera.
Artistically, Milan can’t compare with Rome and Florence, but the city does have several unique and noteworthy sights: the Duomo and the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II arcade, La Scala Opera House, Michelangelo’s last pietà sculpture (in Sforza Castle), and Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper.
Founded by the Romans as Mediolanum (“the place in the middle”), by the fourth century A.D. it was the capital of the western half of the Roman Empire, the namesake of Constantine’s “Edict of Milan” legalizing Christianity, and home of the powerful early Christian bishop, St. Ambrose.
After some barbarian darkness, medieval Milan became a successful mercantile city, eventually rising to regional prominence under the Visconti and Sforza families. The mammoth cathedral, or Duomo, is a testament to the city’s wealth and ambition. By the time of the Renaissance, Milan was nicknamed “the New Athens,” and was enough of a cultural center for Leonardo da Vinci to call it home. Then came 400 years of foreign domination (under Spain, Austria, France, more Austria). Milan was a focal point of the 1848 revolution against Austria and helped lead Italy to unification in 1870. The impressive Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and La Scala Opera House reflect the sophistication of turn-of-the-century Milan as one of Europe’s cultural powerhouses.
Mussolini left a heavy fascist touch on the architecture here (such as the central train station). His excesses also led to the WWII bombing of Milan. But the city rose again. The 1959 Pirelli Tower (the skinny skyscraper in front of the station) was a trendsetter in its day. Today, Milan is people-friendly, with a great transit system and inviting pedestrian zones.
Many tourists come to Italy for the past. But Milan is today’s Italy. In this city of refined tastes, window displays are gorgeous, cigarettes are chic, and even the cheese comes gift-wrapped. Yet, thankfully, Milan is no more expensive for tourists than any other Italian city.
For pleasant excursions nearby, consider visiting Lake Como or Lake Maggiore—both are about an hour from Milan by train (see the previous chapter).
Milan isn’t as charming as Venice or Florence, but it’s still a vibrant and vital piece of the Italian puzzle.
With two nights and a full day, you can gain an appreciation for the city and see most major sights. On a short visit, I’d focus on the center. Tour the Duomo, hit any art you like (reserve ahead to see The Last Supper), browse elegant shops and the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, and try to see an opera. To maximize your time in Milan, use the Metro to get around.
For those with a round-trip flight into Milan: I’d recommend starting your journey softly by going first to Lake Como (one-hour ride to Varenna) or the Cinque Terre (3 hours to Monterosso). Then spend the last night or two of your trip in Milan before flying home.
Monday is a terrible sightseeing day, since many museums are closed (including The Last Supper). August is oppressively hot and muggy, and locals who can vacate do, leaving the city quiet. Those visiting in August find that the nightlife is sleepy, and many shops and restaurants are closed.
A Three-Hour Tour: If you’re just changing trains at Milan’s Centrale station (as, sooner or later, you probably will), consider catching a later train and taking this blitz tour: Check your bag at the station, ride the subway to the Duomo, peruse the square, explore the cathedral’s rooftop terraces and interior, drop into the Duomo Museum, have a scenic coffee in the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, spin on the floor mosaic of the bull for good luck, maybe see a museum or two (most are within a 10-minute walk of the main square), and return by subway to the station. Art fans could make time for The Last Supper (if they’ve made reservations) and/or Michelangelo’s Pietà in Sforza Castle (no reservations necessary).
My coverage focuses on the old center. Most sights and hotels listed are within a 15-minute walk of the cathedral (Duomo), which is a straight eight-minute Metro ride from the Centrale train station.
Milan’s TI, at the La Scala end of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, isn’t worth a special trip (Mon-Fri 9:00-19:00, Sat 9:00-18:00, Sun 10:00-18:00, Metro: Duomo, tel. 02-884-5555, www.turismo.milano.it).
By Train: Visitors disembark at one of three major train stations: Milano Centrale, Porta Garibaldi, or Cadorna. Centrale handles most Trenitalia and Italo trains as well as airport buses. Porta Garibaldi receives trains from France and some Trenitalia trains from elsewhere in Italy. Both Centrale and Cadorna are terminals for trains from Malpensa Airport.
At Milano Centrale: This huge, sternly decorated, fascist-built (in 1931) train station is a sight in itself. Notice how the monumental halls and art make you feel small—emphasizing that a powerful state is a good thing. In the front lobby, heroic people celebrate “modern” transportation (circa-1930 ships, trains, and cars) opposite reliefs depicting old-fashioned sailboats and horse carts.
Moving walkways link the station’s three main levels: platforms on top, shops on a small mezzanine, and most services at ground level (including pay WCs and ATMs). For baggage check (Deposito bagagli), taxis, or buses to the airports, head toward the ground-level exit marked Piazza Luigi di Savoia. Outside the station’s front entrance, under the atrium, are car-rental offices for Avis, Budget, and Maggiore, and a post office-run ATM. You’ll also find escalators down to the Metro and a fourth basement level with a few shops, including a Sapori & Dintorni supermarket. (You can also enter the Metro from inside the station—just follow signs.)
“Centrale” is a misnomer—the Duomo is a 35-minute walk away. But it’s a straight shot on the Metro (8 minutes). Buy a €1.50 ticket at a kiosk or from the machines, follow signs for yellow line 3 (direction: San Donato), and go four stops to the Duomo stop. You’ll surface facing the cathedral.
To buy train tickets, follow blue signs to Biglietti and use the Trenitalia or Italo machines for most domestic trips. For international tickets or complicated questions, join the line at the Trenitalia ticket office on the ground floor. There’s also an Italo office on the ground floor. Another alternative is the Agenzie 365 travel agency, which sells tickets at several offices in the station: Their 9 percent markup can be a reasonable price to skip ticket-office lines, but not if the agency’s outlets have lines of their own.
At Milano Cadorna: You’re most likely to use this commuter station if you take the Malpensa Express airport train, which uses track 1. The Cadorna Metro station—with a direct connection to the Duomo on Metro red line 1—is directly out front.
At Milano Porta Garibaldi: Some Trenitalia trains and the high-speed TGV from Paris use Porta Garibaldi Station, north of the city center (see map on here). Porta Garibaldi is on Metro green line 2, two stops from Milano Centrale.
By Car: Leonardo never drove in Milan. Smart guy. Driving here is bad enough to make the €30/day fee for a downtown garage a blessing. If you’re driving in Italy, do Milan (and Lake Como) before or after you rent your car, not while you’ve got it. If you must have a car, use the safe, affordable, well-marked park-and-ride lots at suburban Metro stations such as Cascina Gobba. These are shown on the official Metro map, and full details are at www.atm.it (select English, then “Car Parks,” then “Parking Lots”).
By Plane: See “Milan Connections” at the end of this chapter.
Theft Alert: Be on guard. Milan’s thieves target tourists, especially at the Centrale train station, getting in and out of the subway, and around the Duomo. They can be dressed as tourists, businessmen, or beggars, or they can be gangs of too-young-to-arrest children. Watch out for ragged people carrying newspapers and cardboard—they’ll thrust these at you as a distraction while they pick your pocket. If you’re ripped off and plan to file an insurance claim, fill out a report with the police (main police station, “Questura,” Via Fatebenefratelli 11, Metro: Turati, open daily 24 hours, tel. 02-62261).
Free Museums: Every Tuesday after 14:00 the Museo del Novecento and Sforza Castle museums are free. They’re also free on the first Sunday of the month, as is The Last Supper (reservations required; line up at 8:00 that day), the Brera Art Gallery, and the Risorgimento Museum.
Helpful Websites: HelloMilano.com and WantedinMilano.com are decent websites for the latest info on what’s happening in the city.
Medical Help: Here are two medical clinics with emergency care facilities (both closed Sat-Sun): the International Health Center in Galleria Strasburgo (also does dentistry, between Via Durini and Corso Europa, at #3, third floor, Metro: San Babila, tel. 02-7634-0720, www.ihc.it) and the American International Medical Center at Via Mercalli 11 (Metro: Missori or Crocetta, call for appointment, tel. 02-5831-9808, www.aimclinic.it).
Bookstores: The handiest major bookstore is La Feltrinelli, under the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (daily, tel. 02-8699-6903). The American Bookstore is at Via Manfredo Camperio 16, near Sforza Castle (closed Sun, Metro: Cairoli, tel. 02-878-920).
Laundry: Self-service laundry is hard to find in Milan; ask at your hotel for options. Allwash, at Via Savona 2, just off Via Zugna, is the closest launderette to the center. Take tram #14 (direction: Cim. Maggiore-Lorenteggio) to Piazzale Cantore, or go by Metro to Porta Genova and walk 5-10 minutes (daily 8:00-22:00, English instructions, tel. 800-030-653, www.allwash.it).
Soccer: For a dose of Europe’s soccer mania (which many believe provides a necessary testosterone vent to keep Europe out of a third big war), catch a match while you’re here. A.C. Milan and Inter Milan are the ferociously competitive home teams. Both teams play in the 85,000-seat Meazza Stadium (a.k.a. San Siro) most Sunday afternoons from September to June (ride Metro purple line 5 to San Siro Stadio, bring passport for security checks, www.acmilan.com or www.inter.it).
By Public Transit: It’s a pleasure to use Milan’s great public transit system, called ATM (“ATM Point” info desk in Duomo Metro station, www.atm.it). The clean, spacious, fast, and easy Metro zips you nearly anywhere you may want to go, and trams and city buses fill in the gaps. The handiest Metro line for a quick visit is the yellow line 3, which connects Centrale station to the Duomo. The other lines are red (1), green (2), and purple (5). The Metro shuts down about half past midnight, but many trams continue until 1:00 or even 2:00. With 100 miles of track, Milan’s classic, century-old yellow trams are both efficient and atmospheric.
A single ticket, valid for 90 minutes, can be used for one ride, including transfers, on all forms of transport (€1.50; sold at newsstands, tobacco shops, shops with ATM sticker in window, and at machines in subway stations). Other ticket options include a carnet (€13.80 for 10 rides—it’s one magnetic ticket that can be validated 10 times, but only by a single user); a 24-hour pass (€4.50, worthwhile if you take at least four rides); and a 48-hour pass (€8.25, pays off with six rides). Tickets must be run through the machines at Metro turnstiles when you enter and leave the station. On trams, the machines are at the front and rear and you need only validate upon entry. You also need to validate if transferring.
By Taxi: Small groups go cheap and fast by taxi (drop charge-€3.30, €1.10/kilometer; €5.40 drop charge on Sun and holidays, €6.50 from 21:00 to 6:00 in the morning). It can be easier to walk to a taxi stand than to flag down a cab. Handy stands are at Piazza del Duomo and in front of Sforza Castle. Hotels and restaurants are also happy to call one for you (tel. 02-8585 or 02-6969). The free MyTaxi app (www.mytaxi.com), popular with younger and tech-savvy Milanese, lets you summon and pay for a taxi using your smartphone. After you enter your credit card number, the app charges you regular taxi fares and lets you add a tip. Uber Black and UberLux operate in Milan and charge similar rates (but have faced legal challenges).
By Bike: Milan’s public bike system, BikeMi, lets you set up a temporary subscription (€4.50/day, €9/week) online or at an “ATM Point” public transit info office (a handy one is in the Duomo Metro station). You’ll receive a user code and password, allowing you to pick up a bike at any BikeMi station (generally located near Metro stations). Enter your code and password on the keypad, grab the assigned bike, and you’re on your way (first 30 minutes free, then €0.50/30 minutes up to 2 hours, after that €2/hour, www.bikemi.com). Download the BikeMi app to see available bikes and parking spots.
To sightsee on your own, download my free Milan’s Duomo Neighborhood audio tour.
Lorenza Scorti is a hardworking young guide who knows her city’s history and how to teach it (€160/3 hours, €320/6 hours, same price for individuals or groups, evenings OK, mobile 347-735-1346, lorenza.scorti@libero.it). Sara Cerri is another good licensed local guide who enjoys passing on her knowledge (€195/3 hours, then €50/hour, mobile 380-433-3019, www.walkingtourmilan.it, walkingtourmilan@gmail.com). Ludovic Charles Goudin is energetic and has a passion for teaching art (€180/3 hours, mobile 331-289-3464, ludovicgoudin@icloud.com).
If your visit to Milan is fast approaching and you can’t get a reservation for The Last Supper, consider joining a walking or bus tour that includes a guided visit to Leonardo’s masterpiece. These €60-75 tours (usually three hours) also take you to top sights such as the Duomo, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, La Scala Opera House, and Sforza Castle. Ideally book at least a week in advance, but it’s worth a try at the last minute, too.
For the best experience, I’d book a walking tour with Veditalia (www.veditalia.com) or City Wonders (www.citywonders.com). Both have good guides and solid reputations. The bus-and-walking tours are less satisfying, but you can try Autostradale (“Look Mi” tour, offices in passage at far end of Piazza del Duomo and in front of Sforza Castle, tel. 02-8058-1354, www.autostradaleviaggi.it) or Zani Viaggi (office disguised as a “tourist information” point, corner of Foro Buonaparte and Via Cusani at #18, near Sforza Castle, tel. 02-867-131, www.zaniviaggi.com).
