Below you will find three Rome hotels close to the Trevi Fountain, ranging from a good standard 3 star Remember, you need to throw a coin in the fountain to be assured a return visit to Rome! It was completely refurbished in 1998, when the stonework was scrubbed and new plumbing was installed. Today, the beautiful Trevi Fountain is one of Rome's most popular tourist attractions. The fountain was finally completed in 1762 by Giuseppe Pannini, 11 years after Salvi passed away.
Work began 1732 and many of Bernini's original plans were incorporated into the design. However, as he was not Roman, there was an outcry by the locals, and in the end the commissioning was given to Nicola Salvi. The competition was initially won by a Florentine, Alessandro Galilei. However, after the Pope's death the project was scrapped for almost 100 years, when in 1730 Pope Clement XII held a competition for a new design. But in 1629, Pope Urban VIII decided that the then current fountain was not dramatic enough and asked one of Italy's best loved artists, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, to design a more dramatic and ornate fountain for the site.
It was customary in Ancient Rome to build ornate fountains at the terminal of an aqueduct. Its location, in the centre of the historic area (41.900875, 12.483167), marks the terminal point of the revived Aqua Virgo, one of the ancient aqueducts that supplied water to Ancient Rome. The Trevi Fountain stands 25.9 meters high and 19.8 meters wide and is the largest Baroque fountain in Rome.
Work began 1732 and many of Bernini's original plans were incorporated into the design. However, as he was not Roman, there was an outcry by the locals, and in the end the commissioning was given to Nicola Salvi. The competition was initially won by a Florentine, Alessandro Galilei. However, after the Pope's death the project was scrapped for almost 100 years, when in 1730 Pope Clement XII held a competition for a new design. But in 1629, Pope Urban VIII decided that the then current fountain was not dramatic enough and asked one of Italy's best loved artists, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, to design a more dramatic and ornate fountain for the site.
It was customary in Ancient Rome to build ornate fountains at the terminal of an aqueduct. Its location, in the centre of the historic area (41.900875, 12.483167), marks the terminal point of the revived Aqua Virgo, one of the ancient aqueducts that supplied water to Ancient Rome. The Trevi Fountain stands 25.9 meters high and 19.8 meters wide and is the largest Baroque fountain in Rome.
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