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Venice to create a wheelchair accessible tourist route

2021-08-18T01:51:35.309Z


Venice will create a tourist route with ramps from the city's main entry point to the iconic St. Mark's Square.


Venice is transformed and will be suitable for wheelchairs 1:03

(CNN) - 

Its 403 bridges, countless canals and pretty cobbled streets have made Venice one of the most beautiful cities in the world.

But what is one person's Instagram dream is another's nightmare of mobility.


The lakeside city has long been nearly impossible for wheelchair users to navigate, with only a limited number of step-free areas of the city, and a waterbus service (which is accessible) with limited routes.

Now, however, this could all change.

The Venice authorities are committed to making the city's main sights accessible to all, with a wheelchair-friendly route from the city's main entry point to the iconic St. Mark's Square.

The ramps will connect a series of bridges running from Piazzale Roma to St. Mark's Square.


Courtesy of the Venice City Council

To start the project, the city council announced the construction of six ramps in busy areas of the city: four on the road to San Marcos and two at other crucial points for the inhabitants.

The project will cost € 900,000 (US $ 1.6 million).

Francesca Zaccariotto, councilor for public works, told CNN that the goal was "to build at least one route that allows people of all ages to go at least from Piazzale Roma [the gateway to the Italian peninsula] to San Marcos without barriers. ".

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When completed, it will be the first time that Venice has been accessible by wheelchair in its history.

The city is said to have been founded in 421 AD.

The new route will not only be accessible to wheelchairs.

"We have expanded the plan so that everyone can go through it without problems, including the blind, something that was not in the original plan," said Zaccariotto.

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The bridges of Venice are impassable for many visitors with mobility problems.


Marco Piraccini / Mondadori Portfolio / Getty Images

"We are doing interventions on the bridges, making it easier to climb steps and adding non-slip surfaces that make everything more passable."

Venice is a difficult city to update, he said, due to strict regulations on modifying its cultural heritage.

But, he said, the goal is to become "an example of accessibility for people with mobility problems."

Wheelchair users have applauded the move.

British sculptor Tony Heaton, who often goes to the city for work, called the current situation a "nightmare of access" but said the planned route would be "enormously important".

"It seems that Venice always looks the other way when it thinks of wheelchair users, resorting to the rhetoric of the 'old city'," he told CNN.

"Over the years I have had to fight through the city with several helpers who were wheelchair bound. By trial and error, I have a good idea of ​​how to get around and when to use the vaporetto [water bus], but it's a nightmare access and could be a lot better with a little bit of joint thinking. "

Initiative helps disabled people to enjoy the sea 0:54

In 2016, two enterprising gondoliers created a wheelchair accessible gondola on their own.

However, the Gondolas4all project is currently on hold due to lack of funding.

Heaton added that the ramps would be "liberating for the elderly and disabled residents of Venice, who often feel trapped."

In the past, he has held discussions about accessibility at the city's Biennale art show, and has spoken with locals about their experiences.

The accessibility project

The bridges have been designed to be slip resistant and also quiet.


Courtesy of the Venice City Council

In the first phase of the project, five bridges with ramps will be equipped.

The Pont de la Croze, near Piazzale Roma, will be the first.

It will link with other bridges that already have ramps, allowing step-free access through the Santa Croce and San Polo areas to the San Toma vaporetto stop.

From there, users will have to take the vaporetto that crosses the Grand Canal (free for wheelchair users) to San Samuele, where the route continues along the Ponte dei Frati, connecting the squares of Santo Stefano and Sant'Angelo.

From there, the route passes the famous Fenice opera house.

"It is an important place that must be accessible to everyone," says Zaccariotto and arrives in San Marcos.

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The only drawback is that a bridge near La Fenice, the Ponte Vecia Malvasia, will not have a ramp in this first phase of construction.

The authorities are working on a solution that satisfies those responsible for the preservation of heritage, so that the tour is fully accessible.

In addition to the San Marcos route, the stairs that lead from the Campo de la Misericordia square to the Fondamenta de la Misericordia, an important nightlife center, will also have a ramp.

Another will go to the island of Giudecca, right next to the Palanca vaporetto stop, a residential area increasingly popular with visitors.

The ramp widens

The city's ramps have already been well received by residents and visitors.


Courtesy of the Venice City Council

Ramps are not new in Venice.

In the last six years, the temporary ramps installed for the annual marathon have been left for most of the year in places such as the Zattere promenade in the Dorsoduro district and on the Riva degli Schiavoni, the world-famous promenade. on the outskirts of San Marcos.

But Heaton says they are not ideal.

"They are usually crowded with people without disabilities who take photos from there and impede the passage," he explains.

In addition to the new bridges, authorities will replace existing temporary ramps, Zaccariotto said.

The first permanent one, which will go on the Riva degli Schiavoni, is already under construction, he said.

"We have perfected them based on the experience of [the ramps of] the Zattere, changing the surface, using a material that guarantees the absence of noise, thus improving acoustics, aesthetics and gliding," he said.

Paralympic skier transforms wheelchairs 2:20

The plans for the new bridges will be approved by the Executive, and then they will be put out to tender.

The idea is to complete the project in a few months.

"It would be a huge message for other places that don't address the issue of access: they will be left without an excuse," Heaton added of the proposed plans.

"If Venice can do it, everyone can do it. It just takes political will."

Venice

Source: cnnespanol

All news articles on 2021-08-18

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