Hop-On, Hop-Off Option: Zani Viaggi also operates CitySightseeing Milano hop-on, hop-off buses (look for the red buses—easiest at Duomo and La Scala, €22/all day, €25/48 hours, buy on board, recorded commentary, www.milano.city-sightseeing.it). With a bus ticket, you can pay an additional €33 for a Last Supper reservation—exorbitant but worth considering for the wealthy and the desperate (April-Oct only).
▲Duomo Museum (Museo del Duomo)
▲▲Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
▲▲La Scala Opera House and Museum
Performances in the Opera House
Piazza degli Affari and a Towering Middle Finger
▲Church of San Maurizio (San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore)
▲Leonardo da Vinci National Science and Technology Museum (Museo Nazionale della Scienza e Tecnica “Leonardo da Vinci”)
▲▲Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper (L’Ultima Cena/Cenacolo Vinciano)
▲▲Brera Art Gallery (Pinacoteca di Brera)
▲▲Sforza Castle (Castello Sforzesco)
▲Naviglio Grande (Canal District)
▲Monumental Cemetery (Il Cimitero Monumentale)
Milan’s core sights—the Duomo, Duomo Museum, and Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II—cluster within easy walking distance. Download my free Milan’s Duomo Neighborhood audio tour, available in 2018, to link them in one convenient stroll (see here). Also in the Duomo area are the Piazza della Scala and La Scala Opera House.
The city’s other main sights—The Last Supper, Basilica di Sant’Ambrogio, Sforza Castle, and Brera Art Gallery—are scattered farther afield. It’s easiest to reach them by public transportation.
(See “Milan Duomo” map, here.)
The city’s centerpiece is the third-largest church in Europe (after St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome and Sevilla’s cathedral). At 525 by 300 feet, the place is immense, with more than 2,000 statues inside (and another thousand outside) and 52 one-hundred-foot-tall, sequoia-size pillars representing the weeks of the year and the liturgical calendar. If you do two laps, you’ve done your daily walk. The church was built to hold 40,000 worshippers—the entire population of Milan when construction began.
A visit here has several elements. First, take in the overwhelming exterior from various angles, admiring its remarkable bulk and many spires and statues. Then go inside (requires a ticket) to see the church’s vast nave, stained glass, historic tombs, and a quirky, one-of-a-kind statue of a flayed man. Nearby, a visit to the adjacent Duomo Museum lets you see the church’s statues and details up close. Finally, take an elevator ride (or long stair climb) up to the Duomo rooftop for city views and a stroll through a forest of jagged church spires.
Cost: Duomo and Duomo Museum—€3, includes skippable San Gottardo Church; rooftop terraces—€13 by elevator, €9 via stairs. To visit the archaeological area under the church, purchase the €7 ticket that includes the church and museum, or a combo-ticket that includes the rooftop terraces (€12-16); see website for details.
Hours: Duomo and archaeological area—daily 8:00-19:00, last entry at 18:00; Duomo Museum and San Gottardo Church—Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00, closed Mon, last entry at 17:00; rooftop terraces—daily 9:00-19:00, last ascent at 18:00.
Information: Church tel. 02-7202-2656, museum tel. 02-860-358, www.duomomilano.it.
Buying Tickets: Ticket booths are located on the south side of the cathedral: at the Duomo Museum (Tue-Sun 8:45-18:00, closed Mon), and just east of the museum (across from the Duomo’s right transept) at #14a (daily 9:00-17:45, shorter hours Nov-April)—this location also hosts the Duomo Info Point office (daily 9:30-17:30). Ticket machines are available at both locations.
Dress Code: Modest dress is required to visit the church. Don’t wear shorts or anything sleeveless—even children.
Tours: A €6 audioguide for the church is available at a kiosk inside its main door (no rentals Sun, 1.5 hours).
Stand facing the main facade. The Duomo is huge and angular, with prickly spires topped with statues. The style, Flamboyant Gothic, means “flame-like,” and the church seems to flicker toward heaven with flames of stone. The facade is a pentagon, divided by six vertical buttresses, all done in pink-white marble. The dozens of statues, pinnacles, and pointed-arch windows on the facade are just a fraction of the many adornments on this architecturally rich structure.
For more than 2,000 years, this spot has been the spiritual heart of Milan—in 2014, archaeologists probing for ancient Roman ruins beneath the Duomo discovered the remains of what might be a temple to the goddess Minerva. A church has stood on this site since the days of the ancient Romans and St. Ambrose, but construction of the building we see today began in 1386. Back then, Europe was fragmented into countless tiny kingdoms and dukedoms, and the dukes of Milan wanted to impress their counterparts in Germany, France, and the Vatican with this massive cathedral. They chose the trendy Gothic style coming out of France, and stuck with it even after Renaissance-style domes came into vogue elsewhere in Italy. The cathedral was built not from ordinary stone, but from expensive marble, top to bottom. Pink Candoglia marble was rafted in from a quarry about 60 miles away, across Lake Maggiore and down a canal to a port at the cathedral—a journey that took about a week. Construction continued from 1386 to 1810, with final touches added as late as 1965.
The statues on the lower level of the facade—full of energy and movement—are early Baroque, from about 1600. Of the five doors, the center one is biggest. Made in 1907 in the Liberty Style (Italian Art Nouveau), it features the Joy and Sorrow of the Virgin Mary. Sad scenes are on the left, joyful ones on the right, and on top is the coronation of Mary in heaven by Jesus, with all the saints and angels looking on.
Topping the church (you may have to back up to see it) is its tallest spire. It rises up from the center of the Duomo to display a large golden statue of the Madonna of the Nativity, to whom the church is dedicated.
A Closer Look: Along the right side of the church are interesting views from every angle: the horizontal line of the long building, the verticals of the spires, and the diagonals of the flying buttresses supporting the roof. Get close to the facade’s right corner to appreciate the many intricate details: a nude Atlas holding up the buttress, robed saints, relief panels of Bible scenes, and tiny faces—angry, smiling, happy, sad.
Stroll a little farther down the right to see the range of statues, from placid saints to thrashing nudes. These statues were made between the 14th and 20th centuries by sculptors from all over Europe. There are hundreds of them—each different. Midway up are the fanciful gargoyles (96 in total) that functioned as drain spouts. Look way up to see the statues on the tips of the spires...they seem so relaxed, like they’re just hanging out, waiting for their big day.
The back end of the church (if you make it that far) is the oldest part, with the earliest stones, laid in the late 1300s. The sun-in-rose window was the proud symbol of the city’s leading Visconti family. It’s flanked by the angel telling Mary she’s going to bear the Messiah. Nearby, find the shrine to the leading religion of the 21st century: soccer. The Football Team store is filled with colorful vestments and relics of local soccer saints.
• Enter the church.
Nave: It’s the fourth-longest nave in Christendom, stretching more than 500 feet from the entrance to the stained-glass rose window at the far end. The apse at the far end was started in 1385. The wall behind you wasn’t finished until 1520. The style is Gothic, a rarity in Italy. Fifty-two tree-sized pillars rise to support a ribbed, pointed-arch ceiling, and the church is lit by glorious stained glass. At the far end, marking the altar, is a small tabernacle of a dome atop columns—a bit of an anomaly in a Gothic church (more on that later). Notice the little red light on the cross above the altar. This marks where a nail from the cross of Jesus is kept. This relic was brought to Milan by St. Helen (Emperor Constantine’s mother) in the fourth century, when Milan was the capital of the western Roman Empire. It’s on display for three days a year (in mid-Sept).
Closer to you, find the two single-stone marble pillars flanking the main door—the most precious ones in the church. Now, facing the altar, look high to the right, in the rear corner of the church, and find a tiny pinhole of white light. This is designed to shine a 10-inch sunbeam at noon onto the bronze line that runs across the floor, indicating where we are on the zodiac (but local guides claim they’ve never seen it work).
This 600-year-old church is filled with history. It represents the continuous line of bishops who have presided over Milan, stretching back to the days of St. Ambrose (c. 340-397). Let’s see some of the earliest artifacts.
• Wander deeper into the church, up the...
Right Aisle: The first chapel along the right wall has the 1,000-year-old gray-stone coffin of Aribert, a bishop who predates the present building. Continuing along to the third chapel, you’ll see a red coffin atop columns belonging to the noble Visconti family that commissioned this church.
The third bay also has a plaque where you can trace the uninterrupted rule of 144 local archbishops back to A.D. 51. Check out the stained-glass window above the plaque. Each window has 12 panels and 12 rows, creating 144 separate scenes. Find familiar scenes along the window’s bottom level: Cain killing Abel, the Flood, and the drunkenness of Noah. The brilliant and expensive colored glass (stained, not painted) is from the 15th century. Bought by wealthy families seeking the Church’s favor, the windows face south to get the most light. The altars below generally honor the patron who made each window possible. The windows’ purpose was to teach the illiterate masses the way to salvation through stories from the Old Testament and the life of Jesus. On the opposite wall (left side), many of the windows are more modern—from the 16th to the 20th century—and are generally made of dimmer, cheaper painted glass. Many are replacements for ones destroyed by the concussion of WWII bombs that fell nearby.
The fifth window dates from 1470, “just” 85 years after the first stone of the cathedral was laid. The window shows the story of Jesus, from Annunciation to Crucifixion. In the bottom window, as the angel Gabriel tells Mary the news, the Holy Spirit (in the form of a dove) enters Mary’s window and world. Compare the exquisite beauty of this window to the cruder 19th-century window on the right.
The seventh window is modern, from the 1980s. Bright and bold, it celebrates two local cardinals (whose tombs and bodies are behind glass). This memorial to Cardinal Ferrari and Cardinal Schuster, who heroically helped the Milanese out of their post-WWII blues, is a reminder that this great church is more than a tourist attraction—it’s a living part of Milan.
• Now take a few steps back into the nave for a view of the...
Main Altar: The altar area is anchored by the domed tabernacle atop columns. This houses the receptacle that holds the Eucharist. Flanking the tabernacle are two silver statues of famous bishops. One is St. Ambrose, the influential fourth-century bishop who put Milan on the map and became the city’s patron saint. The other is St. Charles Borromeo, the bishop who transformed the Duomo in the 16th century. Charles had inherited a cathedral that was barely half-finished. He re-energized the project, and commissioned the tabernacle.
While the rest of the church is Gothic, the altar is Baroque—a dramatic stage-like setting in the style of the Vatican in the 1570s. Borromeo was a great champion of the Catholic church, and this powerful style was a statement to counter the (mostly Gothic) Protestant churches of the north. Look up into the dome above the altar—a round dome on an octangular base, rising 215 feet. Napoleon crowned himself King of Italy under this dome in 1805. It was Napoleon who sped up construction, so that in 1810—finally—the church was essentially completed.
• Before moving on, look to the rear, up at the ceiling, and see the fancy “carved” tracery on the ceiling’s ribs. Nope, that’s painted. It looks expensive, but paint is more affordable than carved stone. Now continue up the right aisle and into the south (right) transept. Find the bald statue.
St. Bartolomeo Statue: This is a grotesque 16th-century statue of St. Bartolomeo, an apostle and first-century martyr skinned alive by the Romans. Examine the details (face, hands, feet) of the poor guy. He piously holds a Bible in one hand and wears his own skin like a robe. Carved by a student of Leonardo da Vinci, this is a study in human anatomy learned by dissection, forbidden by the Church at the time. Read the sculptor’s Latin inscription on the base: “I was not made by Praxiteles”—the classical master of beautiful nudes—“but by Marco d’Agrate.”
• Walk toward the altar, checking out the fine 16th-century inlaid-marble floor. The black marble (quarried from Lake Como) is harder and more durable, while the lighter colors (white from Lake Maggiore, pink from Verona) look and feel more worn. At the altar, bear right around the corner 30 steps. You’ll see a door marked Scurolo di S. Carlo. This leads down to the...
Crypt of St. Charles Borromeo: Steps lead under the altar to the tomb of St. Charles Borromeo (1538-1584), the economic power behind the church. You can still see Charles’ withered body inside the rock-crystal coffin. Charles was bishop of Milan, and the second most important hometown saint after St. Ambrose. Tarnished silver reliefs around the ceiling show scenes from Charles’ life.
• Now resurface and continue around the apse, looking up at the...
Windows: The apse is lit by three huge windows, all 19th-century painted copies. The originals, destroyed in Napoleonic times, were made of precious stained glass.
• From the apse, head back through the church toward the main entrance. Near the entrance stands a large basin of expensive purple porphyry. Made by Borromeo’s favorite architect, Pellegrini, it was used to baptize infants. Now find the entrance and stairs that lead down to the...
Archaeological Area: The church’s “basement” is a maze of ruined brick foundations of earlier churches that stood here long before the present one. Milan has been an important center of Christianity since its beginning. In Roman times, Mediolanum’s streets were 10 feet below today’s level.
The highlight here is the scant remains of the eight-sided Paleo-Christian Baptistery of San Giovanni. It stands alongside the remains of a little church. Back then, since you couldn’t enter the church until you were baptized (which didn’t happen until age 18), churches had a little baptistery just outside for the unbaptized.
