Arrival in Rome
Rome- 10:05 AM — Arrival at Rome Fiumicino (FCO)
- Meet & greet your driver; private transfer to the hotel
- Check-in at Hotel L'Orologio Roma
You arrive and depart through Rome, but the heart of this journey is Florence — your base for nearly two weeks, with day trips fanning out across northern Italy.
The moments that make this trip — and a few local secrets near your Florence door that aren't on the schedule.
At the Accademia, the 17-foot marble is even more breathtaking in person — carved from a single flawed block other sculptors had abandoned. With a private guide, you'll have the context that makes it land.
Jul 1 · Accademia GalleryThe Birth of Venus and Primavera in the room they were made for — one of the world's great art experiences, guided privately.
Jun 30The terracotta dome that crowns Florence was an engineering marvel of its age — and your reserved Duomo entrance brings you inside it.
Jun 29Forage for truffles, then cook and feast inside a 15th-century Tuscan castle — arguably the most memorable day of the whole journey.
Jul 5 · Castello di OlivetoMurano glassblowing, St. Mark's, and the Doge's Palace — the floating city in a single, beautifully run day trip.
Jul 4Real Parmigiano, 12-year balsamico, the Ferrari Museum, and Bologna's porticoes — Emilia-Romagna in a day.
Jul 7Vivoli (Florence's oldest, since 1929) and Gelateria dei Neri are both a short walk from Borgo Pinti by Santa Croce. Order a cup, not a cone — locals say it keeps the flavor pure.
Santa Croce · 5–8 min walkThe postcard view of the whole city and the Arno, best an hour before sundown. Walk up through the Rose Garden, or have your driver drop you.
Free time · any eveningLa Terrazza at Hotel Continentale (over the Ponte Vecchio) and SE·STO at the Westin offer 360° Duomo views with an Aperol or Tuscan bubbles. Book ahead for sunset.
Free timeYour neighborhood's beloved local food market — produce, cheese, and a no-frills lunch counter where Florentines actually eat. Mornings, Mon–Sat.
Steps from Borgo PintiThe legendary Florentine T-bone — thick-cut, char-grilled, served rare and meant to share. The one dish to seek out on a free evening.
Tuscan classicFlorence's most famous schiacciata panini — enormous, cheap, and worth the queue. A perfect quick lunch between sights on Via dei Neri.
Centro storicoYour private driver Blendi accompanies you throughout and holds the full itinerary and every guide's details. Local guides meet you each morning with all entrance tickets in hand.
Borgo Pinti 32 sits in a quiet, elegant pocket of the historic center, between the Duomo and the Basilica of Santa Croce — a few minutes' walk from almost everything, yet off the busiest tourist lanes.
Approximate walking times from your door. Your driver or guide collects you on scheduled mornings — these are for the rest.
Booked times and reservations in terracotta; your free time in green.
Treat this trip as a journey through ideas, not just rooms. Each entry below is the story to carry in — where it came from, why it mattered, and what to notice — so the art and architecture mean something when you stand in front of them.
Begun in 1560 by Giorgio Vasari as the administrative offices — uffizi — of Cosimo I de' Medici, the building was turning into a gallery within a generation as the family hung their treasures along its top floor. When the last Medici heir, Anna Maria Luisa, died in 1743, she bequeathed the entire collection to the city of Florence on the condition it never leave — making the Uffizi one of the first public art museums in the world.
The collection runs roughly chronologically, from Giotto and the Gothic through the full bloom of the Renaissance to Caravaggio and the Baroque. With a private guide you'll move efficiently to the essentials rather than its 100-odd rooms.
Gucci is one of the world's most recognized luxury houses — and it began a few steps from where you'll be standing. Guccio Gucci was born in Florence in 1881. As a young man he took a job as a porter and bellhop at London's grand Savoy Hotel, where he watched wealthy travelers arrive with beautifully made leather luggage. That image stayed with him.
Returning to Florence, he learned the city's centuries-old leather and saddlery crafts and, in 1921, opened his own shop selling fine luggage and goods. The house grew directly out of Tuscan craftsmanship — which is why equestrian details like the horse-bit and the woven-bamboo bag handle (improvised when leather was scarce after the war) became signatures. The Gucci Garden, opened in 2018 inside the 14th-century Palazzo della Mercanzia on Piazza della Signoria, is part archive-museum and part boutique.
Founded in 1784 as a teaching collection for the Academy of Fine Arts, the Accademia became world-famous for one reason: in 1873 Michelangelo's David was moved here from the open air of Piazza della Signoria to shield it from the elements, and a domed Tribune was built to display it.
Carved between 1501 and 1504 when Michelangelo was in his twenties, the David emerged from a single block of Carrara marble that two earlier sculptors had given up on as flawed. The approach to it — down a corridor lined with the unfinished Prisoners — is a deliberate piece of theatre.
Florence's cathedral was begun in 1296 but left with a gaping hole where its crossing should be: no one knew how to roof a span that wide. In 1418 a goldsmith named Filippo Brunelleschi won the commission with a radical idea — a self-supporting double-shell dome raised without the usual wooden centering, using a herringbone brick pattern that locked each course in place. Completed in 1436, it remains the largest masonry dome ever built and the emblem of the Renaissance.
The interior is surprisingly austere, which makes the explosion of color overhead — Vasari and Zuccari's Last Judgment swirling inside the cupola — all the more dramatic.
