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Milan Travel Guide

Milan, Lombardy's jewel city in Northern Italy, is a stylish, sophisticated metropolis that blends the hip and new with over 2500 years of history. Milan is also a cultural hub that rivals London in terms of theatre and Paris in terms of fashion.

About Milan

Milan covers an area of 765.3 square miles (1982 square Km) and is estimated to have a population of 3.7 million people being one of the largest cities in Italy. It is one of the main artistic centres in Europe and also an important fashion spot.

Archive for the ‘Milan’ Category

Milan City Guide

Travel to Milan to discover the ‘alternative’ Italy, for the city embodies everything that is chic and sophisticated in Italian culture, far removed from quaint Tuscan villages or warbling gondoliers. Milan is the home of haute couture and haute cuisine, world-class shopping, supreme opera, sleek skyscrapers, tasteful galleries and museums, and spacious piazzas. A holiday in Milan is a stylish experience.

Mid-summer is stifling hot and humid in the city and most locals head for the lakes at this time of year. The best time to holiday in Milan is in early summer, or early autumn, when the weather is warm and sunny. Winters are very chilly, wet and foggy.

Fashion fundis, shopaholics, opera lovers and anyone who enjoys the finer things in life (and can afford to pay for them) will revel in a holiday in Milan. Art lovers are also drawn to travel to Milan to see the treasures stored in its leading galleries, but the piece de resistance, da Vinci’s The Last Supper fresco, is in the refectory of the Santa Maria delle Grazie.

Sophistication reaches new levels in Milan. The financial and commercial centre of Italy attracts fashion fundis, opera lovers, the young, the beautiful and the bold. Shopping, eating and clubbing is serious business here and it is no surprise that the city boasts the world’s most beautiful shopping mall, the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II. Equally vying for admiration are the Milanese icons of La Scala Theatre (Teatro della Scala) and the Gothic Duomo, one of the world’s largest churches.

Milan’s frenetic pace surges ahead in its drive towards progress, forsaking the lengthy siestas enjoyed in other parts of the country. The city’s urban tentacles stretch for miles, although the significant historical attractions are contained between the two landmark sites - the Duomo and the Sforzesco Castle. These reside within the inner loop of the city’s concentric design, which is split into four squares: Piazza Duomo, Piazza Cairoli, Piazza Cordusio and Piazza san Babila. The modern civic centre lies to the northwest, around Mussolini’s colossal train station built in 1931. The area around here is dominated by a skyline of skyscrapers from which the sleek Pirelli Tower emerges. The Fiera district that stretches around Porta Genova station is the nub for trade and fashion fairs.

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