This humble baptistery may be one of the most significant places in all of Christianity. It was here that little St. Ambrose was baptized. Ambrose went on to become bishop here, and to mentor a randy and rebellious Roman named Augustine. On this spot in A.D. 387, Ambrose baptized the 31-year-old Augustine of Hippo, who later became one of Christianity’s (and the world’s) most influential thinkers, philosophers, and writers. And the rest—like this tour—is history.
This museum, to the right of the Duomo in the Palazzo Reale, helps fill in the rest of the story of Milan’s cathedral, and lets you see its original art and treasures up close (your Duomo ticket includes museum admission; see “Cost” and “Hours” in the Duomo listing, earlier). The collection lacks description (in any language) and is virtually meaningless without an audioguide (€5). It’s worth a walk-through if you have an interest in old church art.
Visiting the Museum: Just after the ticket taker, notice (on the wall to your right) the original inlaid-marble floor of the Duomo. The black (from Lake Como) marble is harder. Go ahead, wear down the white a little more.
Now follow the one-way route. Among the early treasures of the cathedral is a 900-year-old, Byzantine-style crucifix. Made of copper gilded with real gold and nailed onto wood, it was part of the tomb of the archbishop of Milan. A copy is in today’s cathedral.
You’ll pass a big, wooden model of the church (we’ll get a better look at this later, on the way out). Then you’ll step through a long room with paintings, chalices, glass monstrances, and lifelike reliquary busts of Sts. Charles, Sebastian, and Thecla.
Look for the big statue of St. George. Although this is a copy, the 600-year-old original is among the cathedral’s oldest statues and once stood on the front (and first constructed) spire of the Duomo. Some think this is the face of Duke Visconti—the man who started the cathedral. The museum is filled with statues and spires like this, carved of marmo di Candoglia—marble from Candoglia. The duke’s family gave the entire Candoglia quarry (near Stresa) to the church for all the marble it would ever need.
You’ll pop into a long room filled with more statues. On your left, gaze—as did pilgrims 500 years ago—into the eyes of God the Father. Made of wood, wrapped in copper, and gilded, this giant head covered the keystone connecting the tallest arches directly above the high altar of the Duomo.
Continue into a narrow room lined with grotesque gargoyles. When attached to the cathedral, they served two purposes: to scare away evil spirits and to spew rainwater away from the building.
Twist through several more rooms of statues big and small. In one long, brick-walled hall, watch on the left for St. Paul the Hermit, who got close to God by living in the desert. While wearing only a simple robe, he’s filled with inner richness. The intent is for pilgrims to commune with him and feel at peace (but I couldn’t stop thinking of the Cowardly Lion—“Put ’em up! Put ’em up!”).
A few steps beyond Paul, look for the 15th-century dandy with the rolled-up contract in his hand. That’s Visconti’s descendant, Galeazzo Sforza, and if it weren’t for him, the church facade might still be brick as bare as the walls of this room. The contract he holds makes it official—the church now owns the marble quarry (and it makes money on it to this day).
In the next room, study the brilliantly gilded and dynamic statue God the Father (1554). Also keep an eye out for a sumptuous Flanders-style tapestry, woven of silk, silver, and gold. Half a millennium ago, this hung from the high altar. In true Flemish style, it weaves vivid details of everyday life into the theology. It tells the story of the Crucifixion by showing three scenes at once. Note the exquisite detail, down to the tears on Mary’s cheeks.
Next you’ll step through a stunning room with 360 degrees of gorgeous stained glass from the 12th to 15th century, telling the easily recognizable stories of the Creation, the Tower of Babel, and David and Goliath. Take a close look at details that used to be too far above the cathedral floor to be seen clearly.
Farther on, you’ll reach a display of terra-cotta panels juxtaposed with large monochrome paintings (1628) by Giovanni Battista Crespi. After Crespi finished the paintings, they were translated into terra-cotta, and finally sculpted in marble to decorate the doorways of the cathedral. Study Crespi’s Creation of Eve (Creazione di Eva) and its terra-cotta twin. This served as the model for the marble statue that still stands above the center door on the church’s west portal (1643). You’ll pass a few more of these scenes, then hook into a room with the original, stone-carved, swirling Dancing Angels, which decorated the ceiling over the door.
• When you reach the doors leading into the museum shop, make a U-turn to see the final exhibits.
After passing several big tapestries, and a huge warehouse where statues are stacked on shelves stretching up to the ceiling, you’ll reach the Frame of the Madonnina (1773). Standing like a Picasso is the original iron frame for the statue of the Virgin Mary that still crowns the cathedral’s tallest spire. In 1967, a steel replacement was made for the 33 pieces of gilded copper bolted to the frame. The carved-wood face of Mary (in the corner) is the original mold for Mary’s cathedral-crowning copper face.
Soon you’ll get a better look at that wooden model of the Duomo. This is the actual model used in the 16th century by the architects and engineers to build the church. This version of the facade wasn’t built, and other rejected facades line the walls.
On your way out, you’ll pass models for the Duomo’s doors. And stepping outside, as your eyes adjust to the sunlight, you’ll see the grand church itself—looking so glorious thanks to the many centuries of hard work you’ve just learned about.
Strolling between the frilly spires of the cathedral rooftop terraces is the most memorable part of a Duomo visit. You can climb the stairs or take the elevators (for specifics, see “Cost” and “Hours” in the Duomo listing, earlier). On the left side, the stairs are in front of the transept, and the elevator is behind it. (Even those taking the elevator will have to climb some stairs.) On the right side, look for the elevator behind the transept.
Once up there, you’ll loop around the rooftop, wandering through a fancy forest of spires with great views of the city, the square, and—on clear days—the crisp and jagged Alps to the north. And, 330 feet above everything, La Madonnina overlooks it all. This 15-foot-tall gilded Virgin Mary is a symbol of the city.
As you emerge from the stairs or lift, you first walk along the lower side-terrace. You’ll enjoy close-ups of fanciful gargoyles, statue-topped spires, and ever-changing views of the rows of flying buttresses (which, on this lavishly ornamented Gothic church, are more decorative than functional).
Next you climb a richly carved staircase to the sloping rooftop—directly above the nave. As you wander among the spires, pick any single one and appreciate its details. At the spires’ base is the marble “fence” that surrounds the entire rooftop, with its pointed arches topped with pinnacles, which themselves are mostly crowned with crosses. Each spire is supported by blocks of Candoglia marble, with its pink-white-green-blue hues (which blend into gray).
On the next level up, the spires have vertical ribs and saints in cages. Continuing up, they get more ornate, with flamboyant flames that flicker upward toward still more saints posing beneath church-like awnings. Finally, the spire tapers into a slender point, topped with a lifelike saint who gazes out over the city. The church has 135 spires—all similar, yet each different. No wonder it took 600 years to carve it all.
At the counter-facade (the back side of the church’s false-front facade), find a few 20th-century details that are among the last things done. To the left (as you face toward the Piazza del Duomo), find carved reliefs with boxing scenes. Just above and to the right of the boxing scenes is a relief of carved foliage. The proud-looking face peering out from the leaves is none other than the WWII dictator, Benito Mussolini.
Before leaving, check out the great views of the city. To the east, you can peer down into the Piazza del Duomo, 20 stories below.
To the south of the Duomo is the red-brick, octagonal, statue-topped bell tower of San Gottardo Church, built in the 1300s by the same Visconti family that began the Duomo. The hard-to-miss Velasca Tower (Torre Velasca) is a top-heavy skyscraper from the 1950s (modeled on medieval watchtowers such as those at the Sforza Castle), which became a symbol of Milan’s rise from the ashes of World War II.
Looking north, there’s a skyline of a dozen-plus skyscrapers. At the far right of the group is the 32-story Pirelli Tower, a slender rectangle with tapering sides, which proclaimed Italy’s postwar “economic miracle.” The UniCredit Tower (from 2011), with its 750-foot-high rocket-like spire, is Italy’s tallest building, and represents Milan’s future.
Stand in the center of Milan’s main square and take in the scene. Before you rises the massive, prickly facade of Milan’s cathedral, the Duomo. The huge equestrian statue in the center of the piazza is Victor Emmanuel II, the first king of Italy. He’s looking at the grand Galleria named for him. The words above the triumphal arch entrance read: “To Victor Emmanuel II, from the people of Milan.”
To the right of the Duomo are the twin fascist buildings of the Arengario Palace. Mussolini made grandiose speeches from their balconies. Study the buildings’ relief panels, which tell—with fascist melodrama—the history of Milan. Today the palace houses the Museo del Novecento (described later).
Directly to the right of the Duomo is the historic ducal palace, the Palazzo Reale, which now houses the Duomo Museum (described earlier). The palace was redone in the Neoclassical style by Empress Maria Theresa in the late 1700s, when Milan was ruled by the Austrian Habsburgs.
Behind the Victor Emmanuel II statue (opposite the cathedral, about a block beyond the square), hiding in a small courtyard, is Piazza dei Mercanti, the center of medieval Milan (described later).
And all around you in Piazza del Duomo is a classic European scene and a local gathering point. Professionals scurry, fashion-forward kids loiter, and young thieves peruse.
This breathtaking four-story glass-domed arcade, next to Piazza del Duomo, is a symbol of Milan. The iron-and-glass shopping mall (built during the age of Eiffel and the heady days of Italian unification) showcased a new, modern era. It was the first building in town to have electric lighting, and from its inception it’s been an elegant and popular meeting place. (Sadly, its designer, Giuseppe Mengoni, died the day before the gallery opened.) Here you can turn an expensive cup of coffee into a good value by enjoying some of Europe’s best people-watching.
The venerable Bar Camparino (at the Galleria’s Piazza del Duomo entry), with a friendly staff and a period interior, is the former haunt of famous opera composer Giuseppe Verdi and conductor Arturo Toscanini, who used to stop by after their performances at La Scala. It’s a fine place to enjoy a drink and people-watch (€3.70 for an espresso is a great deal to take a seat, relax and enjoy the view, or pay €1.10 at the bar just to experience the scene). The café is named after the Campari family (its first owners), originators of the famous red Campari bitter (Tue-Sun 7:30-20:00, closed Mon and Aug, tel. 02-8646-4435).
Wander around the Galleria. Its art celebrates the establishment of Italy as an independent country. Around the central dome, patriotic mosaics symbolize the four major continents (sorry, Australia). The mosaic floor is also patriotic. The white cross in the center is part of the king’s coat of arms. The she-wolf with Romulus and Remus (on the south side—facing Rome) honors the city that, since 1870, has been the national capital. On the west side (facing Torino, the provisional capital of Italy from 1861 to 1865), you’ll find that city’s symbol: a torino (little bull). For good luck, locals step on his irresistible little testicles. Two local girls explained to me that it works better if you spin—two times, and it must be clockwise. Find the poor little bull and observe for a few minutes...it’s a cute scene. With so much spinning, the mosaic is replaced every few years.
Luxury shops have had outlets here from the beginning. Along with Gucci, Louis Vuitton, and Prada, you’ll find Borsalino (at the end near Piazza della Scala), which has been selling hats here since the gallery opened in 1877.
If you cut through the Galleria to the other side, you’ll pop out at Piazza della Scala, with its famous opera house and the Gallerie d’Italia (all described later).
Milan’s art of the 1900s (Novecento) fills the two buildings of the Arengario Palace, Mussolini’s fascist-era City Hall. In the beautifully laid-out museum, you’ll work your way up the escalators and through the last century, one decade at a time. Each section is well described, and the capper is a fine panoramic view over Piazza del Duomo through grand fascist-era arches. The museum makes it clear that Milan—a trendy city today—has been setting design trends since the start of the Novecento.
Cost and Hours: €5, free from two hours before closing and Tue after 14:00; Mon 14:30-19:30; Tue-Wed, Fri, and Sun 9:30-19:30; Thu and Sat 9:30-22:30; last entry one hour before closing, audioguide-€5, facing Piazza del Duomo at Via Marconi 1, tel. 02-8844-4072, www.museodelnovecento.org.
Visiting the Museum: As you spiral up the ramp, pause at the large painting, The Fourth Estate, to gaze into the eyes of proud workers getting off their shift. Painted in 1901, the work was a bold manifesto of a new era, and is a good introduction to the revolutionary spirit of the museum.
On the second floor, minor works by Picasso, Matisse, Mondrian and others are a snapshot of “Modern Art” trends around Europe as the 1900s began. Next you see how they inspired Italy’s artists. Boccioni followed northern Europe’s lead, evolving from a placid painter of realistic portraits to a bold sculptor of swirling forms. He captured a world in high-tech motion—i.e., “Futurism.”
Escalate up to the third floor to see Giorgio de Chirico’s brooding canvases of long shadows and empty architecture—Italy’s great contribution to the movement called Surrealism.
The fourth floor focuses on the actual Novecento Italiano movement of the 1920s, which was based in Milan. These artists tried to merge Italy’s classic roots (of monumental ancient Roman art and geometrically solid Renaissance art) with abstract styles and the revivalist spirit of the Mussolini years.
