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罗马步行游览指南
城市指南

罗马步行游览指南

June 8, 20267分钟阅读

Rome is a walking city. The ancient center is compact enough that most major landmarks sit within 20 minutes of each other on foot. The Colosseum, Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, and Spanish Steps are all connected by streets where the real sightseeing happens between the big stops.

Here's how to cover the best of Rome without getting on a bus.

Colosseum to the Roman Forum

Start at the Colosseum, then walk 500 metres to the Roman Forum. This short stretch along Via dei Fori Imperiali takes about 10 minutes, and it's the most historically dense walk in the city. The Forum sprawls below street level, with temple ruins, triumphal arches, and the spot where Julius Caesar's body was cremated.

Keep walking past the Forum to Palatine Hill for views over the ancient city. The full Colosseum-Forum-Palatine loop takes about 90 minutes if you stop to read the plaques and take it in.

Piazza Navona to the Pantheon and Trevi Fountain

From the Colosseum, head northwest about 1.5 km (20 minutes) to reach the Pantheon. The walk takes you through quieter residential streets where laundry hangs above the sidewalk and scooters outnumber cars.

The Pantheon to Piazza Navona is only 400 metres, about 5 minutes on foot. Bernini's Fountain of the Four Rivers anchors the piazza, and the surrounding streets are full of cafes with outdoor seating.

From Piazza Navona, it's a 15-minute walk northeast to the Trevi Fountain (roughly 1 km through narrow streets). The Trevi sits in a small square that's almost always crowded, but arriving early morning or late evening changes the whole feel.

Spanish Steps to Piazza del Popolo

If you're coming from the north end of the city, start at Piazza del Popolo and walk 800 metres south to the Spanish Steps. From there, it's about 1 km (10 to 15 minutes) to the Trevi Fountain. This loop through Rome's shopping district along Via dei Condotti is one of the most popular evening walks in the city.

Vatican City and St. Peter's

The Vatican sits about 4 km from the Colosseum, roughly 45 minutes on foot. Most people walk there from the Pantheon area, which cuts the distance to about 2 km (25 minutes). Cross the Tiber at Ponte Sant'Angelo and walk along Via della Conciliazione toward St. Peter's Basilica. The approach gives you the full reveal: the dome growing larger with every step until the piazza opens up in front of you.

Trastevere, Testaccio, and the Aventine Keyhole

Cross the Tiber south of the Vatican and you're in Trastevere. Cobblestone alleys, ivy-covered buildings, and some of the best dinner spots in the city. Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere is worth a stop for the mosaics alone.

South of Trastevere, the Testaccio neighbourhood is where Romans go when they want to eat well without a tourist markup. The Mercato di Testaccio is an indoor food market where you can try supplì (fried rice balls) and cacio e pepe in its birthplace.

From Testaccio, climb Aventine Hill to the Priory of the Knights of Malta. Look through the keyhole in the wooden door on Piazza dei Cavalieri di Malta. You'll see a perfectly framed view of St. Peter's dome at the end of a hedged garden tunnel. It's free, takes 5 minutes, and it's one of the most surprising views in Rome.

Practical tips for walking Rome

  • Drink from the nasoni. Rome has over 2,500 free cast-iron drinking fountains scattered across the city. The name means "big noses" after the curved spout shape. The water is cold, clean, and comes from the same ancient aqueduct system that has supplied the city for centuries. Bring a refillable bottle.
  • Wear sturdy shoes. Rome's sampietrini cobblestones are charming but unforgiving. Flat, closed-toe shoes with good grip will save your feet and your ankles.
  • Walk early or late. Summer temperatures push past 35°C by midday. The best walking hours are before 10am and after 5pm. You'll also dodge the tour-bus crowds at the Colosseum and Vatican.
  • Expect 10 to 15 km per day. A full day of sightseeing on foot covers serious ground. Factor in hills (Aventine, Palatine, Janiculum) and heat, not just distance.

An AudaTours self-guided audio tour of Rome puts all of this on a GPS-tracked route with narration that plays automatically at each stop. Download it over Wi-Fi, walk at your own pace, and skip anything that doesn't interest you. Tours are available in 50+ languages, work completely offline, and cost a few dollars each. Or unlock every tour in every city with an Unlimited subscription.

Browse all walking tours and start planning your route.

音频导览的优势

步行连接一切

罗马的主要景点都在步行距离内。一天步行10到15公里可以看遍精华。

美食街区

特拉斯提弗列和Testaccio是当地人吃饭的地方。远离旅游区的餐厅,价格更好,味道更正宗。

免费饮水喷泉

2,500多个nasoni喷泉遍布全城。走到哪都能补水,省下买瓶装水的钱。

GPS导航地图

跟随GPS路线,音频在每个景点自动播放。

观景台

Aventine锁孔可以看到圣彼得大教堂的完美框景。这种隐藏的观景点只有步行才能发现。

按自己的节奏

在万神殿前多坐一会儿,在小巷里迷路,随时暂停导览喝杯浓缩咖啡。

常见问题解答

罗马各景点之间有多远?

斗兽场到Forum 500米,万神殿到纳沃纳广场400米,西班牙阶梯到许愿泉1公里,斗兽场到梵蒂冈4公里。

什么是nasoni喷泉?

罗马有2,500多个免费公共饮水喷泉,叫做nasoni(大鼻子)。水质优良,随时可以灌装水瓶。

穿什么鞋好?

选择有厚底和良好支撑的运动鞋。罗马的sampietrini鹅卵石路面对薄底鞋不太友好。

从斗兽场可以走到梵蒂冈吗?

可以,大约4公里,步行约50分钟。沿途会经过许多有趣的街区。

什么时间最适合步行?

清晨和傍晚。夏天中午非常热,建议避开正午到下午3点的时段。

导览可以离线使用吗?

可以。通过Wi-Fi下载后完全离线使用。

漫步城市,聆听故事。

音频导览低至 $2.99。选择一座城市,开始探索吧。

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