The Botanical Garden of Rome has been through multiple iterations over the years. After several moves, in the 19th century it reached its present home, in the royal-palace sized garden formerly attached to Cardinal Corsini’s 18th-century residence along the Via Lungara. Today, the garden is an oasis of nature at the foot of the Janiculum Hill.
The sixteenth-century Villa Riario, famous in the late 17th century as home to Queen Christina of Sweden, featured a palazzo, a garden, a forest, a small house atop the Janiculum, and access to considerable quantities of water. After Cardinal Neri Corsini and his brother Prince Bartolomeo purchased it in 1736, they commissioned architect Ferdinando Fuga to enlarge and embellish the property. Behind the palazzo, beyond the Corte d’onore, a “French-style” park extended as far as the top of the Janiculum Hill. It housed an open-air Teatro di verzura, with a Fountain of the Tritons at its centre, perfect for the plays put on by the Academy of the Quiriti, of which Cardinal Corsini was patron. The garden was dominated by a scenic cascading water feature. Purchased in 1883 by the Italian State, the complex comprises the palazzo, which hosts the historic Corsini Gallery and its display collection of priceless artworks, as well as the Accademia dei Lincei, its archives and the Corsiniana Library. Well-known botanist Pietro Romualdo Pirotta supervised the conversion of the gardens into the Botanical Garden for Rome’s “La Sapienza” University, enriching the original layout with major collections of plant species, many rare or endangered, along with trees of exceptional value, including varieties of palms, conifers and deciduous trees planted according to systematic and scenic criteria. The avenue of palms near the entrance is particularly spectacular, while the monumental Platanus orientalis specimens along the sides of the water feature testify to the garden’s centuries-long heritage.
Highlights
The "catena d’acqua"
Enclosed between two flights of steps, once adorned with sculptures and flower vases to invite visitors to ascend the hill, the five successive tanks in the cascading water feature have eleven fountain sprays. The construction ends at the top in an exedra with a beautiful balustrade open towards the middle to direct visitors’ gaze towards a niche-nymphaeum, which today lies outside the boundary of the Corsini garden.
The Triton Fountain
As the centrepiece of his open-air theatre, Cardinal Corsini was keen to have a travertine fountain with a low poly-lobed basin, accompanied by the sculptures of two tritons, one young and one old, holding a fruit bowl from which water spurted. No trace of the theatre has survived. Carved in 1742 by stonemason Giuseppe Poddi, the fountain is today in rather poor condition; it does, however, evoke more illustrious baroque models.
Greenhouse
Technologically-advanced for its day, French company Mathian built a glass and cast iron greenhouse in 1878 for the Botanical Garden when it was still located in Via Milano. A few years after its installation, to comply with the city’s new regulatory plan, the Garden had to transfer to the Corsini Gardens; the greenhouse was dismantled and reassembled in the new location.
Orto Botanico di Roma Contacts
Contacts
Telephone:- Informazioni: +39 06 49917116
- Biglietteria: +39 06 49917107
Address
Largo Cristina di Svezia, 24
00165 , Roma (RM)
Orto Botanico di Roma Opening times and prices
Opening hours
The Botanical Garden is open:
- April – October: daily from 9:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. including Sundays and public holidays
- November – March: every day from 9.00 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. including Sundays and public holidays.
The Butterfly House is open daily from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm and is closed on Mondays.
On Saturdays at 11.00 am, 5.00 pm and on Sundays at 10.30 am, 11.30 am, 3.30 pm, 4.30 pm there are free guided tours with ordinary entrance fees and free booking on site.
Pricing
- Full (12 – 65 years): € 8,00
- Reduced (6 – 11 years old, 65 +, affiliated institutions): € 4,00
- Free: 0 – 5 years old, disabled with accompanying person, staff and Sapienza students
Groups (minimum 20 people with reservation)
- rate: € 4,00 per person
- 2 free companions for every 20 people
Annual subscription: € 40.00 (excluding events)
Guided tours and educational activities (booking required):
- groups from 10 to 19 people: entrance ticket + € 4,00 per person
- groups of at least 20 people: entrance fee + € 2,00 per person
It is possible to visit the Butterfly Eden House by purchasing, in addition to the entrance ticket to the Botanical Garden, an additional ticket of € 4.00.
Orto Botanico di Roma How to get there
Address
Largo Cristina di Svezia, 24
00165 , Roma (RM)
Latitude: 41.892234
Longitude: 12.466083
How to arrive by bus
From the North (p.le Clodio, piazza Cavour) or from the South (p.le Ostiense, v.le Aventino):
- Reach Ponte Sisto with bus lines 23 or 280, walk along via di Ponte Sisto, via di S. Dorotea, via di Porta Settimiana, via Corsini.
From the Centre (p.zza Torre Argentina) or from the West (Monteverde, Trastevere station):
- Reach p.zza G. Belli by tram 8 then continue on foot along via della Lungaretta, via della Scala, via di Porta Settimiana, via Corsini.
Orto Botanico di Roma Services/Accessibility
Services
Dogs are allowed inside the Botanical Garden only if they accompany visually impaired visitors.
The Botanical Garden Museum organizes general or thematic guided tours for schools of all levels (from 6 years old +), groups and associations (minimum 10 people) lasting 90 minutes. For further information please consult the website.
All guided tours require a reservation by filling out a special form. form
The reservation is completed upon receipt of the reply email to be shown at the entrance.
It is possible to eat inside the Garden while respecting the historical and museum character of the Garden. Camping and picnics are forbidden. Only on weekends is a refreshment area with a few tables open. There is a vending machine for hot drinks, cold drinks and snacks.
Inside the Botanical Garden there is a bathroom for the disabled.
Accessibility
Free admission for the disabled and accompanying person.
- All driveways are wheelchair accessible, the central driveway is covered in gravel, the others are paved. The entire western sector of the Botanical Garden is on a slope (about 40 metres in height difference).
- The Tropical Greenhouse, part of the Garden of Simples and the Japanese Garden, the French Greenhouse, the Corsini Greenhouse, the Stairway of the Eleven Fountains, the Rose Garden and part of the Bamboo Area are not accessible.
- There are Braille tags in the Garden of the Senses.
- Only guide dogs for the blind are permitted.
Orto Botanico di Roma Private events
Orto Botanico di Roma Itineraries
You could find the garden in these itineraries
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