Continuing up to the fifth floor, you emerge into a glass-walled space (often hosting temporary installations) with great views over Piazza del Duomo. Find the stairs up to the top room, with canvases by Lucio Fontana. In the 1950s and ‘60s, Fontana made his mark by slicing and puncturing canvases to transform a two-dimensional “painting” into a three-dimensional “sculpture.” Fontana also did the room’s textured ceiling and a large neon sculpture elsewhere on floor 5.
This small square, the center of political power in 13th-century Milan, hides one block off Piazza del Duomo (directly opposite the cathedral). A strangely peaceful place today, it offers a fine smattering of historic architecture that escaped the bombs of World War II.
The arcaded, red-brick building that dominates the center of the square was the City Hall (Palazzo della Ragione); its arcades once housed the market hall. Overlooking the wellhead in the middle of the square is a balcony with coats of arms—this is where new laws were announced. Eventually two big families—Visconti and Sforza—took power, Medici-style, in Milan; the snake is their symbol. Running the show in Renaissance times, these dynasties shaped much of the city we see today, including the Duomo and the fortress. In 1454, the Sforza family made peace with Venice while enjoying a friendship with the Medici in Florence (who taught them how to become successful bankers). This ushered in a time of stability and peace, when the region’s major city-states were run by banking families, and money was freed up for the Renaissance generation to make art, not war.
This square also held the Palace of Justice (the 16th-century courthouse with the clock tower), the market (not food, but crafts: leather, gold, and iron goods), the bank, the city’s first university, and its prison. All the elements of a great city were right here on the “Square of the Merchants.”
To reach these sights, cut through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II from Piazza del Duomo.
This smart little traffic-free square, between the Galleria and the opera house, is dominated by a statue of Leonardo da Vinci. The statue (from 1870) is a reminder that Leonardo spent his best 20 years in Milan, where he found well-paid, steady work. He was the brainy darling of the Sforza family (who dominated Milan as the Medici family dominated Florence). Under the great Renaissance genius stand four of his greatest “Leonardeschi.” (He apprenticed a sizable group of followers.) The reliefs show his various contributions as a painter, architect, and engineer. Leonardo, wearing his hydro-engineer hat, reengineered Milan’s canal system, complete with locks. (Until the 1920s, Milan was one of Italy’s major ports, with canals connecting the city to the Po River and Lake Maggiore. For more on this footnote of Milan’s history, read about the Naviglio Grande on here.)
The statue of Leonardo is looking at a plain but famous Neoclassical building, arguably the world’s most prestigious opera house (described next).
Milan’s famous Teatro alla Scala opened in 1778 with an opera by Antonio Salieri (Mozart’s wannabe rival). Today, opera buffs can get a glimpse of the theater and tour the adjacent museum’s extensive collection, featuring Verdi’s top hat, Rossini’s eyeglasses, Toscanini’s baton, Fettuccini’s pesto, original scores, diorama stage sets, busts, portraits, and death masks of great composers and musicians. For true devotees, La Scala is the Mecca of the religion of opera.
Cost and Hours: €8, daily 9:00-17:30, Piazza della Scala, tel. 02-8879-7473, www.teatroallascala.org.
Visiting the Museum: The main reason to visit the museum is the opportunity (on most days) to peek into the actual theater. The stage is as big as the seating area on the ground floor. (You can see the towering stage box from Piazza della Scala across the street.) A recent renovation corrected acoustical problems caused by WWII bombing and subsequent reconstruction. The royal box is just below your vantage point, in the center rear. Take in the ornate red-velvet seats, white-and-gold trim, the huge stage and orchestra pit, and the massive chandelier made of Bohemian crystal.
The museum itself is a handful of small rooms with low-tech displays. Room 1 has antique musical instruments—some are familiar-looking keyboards and guitars, some are strange and weirdly shaped. Room 2 takes you to the roots of opera in commedia dell’arte—those humorous plays of outsized characters and elaborate costumes, like clever harlequins and buffoonish doctors in masks. Room 3 features Liszt’s grand piano, still in playing condition.
Room 4’s paintings lead you through opera’s heyday in Milan. There’s a street scene of La Scala in 1852, with fancy carriages and well-dressed ladies and gents. Find portraits of great opera composers like portly Rossini, sideburned Donizetti, and thick-bearded Verdi (flanked by his two wives). In the glass case are miniature portraits of famous opera composers and singers, as well as Napoleon’s sword. Pass through Room 5 and into Room 6, with a glass case holding a snip of Mozart’s hair and a cast of Chopin’s slender hand. (The stairs lead up to temporary exhibits.)
Room 7 features many of opera’s all-stars. In the glass case is a snip of Verdi’s hair, scores by Verdi and Puccini, and batons of the great conductor (and music director of La Scala) Toscanini, who’s practically a saint in this town. The room’s portraits bring opera into the modern age. There’s the great composer Puccini whose accessible operas seem to unfold like realistic plays that just happen to be sung. The great early-20th-century tenor Enrico Caruso brought sophisticated Italian opera to barbaric lands like America. There are portraits of renowned sopranos (and world-class divas) Maria Callas and Renata Tebaldi.
The show goes on at the world-famous La Scala Opera House, which also hosts ballet and classical concerts. There are performances every month except August, and showtime is usually at 20:00 (for information, check online or call Scala Infotel Service, daily 9:00-18:00, tel. 02-7200-3744). On the opening night of an opera, a dress code is enforced for men (suit and tie).
Advance Booking: Seats sell out quickly. Online tickets go on sale two months before performances (www.teatroallascala.org). You can also book through an automated phone system: Call 02-860-775 and press 2 for English. Tickets are also sold at an office beneath Piazza del Duomo (daily 12:00-18:00, use stairs down in front of the Duomo and follow ATM Point signs). The “evening box office” (Biglietteria Serale) at the opera house itself—see below—opens 2.5 hours before showtime.
Same-Day Tickets: On performance days, 140 sky-high, restricted-view, peanut-gallery tickets are offered at a low price (generally less than €15) at the box office (located down the left side of the theater toward the back on Via Filodrammatici, and marked with Biglietteria Serale sign). It’s a bit complicated: Show up at 13:00 with an official ID (driver’s license or passport) to put your name on a list (one ticket per person; for popular shows people start lining up long before, weekends tend to be busiest), then return at 17:00 for the roll call. You must be present when your name is called to receive a voucher, which you’ll then show at the window to purchase your ticket. (Matinees and symphonic concerts follow a different timetable; check the website.) Finally, one hour before showtime, the box office sells any remaining tickets at a 25 percent discount.
This museum fills three adjacent buildings on Piazza della Scala with the amazing art collections of a bank that once occupied part of this space. The bank building’s architecture is early-20th-century, Tiffany-like Historicism, with a hint of Art Nouveau; it’s connected to two impressive palazzos that boast the nicest Neoclassical interiors I’ve seen in Milan. They are filled with exquisite work by 19th- and 20th-century Italian painters.
Cost and Hours: €5, more during special exhibits, includes audioguide, free first Sun of the month; open Tue-Sun 9:30-19:30, Thu until 22:30, closed Mon, last entry one hour before closing; across from La Scala Opera House at Piazza della Scala 6, toll-free tel. 800-167-619, www.gallerieditalia.com.
Visiting the Museum: Enter through the bank building facing Piazza della Scala and take the red-velvet stairs to the basement to pick up an audioguide (also downstairs is a bag check, WCs, and the original bank vault, which now stores racks and racks of paintings not on display).
Back upstairs, head into the main atrium of the bank, and consider the special exhibits displayed there. Then, to tackle the permanent art collection in chronological order, head to the far end of the complex and work your way back (follow signs for Palazzo Anguissola Antona Traversi and Palazzo Brentani). You’ll go through the café back into the Neoclassical palaces, where you’ll trace the one-way route through the “Da Canova a Boccioni” exhibit, including marble reliefs by the Neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova and Romantic paintings by Francesco Hayez. Upstairs, you’ll see dramatic and thrilling scenes from the unification of Italy, as well as beautiful landscapes and cityscapes, especially of Milan. (An entire room is devoted to depictions of the now-trendy Naviglio Grande canal area in its workaday prime.)
On your way back to the bank building and the rest of the exhibit, take a moment to poke around the courtyard to find the officina di restituzioni alle gallerie—a lab where you can watch art restorers at work. Rejoining the permanent exhibit, you’ll see paintings from the late 19th and early 20th centuries: Romantic landscapes; hyperrealistic, time-travel scenes of folk life; and Impressionism. Finally, you’ll catch up to the art of the late 20th century, tucked between old bank-teller windows.
These sights are listed roughly in the order you’ll reach them as you travel west from Piazza del Duomo. The first one is just a few short blocks from the cathedral, while the last is just over a mile away.
This oldest museum in Milan was inaugurated in 1618 to house Cardinal Federico Borromeo’s painting collection. It began as a teaching academy, which explains its many replicas of famous works of art. Highlights include original paintings by Botticelli, Caravaggio, and Titian—and, most important, a huge-scale sketch by Raphael (may be under restoration when you visit) and a rare oil painting by Leonardo da Vinci.
Cost and Hours: €15, Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00, closed Mon, last entry one hour before closing, audioguide-€3, near Piazza del Duomo at Piazza Pio XI 2, Metro: Duomo or Cordusio, tel. 02-806-921, www.ambrosiana.eu.
Visiting the Museum: Pick up the English-language map locating the rooms and major works I highlight below, and rent the audioguide (covers both permanent and special exhibits). Then head upstairs to begin your visit.
Raphael’s Cartoon (Room 5): Filling an entire wall, this drawing served as an outline for Raphael’s famous School of Athens fresco at the Vatican Museums. (A cartoon—cartone in Italian—is a full-size sketch that’s used to transfer a design to another surface.) While the Vatican’s much-adored fresco is attributed entirely to Raphael, it was painted mostly by his students. But this cartone was wholly sketched by the hand of Raphael. To transfer the fresco design to the wall, his assistants riddled this cartoon with pinpricks along the outlines of the figures, stuck it to the wall of the pope’s study, and then applied a colored powder. When they removed the cartone, the figures’ shapes were marked on the wall, and completing the fresco was a lot like filling in a coloring book. Also in this room, look for Caravaggio’s naturalistic Basket of Fruit.
Jan Brueghel (Room 7): As Cardinal Borromeo was a friend of Jan Brueghel, this entire room is filled with delightful works by the artist and other Flemish masters. Study the wonderful detail in Brueghel’s Allegory of Fire and Allegory of Water. The Flemish paintings are extremely detailed—many are painted on copper to heighten the effect—and offer an insight into the psyche of the age. If the cardinal were asked why he enjoyed paintings that celebrated the secular life, he’d likely say, “Secular themes are God’s book of nature.”
Leonardo Hall (Room 24): During his productive Milan years, Leonardo painted Portrait of a Musician—as delicate, mysterious, and thought-provoking as the Mona Lisa. (This is the only one of his canvases that remains in Milan.) The large fresco filling the far wall—with Christ receiving the crown of thorns—is by Bernardino Luini, one of Leonardo’s disciples. But I find the big replica painting of The Last Supper most interesting. When the cardinal realized that Leonardo’s marvelous frescoed original was fading, he commissioned Andrea Bianchi to create a careful copy to be displayed here for posterity. Today, this copy gives a rare chance to appreciate the original colorful richness of the now-faded masterpiece.
This square and monument mark the center of Milan’s financial district. The bold fascist buildings in the neighborhood were built in the 1930s under Mussolini. Italy’s major stock exchange, the Borsa, faces the square. Stand in the center and appreciate the modern take on ancient aesthetics (you’re standing atop the city’s ancient Roman theater). Find the stern statues representing various labors and occupations and celebrating the nobility of workers—typical whistle-while-you-work fascist themes. Then notice the equally bold modern statue in the center. After a 2009 contest to find the most appropriate sculpture to grace the financial district, this was the winner. With Italy’s continuing financial problems, here we see how “the 99 percent” feel when they stand before symbols of corporate power. (Notice how the finger is oriented—it’s the 1 percent, and not the 99 percent, who’s flipping the bird.) The 36-foot-tall, Carrara marble digit was made by Maurizio Cattelan, the most famous—or, at least, most controversial—Italian sculptor of our age. L.O.V.E., as the statue is titled, was temporary at first. But locals liked it, and, by popular demand, it’s now permanent.
This church, part of a ninth-century convent built into a surviving bit of Milan’s ancient Roman wall, dates from around 1500. Despite its simple facade, it’s a hit with art lovers for its amazing cycle of Bernardino Luini frescoes. Stepping into this church is like stepping into the Sistine Chapel of Lombardy.
Cost and Hours: Free, Tue-Sun 9:30-19:30, closed Mon, Corso Magenta 15 at the Monastero Maggiore, Metro: Cadorna or Cairoli, tel. 02-8645-0011.
Visiting the Church: Bernardino Luini (1480-1532), a follower of Leonardo, was also inspired by his contemporaries Michelangelo and Raphael. Sit in a pew and take in the art, which has the movement and force of Michelangelo and the grace and calm beauty of Leonardo.