The Medici bought this colossal Oltrarno palace in 1550 and made it their grand-ducal residence; later it housed the dukes of Lorraine and, briefly, the kings of a newly united Italy. The Palatine Gallery preserves that palace character — paintings hung floor to ceiling by the personal taste of their collectors rather than by date or school, in rooms with Baroque frescoed ceilings by Pietro da Cortona.
It holds the largest concentration of works by Raphael anywhere, alongside Titian, Caravaggio, Rubens and Andrea del Sarto. Behind the palace, the Boboli Gardens are one of the earliest and most influential Italian formal gardens.
For more than a thousand years Venice was an independent maritime republic, and these two buildings were its sacred and secular hearts. St. Mark's Basilica — begun in 1063 to house the relics of the evangelist, said to have been smuggled from Alexandria — is a Byzantine treasure-house, its interior sheathed in over 8,000 square metres of golden mosaic.
Next door, the Gothic Doge's Palace was the seat of government, law courts, and the doge's apartments. Its grandest room, the Great Council Chamber, is dominated by Tintoretto's Paradise, among the largest oil paintings in the world.
The Vatican Museums grew over five centuries from the private collections of the popes, beginning when Julius II placed a newly excavated ancient statue — the Laocoön, unearthed in a Roman vineyard in 1506 — on public view. Today miles of galleries lead, by design, toward a single room.
That room is the Sistine Chapel, where Michelangelo painted the ceiling between 1508 and 1512 and, decades later, the Last Judgment on the altar wall. It is a working chapel — silence and no photography are enforced. Along the way you'll pass the Raphael Rooms, frescoed at the same moment just down the corridor.
Your evenings in Florence are mostly free. Here are dinners worth booking ahead and the concerts on during your stay — reserve the starred ones soon, as they fill up.
A romantic Florentine institution famous for its welcome prosecco, wild-boar pappardelle, and warm theatricality. On Borgo Pinti — your own street.
~2 min walk · book 2–3 weeks ahead Book / details →Florence's oldest cellar restaurant (since 1880) and a temple to bistecca alla fiorentina. Dinner only, Mon–Sat. The place for the big steak.
~14 min walk · book 1–2 weeks ahead Book / details →Beloved Sant'Ambrogio classic serving traditional, often pasta-free Tuscan cooking. The casual sister, Cibrèino, is next door if the main room is full.
~6 min walk · book 1–2 weeks ahead Book / details →A cult Oltrarno trattoria, family-run since 1945 — no website, phone only, and it books out far ahead. Worth the call.
~16 min walk · phone only: +39 055 212427 Call to book →One Michelin star, perched directly over the Arno with a view of the Ponte Vecchio. Refined tasting menus for a celebratory evening. Open Wed–Sun. Book early — peak dates go fast.
~15 min walk · book 4–6 weeks ahead Book / details →Florence's great opera house runs its famous festival into early July. During your stay, Music Director Daniele Gatti conducts the Beethoven symphonies — including the monumental Symphony No. 9 "Choral" finale, around July 1. The standout night for serious music. Confirm exact dates and book on the official site (individual tickets released in advance).
Programme & tickets →Nightly opera arias — La Traviata, Bohème, Tosca, Butterfly, Figaro — sung by professional voices with piano, in a baroque deconsecrated church with lovely acoustics. About 75 minutes, usually starting ~9:15 PM. An easy, atmospheric evening.
Dates & tickets →Full short operas staged in costume in a historic church, several evenings a week (typically ~8:30 PM). A more theatrical alternative to the aria recitals.
Dates & tickets →Float above the vineyards just south of Florence at dawn, with a champagne toast on landing. Unforgettable — pairs well with a free morning.
Book ahead · weather-dependentDrive the Tuscan back roads through wine country with a winery lunch — a playful half-day on one of your leisure afternoons.
Half or full dayA breathtaking apothecary founded by Dominican friars in 1221 — frescoed halls, ancient remedies, and signature scents and soaps you can take home. Free to wander and wonderfully photogenic.
~18 min walk · near the train stationThe leather school inside the Santa Croce monastery. Watch artisans at work and have a wallet or small bag embossed with your initials in gold — a personal souvenir.
~8 min walk · behind Santa CroceA hands-on afternoon: learn to make real gelato, or blend your own custom fragrance to bottle and keep. Easy to slot into a free afternoon.
~2 hours · book aheadOn the Jul 4 day trip, the glassblowing island is full of pretty, affordable handmade earrings and pendants — a colorful keepsake from the lagoon.
Jul 4 · MuranoThe big show on during your stay: monumental Mark Rothko paintings, many never shown in Italy (through Aug 23, 2026). Don't miss the companion installation at the Museo di San Marco, where Rothko's canvases hang in dialogue with Fra Angelico's Renaissance frescoes.
~13 min walk · Piazza Strozzi · book timed entry Exhibition & tickets →A historic little antiques and bric-a-brac market right by your base — prints, old frames, jewelry, curios. The closest spot for a browse.
~5 min walk · near Sant'AmbrogioFlorence's traditional antiques row in the Oltrarno: dealers in old-master paintings, gilded furniture, and fine objets. Window-shopping is half the pleasure.
~18 min walk · OltrarnoA cluster of art galleries and antiquarians between the river and Santa Maria Novella — a good stretch for browsing paintings and design.
~17 min walkItalian 20th-century art in a former hospital on Piazza Santa Maria Novella — a quieter, modern counterpoint to the Renaissance galleries.
~18 min walkA leading contemporary & modern gallery on Via Tornabuoni — easy to pair with your Ferragamo/Via Tornabuoni morning on Jul 1.
~15 min walk