Italy's third largest city thrives on the chaos that prevails
amid its busy streets. This is the place where pizza was invented
and its restaurants continue to serve some of Italy's finest
cuisine.
Sheltering on the Bay of Naples and dominated by the slopes of
Mount Vesuvius, Naples is naturally imbued with the best of
nature's bounty. The city is somewhat schizophrenic in its
juxtaposition of superb museums, Renaissance and Baroque churches
alongside crumbling tenement blocks and squalor. Noisy markets sell
a collection of items from high-quality food produce to fake
designer goods. Roads are characteristically hectic with gung-ho
moped drivers weaving wildly through the streets and frustrating
traffic jams clogging the city's arteries. Despite its less refined
elements, Naples is a fascinating destination and a great base from
which to explore the Amalfi Coast, Pompeii and Herculaneum.
The city's transport hub is located around the immense Piazza
Garibaldi, on the east side of Naples. The area's growing African
population has imbued the streets with the flavours and favours of
its immigrants. Southwest from here is the Piazza Bovio and
branching to the left of it, the Piazza Municipio and nearby Piazza
del Plebiscito. On the watery edges are the Molo Beverollo and the
Stazione Marittima, the point of departure for ferries. From the
reaches of Spaccanapoli one can explore the historic part of Naples
with its numerous palaces and churches.