Maurizio, the patron saint of this church, was a third-century Roman soldier who persecuted Christians, then converted, and eventually worked to stop those same persecutions. He’s the guy standing on the pedestal in the upper right, wearing a bright yellow cape. The nobleman who paid for the art is to the left of the altar, kneeling and cloaked in black and white. His daughter, who joined the convent here and was treated as a queen (as nuns with noble connections were), is to the right. And all around are martyrs—identified by their palm fronds.
The adjacent Hall of Nuns (Aula delle Monache), a walled-off area behind the altar, is where cloistered sisters could worship apart from the general congregation. Fine Luini frescoes appear above and around the wooden crucifix. The Annunciation scene at the corners of the arch features a cute Baby Jesus zooming down from heaven (see Mary, on the right, ready to catch him). The organ dates from 1554, and the venue, with its fine acoustics, is popular for concerts with period instruments. Explore the pictorial Bible that lines the walls behind the wooden seats of the choir. Luini’s landscapes were groundbreaking in the 16th century. Leonardo incorporated landscapes into his paintings, but Luini was among the first to make landscape the main subject of the painting.
Nearby: You’ll exit the Hall of Nuns into the lobby of the adjacent Archaeological Museum, where you can pay €5 to see part of the ancient city wall and a third-century Roman tower.
One of Milan’s top religious, artistic, and historic sights, this church was first built on top of an early Christian martyr’s cemetery by St. Ambrose around A.D. 380, when Milan had become the capital of the fading (and Christian) western Roman Empire.
Cost and Hours: Free, Mon-Sat 10:00-12:30 & 14:30-18:30, Sun 15:00-17:00, Piazza Sant’Ambrogio 15, Metro: Sant’Ambrogio, tel. 02-8645-0895, www.basilicasantambrogio.it.
Visiting the Church: Ambrose was a local bishop and one of the great fathers of the early Church. Besides his writings, he’s remembered for converting and baptizing St. Augustine of Hippo, who himself became another great Church father. The original fourth-century church was later (in the 12th century) rebuilt in the Romanesque style you see today.
As you step “inside” from the street, you emerge into an arcaded atrium—standard in many churches back when people weren’t allowed to actually enter the church until they were baptized. The unbaptized waited here during Mass. The courtyard is textbook Romanesque, with playful capitals engraved with fanciful animals. Inset into the wall (right side, above the pagan sarcophagi) are stone markers of Christian tombs—a reminder that this church, like St. Peter’s at the Vatican, is built upon an ancient Roman cemetery.
From the atrium, marvel at the elegant 12th-century facade, or west portal. It’s typical Lombard medieval style. The local bishop would bless crowds from its upper loggia. As two different monastic communities shared the church and were divided in their theology, there were also two different bell towers.
Step into the nave and grab a pew. The mosaic in the apse features Jesus Pantocrator (creator of all) in the company of Milanese saints. Around you are pillars with Romanesque capitals and surviving fragments of the 12th-century frescoes that once covered the church.
The 12th-century pulpit sits atop a Christian sarcophagus dating from the year 400. Study its late-Roman and early-Christian iconography—on the side facing the altar, Apollo on his chariot morphs into Jesus on a chariot. You can see the moment when Jesus gave the Old Testament (the first five books, anyway) to his apostles.
The precious, ninth-century golden altar has four ancient porphyry columns under an elegant Romanesque 12th-century canopy. The entire ensemble was taken to the Vatican during World War II to avoid destruction. That was smart—the apse took a direct hit in 1943. A 13th-century mosaic was destroyed; today we see a reconstruction.
Step into the crypt, under the altar, to see the skeletal bodies of three people: Ambrose (in the middle, highest) and two earlier Christian martyrs whose tombs he visited before building the church.
Nearby: For a little bonus after visiting the church, consider this: The Benedictine monastery next to the church is now Cattolica University. With its stately colonnaded courtyards designed by Renaissance architect Donato Bramante, it’s a nice place to study. It’s fun to poke around and imagine being a student here.
The spirit of Leonardo lives here. Most tourists focus on the hall of Leonardo—the core of the museum—where wooden models illustrate his designs. But the rest of this immense collection of industrial cleverness is fascinating in its own right. There are exhibits on space exploration, mining, and radio and television (with some original Marconi radios); old musical instruments, computers, and telephones; chunks of the first transatlantic cable; and interactive science workshops. Out back are several more buildings containing antique locomotives and a 150-foot-long submarine from 1957. Ask for an English museum map from the ticket desk—you’ll need it. On weekends, this museum is very popular with families, so come early or be prepared to wait in line.
Cost and Hours: €10, Tue-Fri 10:00-18:00, Sat-Sun until 19:00, shorter hours off-season, closed Mon year-round, Via San Vittore 21, Metro: Sant’Ambrogio; tel. 02-485-551, www.museoscienza.org.
Decorating the former dining hall (cenacolo) of the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, this remarkable, exactingly crafted fresco by Leonardo da Vinci is one of the ultimate masterpieces of the Renaissance. Reservations are mandatory and should be booked three months in advance (see options below).
Cost: €12, includes €2 reservation fee (9:30 and 15:30 visits cost €3.50 extra and include English tour). Free first Sun of the month (no reservations possible, show up by 8:00 to get a reserved time for later that day).
Hours: Open Tue-Sun 8:15-18:45 (last entry), closed Mon. Show up 20 minutes before your scheduled entry time. When an attendant calls your time, get up and move into the next room.
Reservations: Mandatory timed-entry reservations can be made either online or by phone (through an outfit called Vivaticket). Reservations for each calendar month go on sale about three months ahead; for example, bookings for July open in early April. Spots are snapped up quickly, so plan ahead.
To book online, go to www.vivaticket.it, then enter “Cenacolo Vinciano” into the search bar at the top of the page. A calendar will show available time slots for the coming months.
If you book by phone, you’ll have a greater selection of days and time slots to choose from, since the website doesn’t reflect cancellations. Note that you can’t reserve same-day tickets (tel. 02-9280-0360, from the US dial 011-39-02-9280-0360, office open Mon-Sat 8:00-18:30, closed Sun; the number is often busy—once you get through, select 2 for an English-speaking operator).
Tour Option: If you can’t get a reservation, you can book a more expensive (€60-75) walking or bus tour that includes a guided visit to The Last Supper. These should be reserved at least one week ahead (for details, see “Tours in Milan,” earlier).
Last-Minute Tickets: A few scattered same-day spots may be available due to cancellations. It’s a low-percentage play, but you can try just showing up and asking at the desk—even if the sold out sign is posted (ideally when the office opens at 8:00, more likely on weekdays).
Audioguide: Consider the fine €3.50 audioguide. Its spiel fills every second of the time you’re in the room—so try to start listening just before you enter (ideally in the waiting room while studying the reproduction of The Last Supper).
Getting There: The Church of Santa Maria della Grazie is a 10-minute walk from either Metro: Cadorna or Conciliazione. Or take tram #16 from the Duomo (direction: San Siro or Piazzale Segesta), which drops you off in front of the church.
Background: Milan’s leading family, the Sforzas, hired Leonardo to decorate the dining hall of the Dominican monastery that adjoins the church (the Dominican order traditionally placed a Last Supper on one end of their refectories, and a Crucifixion at the other). Leonardo worked on the project from about 1492 until 1498. This gift was essentially a bribe to the monks so that the Sforzas could place their family tomb in the church. Ultimately, the French drove the Sforzas out of Milan, they were never buried here, and the Dominicans got a great fresco for nothing.
Deterioration began within six years of The Last Supper’s completion because Leonardo painted on the wall in layers, as he would on a canvas, instead of applying pigment to wet plaster in the usual fresco technique. The church was bombed in World War II, but—miraculously, it seems—the wall holding The Last Supper remained standing. A 21-year restoration project (completed in 1999) peeled away 500 years of touch-ups, leaving Leonardo’s masterpiece faint but vibrant.
Visiting The Last Supper: To minimize damage from humidity, only 30 tourists are allowed in, every 15 minutes for exactly 15 minutes. While you wait, read the history of the masterpiece. As your appointed time nears, you’ll be herded between several rooms to dehumidify, while doors close behind you and open up slowly in front of you.
And then the last door opens, you take a step, you look right, and...there it is. In a big, vacant, whitewashed room, you’ll see faded pastels and not a crisp edge. The feet under the table look like negatives. But the composition is dreamy—Leonardo captures the psychological drama as the Lord says, “One of you will betray me,” and the apostles huddle in stressed-out groups of three, wondering, “Lord, is it I?” Some are scandalized. Others want more information. Simon (on the far right) gestures as if to ask a question that has no answer. In this agitated atmosphere, only Judas (fourth from left and the only one with his face in shadow)—clutching his 30 pieces of silver and looking pretty guilty—is not shocked.
The circle meant life and harmony to Leonardo. Deep into a study of how life emanates in circles—like ripples on a pool hit by a pebble—Leonardo positioned the 13 characters in a semicircle. Jesus is in the center, from whence the spiritual force of God emanates, or ripples out.
The room depicted in the painting seems like an architectural extension of the church. The disciples form an apse, with Jesus as the altar—in keeping with the Eucharist. Jesus anticipates his sacrifice, his face sad, all-knowing, and accepting. His feet even foreshadow his death by crucifixion. Had the door, which was cut out in 1652, not been added, you’d see how Leonardo placed Jesus’ feet atop each other, ready for the nail.
The perspective is mathematically correct, with Jesus’ head as the vanishing point where the converging sight lines meet. In fact, restorers found a tiny nail hole in Jesus’ left eye, which anchored the strings Leonardo used to establish these lines. The table is cheated out to show the meal. Notice the exquisite lighting. The walls are lined with tapestries (as they would have been), and the one on the right is brighter in order to fit the actual lighting in the refectory (which has windows on the left). With the extremely natural effect of the light and the drama of the faces, Leonardo created a masterpiece.
Milan’s top collection of Italian paintings (13th-20th century) is world class, but it can’t top those in Rome or Florence. Established in 1809 to house Napoleon’s looted art, it fills the first floor above a prestigious art college. You’ll dodge scruffy starving artists...and wonder if there’s a 21st-century Leonardo in your midst.
Cost and Hours: €10, free first Sun of month, open Tue-Sun 8:30-19:15, closed Mon, last entry 45 minutes before closing, audioguide-€5 (useful, ID required, but museum has excellent English descriptions), free lockers, Via Brera 28, Metro: Lanza or Montenapoleone, tel. 02-722-631, www.pinacotecabrera.org.
Visiting the Museum: Enter the grand courtyard of a former monastery, where you’ll be greeted by the nude Napoleon with Tinkerbell (by Antonio Canova). Climb the stairway (following signs to Pinacoteca), buy your ticket, and pick up an English map of the museum’s masterpieces, some of which I’ve highlighted below. You’ll follow a clockwise, chronological route through the huge collection.
In Rooms IV-VI, examine the altar paintings by late-Gothic master Gentile da Fabriano, hinting at the realism of the coming Renaissance (check out the lifelike flowers and realistic, bright gold paint—he used real gold powder). In the darkened section in the middle of Room VII, don’t miss Andrea Mantegna’s tour-de-force, The Dead Christ. It’s a textbook example of feet-first foreshortening.
Next, to experience the peak of 16th-century Venetian painting, check out the color-rich canvases by the great masters Tintoretto and Veronese in Room IX.
Stop by the glass-enclosed restoration lab in Room XVIII to watch various conservation projects in progress.
In Rooms XXII-XXIX, you can see how Carlo Crivelli, a contemporary of Leonardo, employed Renaissance technique while clinging to the mystique of the Gothic Age (that’s why I like him so much). In the next few rooms, don’t miss Raphael’s Wedding of the Madonna (Room XXIV), Piero della Francesca’s Madonna and Child with Saints (also Room XXIV), and the gritty-yet-intimate realism of Caravaggio’s Supper at Emmaus (Room XXIX).
Next, in Rooms XXXI-XXXV, you’ll see Dutch and Flemish masters, including a big Rubens (Room XXXI). Room XXXV displays several of Canaletto’s picture-postcards of Venetian cityscapes.
Finally, in Room XXXVII, you’ll greet the modern age with Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo’s rousing Human Flood, a study for his famous Fourth Estate (exhibited at the Museo del Novocento; see here). Also in this room, spice things up with Francesco Hayez’s hot and heavy The Kiss (Il Bacio).
With a quick 30-minute swing through this quiet one-floor museum, you’ll get an idea of the interesting story of Italy’s rocky road to unity: from Napoleon (1796) to the victory in Rome (1870). You’ll see paintings, uniforms, monuments, a city model, and other artifacts. But limited English makes this best left to people already familiar with this important period of Italian history.
Cost and Hours: €5, free entry after 16:30 (Tue after 14:00), open Tue-Sun 9:00-13:00 & 14:00-17:30, closed Mon, just around the block from Brera Art Gallery at Via Borgonuovo 23, Metro: Montenapoleone, tel. 02-8846-4176, www.museodelrisorgimento.mi.it.
This classy house of art features Italian paintings of the 15th through 18th century, old weaponry, and lots of interesting decorative arts, such as a roomful of old sundials and compasses. It’s all on view in a sumptuous 19th-century residence.
Cost and Hours: €10, Wed-Mon 10:00-18:00, closed Tue, audioguide-€1, Via Manzoni 12, Metro: Montenapoleone, tel. 02-794-889, www.museopoldipezzoli.it.
This unique 19th-century collection of Italian Renaissance furnishings was assembled by two aristocratic brothers who spent a wad turning their home into a Renaissance mansion.
Cost and Hours: €9 includes audioguide, €6 on Wed; open Tue-Sun 13:00-17:45, closed Mon; Via Gesù 5, Metro: Montenapoleone, tel. 02-7600-6132, www.museobagattivalsecchi.org.
The castle of Milan tells the story of the city in brick. Today it features a vast courtyard, a sprawling museum (with a few worthwhile highlights and Leonardo da Vinci connections), and—most importantly—a chance to see Michelangelo’s final, unfinished Pietà.
Cost and Hours: €5, free entry after 16:30 (Tue after 14:00) and first Sun of the month; museum open Tue-Sun 9:00-17:30, closed Mon; castle grounds open daily 7:00-19:00, until 18:00 Nov-March; WCs and free/mandatory lockers downstairs from ticket counter, Metro: Cairoli or Lanza, tel. 02-8846-3700, www.milanocastello.it.
Background: Built in the late 1300s as a military fortress, Sforza Castle guarded the gate to the city wall and defended Milan from enemies “within and without.” It was beefed up by the Sforza duke in 1450 in anticipation of a Venetian attack. Later, the Sforza family made it their residence, building their Renaissance palace into the fortress. It was even home to their in-house genius, Leonardo. (When he applied for a position with the Sforza family, he did so as a military engineer and contributed to the design of the ramparts.) During the time of foreign rule (16th-19th century), it was a barracks for occupying Spanish, French, and Austrian soldiers. Today it houses an array of museums, but I’d concentrate on the Michelangelo Pietà and the Museum of Ancient Art.
Self-Guided Tour: This tour begins outside the fortress, then focuses on the highlights inside.
The Fortress: The gate facing the city center stands above a ditch that was once filled with water. A relief celebrates Umberto I, the second king of Italy. Above that, a statue of St. Ambrose, the patron of Milan (and a local bishop in the fourth century), oversees the action. Notice the diagram facing the gate that shows how the city was encircled first by a crude medieval wall, and then by a state-of-the-art 16th-century wall—of which this castle was a key element. It’s apparent from the enormity of these walls that Milan was a strategic prize. Today, the walls are gone, giving the city two circular boulevards.
This immense brick fortress—exhausting at first sight—can only be described as heavy. Its three huge courtyards originally functioned as military parade grounds, but today host concerts and welcome the public. (The holes in the walls were for scaffolding.)
• As you enter the main courtyard, look to your left to see the restored hospital building that houses the...
Museo Pietà Rondanini (Michelangelo): This is a rare opportunity to enjoy a Michelangelo statue with relatively few crowds. Michelangelo died while still working on this piece, his fourth pietà—a representation of a dead Christ with a sorrowful Virgin Mary. While unfinished and seemingly a mishmash of corrections and reworks, it’s a thought-provoking work by a genius at nearly 90 years old, who knows he’s fast approaching the end of his life. The symbolism is of life and of death: Jesus returning to his mother, as two bodies seem to become one.
Michelangelo’s more famous pietà at the Vatican (carved when he was in his 20s) features a beautiful, young, and astonished Mary. Here, Mary is older and wiser. Perhaps Mary is now better able to accept death as part of life...as is Michelangelo. The pietà at the Vatican is simple and clear, showing two different people: the mother holding her dead son. Contemplating the Pietà Rondanini, you wonder who’s supporting whom. It’s confused and complex, each figure seeming to both need and support the other.
This unfinished statue shows the genius of Michelangelo midway through a major rework—Christ’s head is cut out of Mary’s right shoulder, and an earlier arm is still just hanging there. Above Mary’s right ear, you can see the remains of a previous face (eye, brow, and hairline).
And there’s a certain power to this rawness. Walk around the back to see the strain in Mary’s back (and Michelangelo’s rough chisel work) as she struggles to support her son. The sculpture’s elongated form hints at the Mannerist style that would follow.
Facing the Pietà is a bronze, life-size head, based on a death mask made at the artist’s passing in 1564. Imagine him working on his Pietà—still vibrant and seeking.
• From the Pietà, go over the little drawbridge in the back wall—directly across from where you entered the complex. Here you’ll find the entrance to the...
Museum of Ancient Art (Museo d’Arte Antica): This sprawling collection fills the old Sforza family palace with interesting medieval armor, furniture, early Lombard art, and much more.
In the first room, among ancient sarcophagi (with early-Christian themes), stands a fine 14th-century equestrian statue—a memorial to Bernabò Visconti. Of the four virtues, he selected only two (strength and justice) to stand beside his anatomically correct horse, opting out of love and patience.
Farther along, the room of tapestries is dominated by a big embroidery of St. Ambrose defeating the heretical Arians. While that was a fourth-century struggle, 12 centuries later, he was summoned back in spirit to deal with Protestants, in the form of Archbishop Borromeo. As a Counter-Reformation leader, with St. Peter’s Basilica behind him, Ambrose stands tall and strong in defense of the Roman Church. The room is lined with 16th-century Flemish tapestries, which were easy to pack up quickly as the nobility traveled. These were typical of those used to warm chilly stone palaces.
Next, you’ll come to the Sala delle Asse (may be closed for restoration when you visit). The Visconti family grew rich making silk in the Lake Como area. While plastered over for centuries, this room was restored around 1900. Not much sparkle survives, but you can appreciate the intricate canopy woven with branches and rope in complicated knots—the work of Leonardo himself, in 1498. The tiny Leonardo-esque painting of Madonna and Child is by Francesco Napoletano, a pupil of Leonardo. The painting’s structure, anatomy, and subtle modeling of the color with no harsh lines (sfumato) are all characteristic of Leonardo. In the upper right, notice the castle, as it looked in 1495.
From here, you’ll pass through rooms filled with weapons and armor from the 16th and 17th centuries.
• At this point, you’re free to go. But if you have a larger-than-average attention span, follow signs upstairs to the Decorative Arts Museum, then the Painting Gallery (Pinacoteca), and finally the Musical Instruments Museum. When you’re done, consider popping out the back door of the fortress and taking a break in the lush Sempione Park (described next).
This is Milan’s equivalent of Central Park. With its circa-1900 English-style gardens, free Liberty-Style aquarium, views of the triumphal arch, and sprawling family-friendly grounds, this park is particularly popular on weekends.
A five-minute walk through the park, on the left, is the erector-set Branca Tower (Torre Branca), built for an exposition in the 1930s. For an inexpensive, commanding city view, you can ride an elevator as high as the Mary that crowns the Duomo (best in daylight, erratic hours—call or confirm at TI before making a special trip, Metro: Cadorna, www.museobranca.it, tel. 02-331-4120).
Next to the tower is the excellent Triennale di Milano, a design museum with changing exhibits that celebrate one of this city’s fortes (www.triennale.org).
At the far end of the park is the monumental Arco della Pace. Originally an arch of triumph, it comes with Nike, goddess of victory, commanding a six-horse chariot. It was built facing Paris to welcome Napoleon’s rule and to celebrate the ideals of the French Revolution, destined to lift Italy into the modern age. When the locals learned Napoleon was just another megalomaniac, they turned the horses around, their tails facing France.
This grand pedestrian boulevard and popular shopping street leads from Sforza Castle toward the town center and the Duomo. Via Dante was carved out of a medieval tangle of streets to celebrate Italian unification (c. 1870) and make Milan a worthy metropolis. Consequently, all the facades lining it are relatively new. Enjoy strolling this beautiful people zone, where you’ll hear the whir of bikes and the lilting melodies of accordion players instead of traffic noise. Photo exhibits are frequently displayed up and down the street. In front of Sforza Castle, a commanding statue of Giuseppe Garibaldi, a hero of the unification movement, looks down one of Europe’s longest pedestrian zones. From here you can walk to the Duomo and beyond (about 1.5 miles), appreciating Italian design both in shop windows and on smartly clothed Milanese.
To locate the first two sights below, see the Greater Milan map on here.
Milan, although far from any major lake or river, has a sizable port, literally called the “Big Canal.” Since 1170, boats have been able to sail from Milan to the Mediterranean via the Ticino River (which flows into the Po River on its way to the Adriatic Sea). Five hundred years ago, Leonardo helped design a modern lock system. During the booming Industrial Age in the 19th century—and especially with the flurry of construction after Italian unification—ships used the canals to bring in the marble and stone needed to make Milan the great city it is today. In fact, one canal (filled in during the 1930s) let barges unload stone right at the building site of the great cathedral. In the 1950s, landlocked Milan was the seventh-biggest port in Italy, as its canals aided in rebuilding the bombed-out city. Today, disused train tracks parallel the canal, old warehouse buildings recall the area’s working-class heritage, and former workers’ tenements—once squalid and undesirable—are being renovated. The once-rough area now dubbed Milan’s “Little Venice” is trendy, traffic-free, and thriving with inviting bars and eateries. Come here for dinner or a late-afternoon drink (for recommendations, see “Eating in Milan,” later).
Getting There: Ride the Metro (or tram #2) to Porta Genova, exit following signs to Via Casale, and walk the length of Via Casale one block directly to the canal. Most bars and restaurants are to the left, on both sides of the canal.
Europe’s most artistic and dreamy cemetery experience, this grand place was built just after unification to provide a suitable final resting spot for the city’s “famous and well-deserving men.” Any cemetery can be evocative, but this one—with its super-emotional portrayals of the deceased and their heavenly escorts (in art styles c. 1870-1930)—is in a class by itself. It’s a vast garden art gallery of proud busts and grim reapers, heartbroken angels and weeping widows, too-young soldiers and countless old smiles, frozen on yellowed black-and-white photos.
Cost and Hours: Free, Tue-Sun 8:00-18:00, closed Mon, pick up map at the entrance gate, ride Metro purple line 5 to Monumentale, tel. 02-8846-5600.
The largest equestrian monument in the world is a modern reconstruction of a model created in 1482 by Leonardo da Vinci for the Sforza family. The clay prototype was destroyed in 1499 by invading French forces, who used it for target practice. In 1982, American Renaissance-art collector Charles Dent decided to build the 15-ton, 24-foot-long statue from Leonardo’s design, planning to present it to the Italians in homage to Leonardo’s genius. Unfortunately, Dent died before the project could be completed. In 1997, American sculptor Nina Akamu created a new clay model that became the template for the final statue; it was unveiled in 1999.
Getting There: The statue (free to view) is at a horse racetrack on the western outskirts of town—ride Metro purple line 5 to San Siro Ippodromo.
For locations, see the map on here.
For world-class window shopping, visit the Quadrilateral, an elegant high-fashion shopping area around Via Montenapoleone, northeast of La Scala Opera House. This was the original Beverly Hills of Milan. In the 1920s, the top fashion shops moved in, and today it remains the place for designer labels. Most shops close Sunday and for much of August. On Mondays, stores open only after 16:00. In this land where fur is still prized, the people-watching is as entertaining as the window shopping. Notice also the exclusive penthouse apartments with roof gardens high above the scene. Via Montenapoleone and the pedestrianized Via della Spiga are the best streets.
Whether you’re gawking or shopping, here’s the best route: From Piazza della Scala, walk up Via Alessandro Manzoni to the Metro stop at Montenapoleone, browse down Via Montenapoleone, and cut left on Via Santo Spirito (lined with grand aristocratic palazzos—peek into the courtyard at #7). Across the street, step into the elegant courtyard at #10 to check out the café sitters and their poodles. Continue to the end of Via Santo Spirito, then turn right to window shop down traffic-free Via della Spiga. After a few short blocks, turn right on Via Sant’Andrea and then left, back onto Montenapoleone, which leads you through a final gauntlet of temptations to Corso Giacomo Matteotti, near the Piazza San Babila. Then (for less-expensive shopping thrills), walk back to the Duomo down the pedestrian-only Corso Vittorio Emanuele II.
For a (slightly) more reasonably priced shopping excursion, step into La Rinascente—one of Europe’s classic department stores. (It’s around the left side as you face the front of the Duomo.) Simply riding the escalator up and up gives a fun overview of Italian design and marketing. The seventh floor is a top-end food circus with recommended restaurants, terrace views of the Duomo, and a public WC. The store’s name translates roughly as “the place reborn” and fits its history. In an earlier life, this was a fine Art Nouveau-style building—until it burned down in 1918. Rebuilt, it was bombed in World War II and rebuilt once again (Mon-Thu 9:30-22:00, Fri-Sun until 23:00, has a VAT refund office, faces north side of the Duomo on Piazza del Duomo).
Heading away from the Duomo, stroll between the arcades on the Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, surrounded by clothing stores and other tempting material pleasures. At Via Passarella, detour to the right to check out Excelsior, a bold high-end concept store. Moving walkways take you from level to colorful level with pulsing music and electronic art installations. If you’re looking for the perfect €1,000 shirt, you’ve come to the right place. Otherwise, hit Eat’s Food Market, a stylish deli in the basement, and pick up a tasty high-design salad to go (daily 9:00-22:00, Galleria del Corso 4, two long blocks behind the Duomo, tel. 027-630-7301).
Double back to the Corso Vittorio Emanuele II to continue shopping all the way to the San Babila Metro station (and the ritzy Quadrilateral area described earlier).
For evening action, check out the artsy Brera area in the old center, with several swanky sidewalk cafés to choose from and lots of bars that stay open late. Home to the local art university, this district has a sophisticated, lively people-watching scene. Another great neighborhood for nightlife, especially for a younger scene, is Naviglio Grande (the canal district), Milan’s formerly bohemian, now-gentrified “Little Venice” (Metro: Porta Genova; tram #2; see the “Greater Milan” map on here).
There are always concerts and live music in the city at various clubs and concert halls. Specifics change quickly, so it’s best to rely on the entertainment information in periodicals from the TI.
My recommended hotels are all within a few minutes’ walk of a Metro station. With Milan’s fine subway system, you can get anywhere in town in a flash.
Hotel prices in Milan rise and fall with the convention schedule. In March, April, September, and October, the city can be completely jammed by conventions, and hotel prices go sky-high; it’s best to avoid the city entirely at these times if you can (for the convention schedule, see www.fieramilano.it). My rankings are based on regular prices, not the much-higher convention rates.
Summer is usually wide-open, with soft or discounted prices, though many hotels close in August for vacation. Hotels cater more to business travelers than to tourists, so prices and availability are a little better on Fridays and Saturdays.
There are only a few small, family-style hotels left in the center, and the good ones charge top dollar for their location. To save money, consider searching online for a deal at a basic chain hotel (such as Ibis) near a Metro stop.
The Duomo area is thick with people-watching, reasonably priced eateries, and the major sightseeing attractions, but hotel prices are high.
$$$$ Hotel Spadari boasts a modern, Art Deco-inspired lobby designed by the Milanese artist Giò Pomodoro (“Joe Tomato” in English). The 40 rooms have billowing drapes, big paintings, and designer doors. It’s next to the recommended Peck Gourmet Deli, and two blocks from the Duomo (RS%, air-con, elevator, Via Spadari 11, tel. 02-7200-2371, www.spadarihotel.com, reservation@spadarihotel.com).
$$$$ Hotel Gran Duca di York, three blocks from the Duomo, is on a stark street of banks and public buildings. Public areas are comfortable and spacious, and the 33 rooms are modern and bright (RS%, air-con, elevator, near Metro stops: Cordusio or Duomo, Via Moneta 1, tel. 02-874-863, www.ducadiyork.com, info@ducadiyork.com).
These slightly-less-central places are close to the Via Dante and Via Brera shopping and restaurant scenes.
$$$$ Antica Locanda dei Mercanti offers 15 rooms in an 18th-century palazzo. While each room has its own personality (some have kitchenettes, others have small terraces), all have a fresh-flower vibe that embraces old and new—a nice change for businesslike Milan (RS%—use code “RSMILANO”, air-con, elevator, Via San Tomaso 6, reception on first floor, Metro: Cairoli or Cordusio, tel. 02-805-4080, www.locanda.it, locanda@locanda.it, Alex and Eri).
$$$ Hotel Star rents 30 rooms, most of which have been modernized and feature artsy, somewhat gaudy decor; interior rooms are quieter (air-con, elevator, usually closes for 2 weeks mid-Aug, Via dei Bossi 5, Metro: Cordusio, tel. 02-801-501, www.hotelstar.it, hotelstar@hotelstar.it, Vittoria).
$$ London Hotel is a faded, old-school hotel with a living room-like lobby and 29 basic rooms with tiny bathrooms. It’s overpriced for what you get, but in a fine location (cheaper rooms with shared bath, breakfast extra—better to grab something on Via Dante, air-con, elevator, Via Rovello 3, Metro: Cairoli, tel. 02-7202-0166, www.hotellondonmilano.com, info@hotellondonmilano.com, sisters Tanya and Licia).
These two hotels are farther from the action in a sleepy, mostly residential zone, but the prices are lower. For locations (about a 15-minute walk or quick tram or Metro ride west of the Duomo), see the map on here.
$$$ Antica Locanda Leonardo, just down the street from The Last Supper, has a romantic, Old World vibe and antique furnishings. Each of its 16 uniquely decorated rooms face either a courtyard (cheaper, some street noise) or a tranquil garden (RS%, some rooms with garden balcony, air-con, elevator, Corso Magenta 78, tel. 02-4801-4197, www.anticalocandaleonardo.com, info@anticalocandaleonardo.com). From the Duomo area, you can ride tram #16 or take the Metro to either Cadorna or Conciliazione and walk five minutes.
$$ B&B Hotel Milano Sant’Ambrogio, part of a chain of budget hotels, has 75 efficient, cookie-cutter rooms. They come with some tram noise (request a quieter one) but are worth considering if you can get a deal (breakfast extra, air-con, elevator, Via degli Olivetani 4, Metro: S. Ambrogio, tel. 02-4810-1089, www.hotelbb.com, mi.santambrogio@hotelbb.com). It’s on a side street near the Leonardo da Vinci Science Museum, about a five-minute walk from either The Last Supper or Basilica Sant’Ambrogio.
The train station neighborhood is more practical than characteristic. Its hotels are utilitarian business-class places with prices that bounce all over depending upon the convention schedule; most of the year, many have rooms in the €100-125 range. You’ll find more shady characters than shady trees in the parks, and lots of ethnic restaurants and massage parlors as you head away from the immediate vicinity of the station. But it’s convenient to trains, the Metro, and airport shuttles, and if you hit it outside of convention times, the prices are hard to beat.
On Via Napo Torriani: This street, a five-minute walk from the station, is lined with midrange hotels (exit the station, head straight across the square, then veer left onto Via Napo Torriani). $$ Hotel Berna feels like a classic European hotel, with an old-school lobby, uniformed bellhops, and 116 faded rooms with some nice upgrades (air-con, elevator, Via Napo Torriani 18, tel. 02-677-311, www.hotelberna.com). $$ Hotel Garda is cheaper and less welcoming, with 55 rooms (RS%—email first to get a promo code, then book on their website; breakfast extra, air-con, elevator, Via Napo Torriani 21, tel. 02-6698-2626, www.hotelgardamilan.com).
Hostel: ¢ Ostello Bello Grande has converted what was a business-class hotel into a well-priced hostel with hipster flair. Worth considering even if you’re not a hosteler, it comes with an inviting rooftop terrace and a shared kitchen (private rooms available, includes breakfast and aperitivo happy-hour snacks, air-con, elevator, laundry, Via Lepetit 33, tel. 02-670-5921, www.ostellobello.com). With the tracks to your back, leave the station to the left, cross the taxi stand, and then cross the road. The hostel is around the corner from Ristorante Giglio Rosso.
Milan’s hundreds of trendy bars, delis, rosticcerie, and self-service cafeterias cater to people with plenty of taste and more money than time. You’ll find delightful eateries all over town (note that many places close in August). To eat mediocre food on a street with great people-watching, choose an eatery on the pedestrian-only Via Dante. To eat with students in trendy little trattorias, explore the Brera neighborhood (especially the pedestrianized Via Fiori Chiari). To eat well near the Duomo, consider the recommended places listed later.
Some locals like to precede dinner with an aperitivo—a before-meal drink (while Campari made its debut in Milan, a simple glass of vino bianco or prosecco, the Italian champagne, is just as popular). At about 18:00, bars fill their counters with inviting baskets of munchies, served free with these drinks. If you’re either likable or discreet, a cheap drink can become a light meal. This aperitivo custom is common throughout Italy but especially prized by the Milanesi—who claim they invented it.
Milan’s signature dishes (often served together) are risotto alla Milanese and ossobuco. The risotto is flavored with saffron, which gives it an intense yellow color. The subtle flavor of the saffron pairs nicely with the veal shanks of ossobuco (meaning “marrow” or, literally, “hole in the bone” shank). The prized marrow, extracted with special little forks, is considered the best part of the meal. Also popular is the cotoletta alla Milanese, a thin, breaded veal cutlet fried in clarified butter. Some places have supersized it and call it orecchio di elefante, an “elephant’s ear” (large enough to share).
(See “Hotels & Restaurants in Milan” map, here.)
$$ Ristorante da Bruno, true to their family roots, serves Tuscan cuisine with a passion for fresh fish. A traditional-feeling place, it impresses with its dressy waiters, hearty food (including Milanese specialties), and a fine antipasti buffet. You can eat inside or on the sidewalk under fascist-style columns (daily 12:00-23:00, closed Aug, air-con, Via M. Gonzaga 6, reservations wise, tel. 02-804-364, www.ristorantedabruno.biz, Graziella).
$$$ Trattoria Milanese is family-run and traditional, on a dark back street. It has an enthusiastic clientele, with a sometimes-lukewarm staff—the restaurant didn’t even bother to get a phone until 1988. Expect an old-fashioned Milanese ambience. Eat early for a less-crowded atmosphere (Mon-Sat 12:00-15:00 & 19:00-22:30, closed Sun and mid-July-Aug, evening reservations recommended, air-con, Via Santa Marta 11, near Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, tel. 02-8645-1991).
$$ Ristorante Calafuria Unione is a bustling, unpretentious place that attracts a sizable crowd for its pizza and traditional dishes. It feels like a well-loved neighborhood eatery (Mon-Sat 12:00-15:00 & 19:00-24:00, closed Sun, air-con, a few blocks south of Piazza del Duomo at Via dell’Unione 8, Metro: Missori, tel. 02-866-103).
$$$ Ronchi 78, a Milan institution for a century, is tight and atmospheric. The main dining room is cozy, while downstairs, more seating sprawls through vaulted cellars. Come here for traditional Milanese cuisine—and, if you’re eating late like the Italians do, stay for the nightly “guitarroche” live music (cheaper at lunch, closed Sun, Via San Maurilio 7, tel. 02-867-295, www.ronchi78.it).
$$ Peck Italian Bar is a hit with the sophisticated office crowd, which mobs the place at lunch for its fast, excellent meals with im-peck-able service. It’s owned by the same people who run the recommended high-end Peck Gourmet Deli (listed later), so be prepared to spend—getting to hang out and be part of the scene makes it worth the money. Any time you find yourself among such a quality-conscious group of Milanesi, you know you’re getting good food (Mon-Fri 8:00-22:30, Sat from 9:00, closed Sun, Via Cantù 3, tel. 02-869-3017, www.peck.it).
(See “Hotels & Restaurants in Milan” map, here.)
The seventh floor of La Rinascente department store, alongside the Duomo, has an upscale food court. Three of its many eateries share a sunny outdoor terrace with views of the cathedral’s rooftop: $$$ Obicà is a swanky “mozzarella bar” (part of a chain), offering this heavenly cheese in all its various forms—cow’s milk, buffalo, and smoked—in salads, on pizzas, or on splittable €23 antipasto sampler plates, accompanied by salumi, tapenades, and vegetables (there are dishes without mozzarella, too). $$$ Ristorante Maio has pricey full-meal service. And $$$ Il Bar, living-room cozy with cushy divans and low coffee tables, serves light meals (salads, pasta), coffee, desserts, and cocktails (all three open daily until 24:00; after store hours, use the elevator on Via S. Radegonda to enter).
(See “Hotels & Restaurants in Milan” map, here.)
$ La Vecchia Latteria, with a 50-year history, is a bright hole-in-the-wall that serves a good vegetarian lunch. This busy joint—with tight seating in front and behind the kitchen—serves soup, salads, pastas, and imaginative veggie entrées at affordable prices. Their star offering is il misto forno, a delicious assortment of soufflés, quiches, and roasted and sautéed veggies (Mon-Sat 12:00-16:00, closed Sun, just off Via Torino at Via dell’Unione 6, a few blocks southwest of the Duomo, Metro: Missori, tel. 02-874-401).
$ Princi bakery is mobbed with locals vying for focaccia, olive breadsticks, and luscious pastries. Notice the stacked-wood-oven action in the back. For most pastry items (like the brioche), pay the cashier first; for items sold by weight (such as pizza and cake), get it weighed before you pay. Consider a pasta lunch (12:00-15:00 only) for €7 per plate (open Mon-Sat 7:00-20:00, Sun 9:00-19:30; off Via Torino, a block southwest of Piazza del Duomo at Via Speronari 6; tel. 02-874-797). Another Princi bakery, more like a café, is near Sforza Castle and is listed later.
Peck Gourmet Deli is an aristocratic deli with a pricey gourmet grocery, rosticceria, and pastry/gelato shop on the main level; a fancy restaurant upstairs; and an expensive enoteca wine cellar in the basement. Even if all you can afford is the aroma, peek in. Check out the classic circa-1930 salami slicers and the gourmet assembly line in the kitchen in the back. The rosticceria serves delectable fancy food-to-go for a superb picnic dinner. It’s sold by weight; order by the etto—100-gram unit, 250 grams equals about a half-pound (Mon 15:30-20:30, Tue-Fri 9:30-20:30, Sat 9:00-20:00, Sun 10:00-17:00, Via Spadari 9, tel. 02-802-3161).
$ Luini Panzerotti, a local institution, is a bakery that serves up €3 piping-hot mini calzones (panzerotti) stuffed with mozzarella, tomatoes, ham, or whatever you like (Mon 10:00-15:00, Tue-Sat until 20:00, closed Sun and Aug, Via S. Radegonda 16, tel. 02-8646-1917). From the back of the Duomo, head north and look for the lines out front. Order from the menus posted on the wall behind the cash registers. Traditionally, Milanesi munch their hot little meals on the benches of nearby Piazza San Fedele (just to the north). Don’t overlook the dolci half of the menu. Across the street is another local hit, Cioccolati Italiani, for chocoholics in search of a treat.
(See “Hotels & Restaurants in Milan” map, here.)
Across from the Duomo, next to Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, Il Mercato del Duomo has conquered several floors above La Feltrinelli bookstore. Budget options abound with a pasta bar, focaccia/sandwich section, “street food,” and a cafféteria. Lighter fare is at their salad and salumi bar. For a fancy drink, head to the champagne bar or the Aperol terrace (daily 11:00-22:00, Piazza del Duomo 1, tel. 02-8633-1924, www.ilmercatodelduomo.it). And for a splurge, go to the top-floor restaurant Spazio Milano, run by three-star Michelin chef Niko Romito’s cooking school (daily 12:30-14:30 & 19:30-22:00, www.nikoromitoformazione.it).
Similarly, Eataly (also in Rome, Florence, and New York) has turned the former Teatro Smeraldo into a gourmet megastore. It’s overwhelming but oddly enchanting, with its overpriced Italian market goods and restaurants with all the major food groups—pasta, meats, vegetables, chocolate, and, of course, gelato (daily 10:00-24:00, Piazza XXV Aprile 10, Metro: Moscova, tel. 02-4949-7301, www.eataly.net).
(See “Hotels & Restaurants in Milan” map, here.)
These restaurants are near the Cairoli and Lanza Metro stations and are convenient to Sforza Castle and nearby recommended hotels. The Brera neighborhood, surrounding the Church of St. Carmine, is laced with narrow, inviting pedestrian streets. Make an evening of your visit by having an aperitivo with snacks at recommended Bar Brera or any other bar—most serve munchies with drinks from 17:00 until 21:00. Afterward, stroll along restaurant row on Via Fiori Chiari and Via Brera, or duck into the semicircular lane of Via Madonnina to survey the sidewalk cafés as you pass fortune tellers, artists, and knockoff handbag vendors. To locate these eateries, see the map on here.
$$ Antica Osteria Milanese is a hardworking family place with a smart local following and spacious, stylish seating. They serve good-quality, typical Milanese favorites (Mon-Sat 12:15-14:30 & 19:30-22:30, closed Sun, Via Camperio 12, tel. 02-861-367, Alessandro).
$$$ Convivium Ristorante and Pizza is popular for its extensive wine list, clever dishes (especially beef and fish), and tempting desserts. It’s bustling and trendy, yet classy (daily 12:00-14:30 & 19:00-24:00, facing Santa Maria del Carmine church at Via Ponte Vetero 21, tel. 02-8646-3708, Claudio and Nicola).
$ Princi bakery’s branch on Via Ponte Vetero works the same as the one on Via Speronari (listed earlier), only it’s more like a restaurant, with seating both inside and on the street. While the bakery and café are open all day, their meal counter (with €7 plates) serves only from 12:00 to 15:00 (Mon-Sat 7:00-20:00, Sun from 9:00, Via Ponte Vetero 10, tel. 02-7201-6067).
$ Bar Brera serves inexpensive sandwiches, pastas, and salads to throngs of art students and has a lively aperitivo happy hour (drinks and a buffet of hearty snacks starts at 18:00; open daily 7:00-late, Via Brera 23, tel. 02-877-091).
Fancy Via Dante Bars and Cafés: Thriving and central, Via Dante is lined with hardworking eateries where you can join locals for a lively lunch. Or just swing by for a morning caffè, watching the parade of Milanesi heading to work.
(See “Hotels & Restaurants in Milan” map, here.)
Consider ending your day at the former port of Milan. The Naviglio Grande district bustles with memorable and affordable bars and restaurants and a great people scene (see listing on here and map on here). In addition to endless aperitivo spreads and traditional trattorias, there are some more creative choices, too: Greek fare, artisanal microbrews, and “Brazilian sushi.”
Getting There: Ride the Metro or tram #2 to Porta Genova and walk down Via Casale, which dead-ends a block away at the canal. Walk halfway across the metal bridge and survey the scene. The street you just walked has plenty of cheap options. Most of the action—and all of my other recommendations—are to the left, on or near the canal. Do a reconnaissance stroll before settling in somewhere: Walk down the left bank of the canal to the bridge with cars, then go back on the other side.
Here are a few good options to consider, listed in the order you’ll pass them.
$$$$ Ristorante Brellin is the top romantic splurge, with a dressy crowd and fine food. The menu is international while clinging to a bit of tradition (daily 12:30-15:00 & 19:00-23:00; located where a small lane, Vicolo dei Lavandai, branches off from the canal; tel. 02-5810-1351, www.brellin.it).
$ Pizzeria Tradizionale, at the far end of the walk after you cross the bridge, is a local favorite (Thu-Tue 12:00-14:30 & 19:00-24:00, Wed 19:00-24:00, at the far end of canal walk, Ripa di Porta Ticinese 7, tel. 02-839-5133).
$$ Cucina Fusetti is a charming little place a few doors off the canal, serving pan-Mediterranean cuisine, including bacalao—salt cod (Mon-Sat 19:00-23:00, closed Sun; near the curved bridge with the zigzag design, go away from canal on Via Argelati to Via M. Fusetti 1; mobile 340-861-2676).
$ Pizzeria Spaghetteria La Magolfa, down a side street, feels like a neighborhood hangout, offering good, cheap salads, pastas, and pizzas. You can sit inside, on a veranda, or at a table on the street. For less than €20, two people could split a hearty pizza and a good bottle of wine (daily 12:00-15:00 & 18:00-24:00, go a long block past Cucina Fusetti to end of street, Via Magolfa 15, tel. 02-832-1696.
On your way back to the Metro or tram, stop by Orso Bianco for “artisanal” gelato. Their nocciola—or hazelnut—is buonissimo (Via Casale 7, on your right as you walk back to the Metro, tel. 02-9738-6848).
From Milano Centrale to: Venice (2/hour, most direct on high-speed ES trains, 2.5 hours), Florence (Trenitalia: hourly, 2 hours; Italo: 2/hour, 2 hours), Genoa (hourly, 2 hours), Rome (Trenitalia: 1-3/hour, 3.5 hours; Italo: 11/day nonstop, 3 hours, more with stops), Brindisi (4 direct/day, 2 night trains, 9-15 hours), Cinque Terre/La Spezia (hourly, 3 hours direct or with change in Genoa; trains from La Spezia to the villages go nearly hourly), Cinque Terre/Monterosso al Mare (8/day direct, otherwise hourly with change in Genoa, 3 hours), Varenna on Lake Como (1 hour; small line direct to Lecco/Sondrio/Tirano leaves at :20 past most hours—confirm these times), Stresa on Lake Maggiore (about hourly; 50-minute fast train may require reservations, while 1.5-hour train doesn’t), Como (2/hour, 30-60 minutes, boats go from Como to Varenna until about 19:00), Naples (Trenitalia: 2/hour, 4-5 hours, more with change in Rome, overnight possible; Italo: 11/day, 4-5 hours). For details see www.trenitalia.com or www.italotreno.it.
From Milano Porta Garibaldi (by High-Speed Train to International Destinations): Basel, with connections to Frankfurt (3/day, 4 hours), Geneva (4/day, 4 hours), Lugano (almost hourly, 1 hour), Munich (night train, 12 hours), Nice (3/day direct, 5 hours, operated by Thello, no rail passes; more with changes via Trenitalia), Paris (3/day, 7 hours; daily night train from Milano Centrale, 11 hours, operated by Thello, no rail passes), Vienna (night train, 12 hours), Zürich (4/day, 3 hours).
To get flight information for Malpensa or Linate airports or the phone number of your airline, call 02-74851 or 02-232-323 and wait for English options, or check www.sea-aeroportimilano.it.
Note: While the train works best for Malpensa, if you want to take a shuttle bus to any of Milan’s airports, just go to Milano Centrale station and walk out the door marked Piazza Luigi di Savoia. There, you’ll find little sales kiosks aggressively selling tickets for all your options.
Most international flights land at Terminal 1 of the manageable Malpensa Airport (airport code: MXP), 28 miles northwest of Milan. Low-cost EU flights use Terminal 2 (buses connect the two). Both have ATMs and exchange offices. Terminal 1 has a pharmacy, eateries, and a hotel-reservation service disguised as a TI. To leave the baggage-carousel area A, go right to reach services and the exit. From area B, go left. Airport info: Tel. 02-5858-0080, www.milanomalpensa-airport.com.
Trains from Malpensa to Milan: The Malpensa Express train is usually the most sensible option (not covered by rail passes, tel. 800-500-005, www.malpensaexpress.it). Trains leave from underground stations at Terminals 1 and 2. To reach the Terminal 2 station, exit the arrivals hall, cross the street, and follow the covered walkway to the station entrance. Both stations have ticket offices and Trenord ticket machines (credit cards accepted). A big electronic board shows the next departure times (“bin” = track). There are two lines: Malpensa-Milano Cadorna and Malpensa-Milano Centrale. For either, the ride costs €13 one-way (€20 round-trip). Validate your ticket in the little machines, and double-check to make sure your train is going to the destination you want.
If you are headed downtown or to most other points in the city, take the Cadorna line, which is quicker, runs more often and later, and drops you at a convenient downtown Metro station (2/hour, 40 minutes, usually departs Terminal 2 at :20 and :50 past the hour—departs Terminal 1 about 6 minutes later, last train from airport leaves at 1:03 in the morning; returning from Cadorna to the airport, the train generally departs Cadorna at :27 and :57 past the hour, first train from Cadorna leaves at 4:27).
If you are heading to the area around Milano Centrale, or connecting by train to other destinations, take the Centrale line (2/hour, 50 minutes, usually departs Terminal 2 at :07 and :37 past the hour—departs Terminal 1 about 6 minutes later, last train from airport leaves at 22:43; returning from Milano Centrale to the airport, the train generally departs at :25 and :55 past the hour, first train from Milano Centrale leaves at 5:25).
If you’re leaving Milan to go to the airport, purchase your ticket before you board, either from the Trenitalia or Trenord ticket machines or, at Cadorna Station, from the staffed ticket windows. At Milano Centrale, trains usually leave from tracks 1 and 2, which are hidden behind tracks 3 and 4 and poorly signed. Cadorna is a little easier to deal with; trains usually depart from track 1.
By Shuttle Bus: Three bus companies run between Malpensa Airport and Milano Centrale train station, offering virtually identical, competing services. They each charge about €8 for the one-hour trip (buy ticket from driver) and depart from the same places: in front of Terminal 2 (outside exit 4) and from Piazza Luigi di Savoia (on the east side of Milan’s central train station—with your back to the tracks, exit to the left). They also pick up and drop off at Terminal 1, which, if your flight docks there, makes the bus an option rather than taking the train. Buses leave about every 20 minutes, every day, from very early until just after midnight (Malpensa Shuttle tel. 02-5858-3185, www.malpensashuttle.it; Autostradale tel. 02-3391-0794, www.autostradale.it; and Terravision, www.terravision.eu).
By Taxi: Taxis into Milan cost a fixed rate of €95; avoid hustlers in airport halls (catch taxis outside exit 8). Considering how far the city is from the airport and how good the train and bus services are, Milan is the last place I’d take an airport taxi.
Most European flights land at Linate (airport code: LIN, www.milanolinate-airport.com), five miles east of Milan. The airport has a bank with an ATM (just past customs) and a hotel-finding service disguised as a TI (daily 7:30-23:30, tel. 02-7020-0443). Eventually the Metro’s new line 4 will link Linate with the city. For now, you can get to downtown Milan by bus or taxi.
By Bus: Public bus #73 connects Linate to the Duomo in about 25 minutes (covered by €1.50 public transit ticket, departs every 10 minutes, less frequently evenings and Sun).
If you’re leaving Milan to go to the airport, look for the #73 bus stop near the Duomo—it’s just off Piazza Armando Diaz where it meets Via Maurizio Gonzaga.
Private companies also run shuttles to Milano Centrale train station (handy only if you’re catching a train; €5, 2/hour, 35 minutes, www.airportbusexpress.it).
By Taxi: Taxis from Linate to the Duomo cost about €25.
Some budget airlines, such as Ryanair and Wizz Air, use Bergamo Airport—about 30 miles from Milan—as their Milan hub (airport code: BGY, tel. 035-326-323, www.sacbo.it). At least three bus companies ply the route between the east side of Milano Centrale train station (Piazza Luigi di Savoia) and Orio al Serio (€5, about 5/hour, 1 hour): Autostradale (www.airportbusexpress.it), Terravision (www.terravision.eu), and the Orio Shuttle (www.orioshuttle.com).