Venice in Brief

Main Attractions

Thousands of pigeons live in St. Marks Square along with some of the most important and magnificent sights of the city. In Italian known as Piazza San Marco, it was designed in the 11th century and is seen as the centre of Venice. The famous historical buildings surrounding it have been added over the centuries, including St. Markò€™s Basilica, The Doge"s Palace and St. Markò€™s Clocktower. Popular with tourists there are many cafes and restaurants to sit and take in the view.

St. Mark"s Basilica, built in the 8th century, is the most famous of Veniceò€™s churches and a stunning creation of Byzantine domes and mosaics. The upper part of the inside is entirely covered with bright mosaics of gold, bronze and a variety of precious stones, this decorated surface covers around 8000 m2.

Doge"s Palace dates back to the early 14th century when Venice was at its most powerful. Set in the style of Italian Gothic, the inside of the palace is sumptuously adorned with paintings and carved wall decorations.

Rialto Bridge was constructed in 1591 and crosses the Grand Canal in the very centre of Venice. Its 24 foot neo Gothic arch was designed to let galleys pass through. There are 3 walkways with two along the outer balustrades and a larger central walkway with a number of small shops selling jewellery and other local products.

How to get around

Itò€™s not possible to drive through Venice so most people get around the city centre either by walking or using the many public water buses, known as vaporetti or battelli, that line the canals. A traghetto is a gondola ferry that departs from certain places along the Grand Canal, taking people back and forth between the two banks, cheap and charming. A Gondola used to be the main form of transport for Venetians at one time, but now they are mainly for the tourists, it is quite a romantic and pleasant way to take a leisurely tour of the canals and see the city.

Shopping

Venice is a great place for shopping; local souvenirs include carnival masks made from terracotta or pottery and traditional Murano glass made on the island of Murano. Techniques have remained unchanged for centuries. You can pick up a ò€˜La murrinaò€™ which is a pendant made from the coloured glass, a vase or a Venini lamp. There are plenty of fashion boutiques with Mercerie the main shopping district to find designer names. The streets here are narrow and winding and you can find designer clothes, leather goods, glassware and linens. The island of Buranoò€™s traditional occupation is lace making and here you can purchase anything from doilies and table linens to a wedding dress. Another favourite is a Venetian sweet known as ò€˜zaetiò€™ that can be purchased from the many cake shops in Venice.

Accommodation

Finding accommodation in Venice should not be too difficult, since there are hundreds of Venice hotels available from budget to luxury class, in any suburb of Venice.






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Why, yes, both of these witty quotes retell the inherent risks of skiing. However, you"ll neither "go broke" nor head "nowhere" (and, certainly, there are not ambulances at the bottom of any hills) in Les Arcs, France. A French ski destination where accommodation (from accommodating tourists" needs to après ski venues to rooms, hotels and apartments) is reserved for everyone. Les Arcs Naturally Came To Be A skier, mountain guide and area resident by the name of Robert Blanc thought it a novel idea to build villages sequentially at different heights above his hometown of Bourg-St-Maurice. When a one Roger Godino and Blanc met in the early 60s, anything was possible for the area. With respect to the nature around it, and with the forethought of conservation-this in a time when no one pondered up global warming and the like-local materials and laborers used the mountain and nature as their guide in the construction of Les Arcs, France. The area accommodation and hotels reflect Blanc and Godino"s "natural world" motif. The succeeding villages-1800 and 2000-take second-stage as the newest linchpin to the villages is Les Arc 1950. Inrawest (North America resort developer) led the first push to build a mega-resort here not too many years back. Though not keeping exactly to Blanc and Godino"s concepts, the new area is as sensitive to design, being built open, letting nature, sky and natural light in. Accommodating All Skiers If you"re an expert skier, then you"ve got no worries finding plenty of still challenging runs in Les Arc. Once you leave your Les Arc hotel, you"ll be in resplendent awe at all the trails awaiting your fresh wax. Above Arc 2000, a lot of expert skiers go to Aiguilles Rouge peak, with black ratings aplenty to challenge your fate. Afterwards, head on over to Peisey Vallandry or Villaroger for some woodland runs. Even if you"re an intermediate skier, there"s no way you"ll stay nestled inside your Les Arc hotel to wait out the cold. Almost all the local accommodation is within minutes of some great runs, some steep prominences. If you want something a little on the mild side, Peisey Valladry has all sorts of wooded and machine groomed runs. You"ll even find some steeper runs fully groomed. If you want surprises, you can find them. If not, you"ll have no trouble finding plenty of groomed pistes awaiting your skis. Though as a beginner you"d like to stay out for the afternoon and rest in the hotel during the wee morning hours, you"ll want to beat the crowds to these groomed nursery slopes. You can find green and blue runs all the while staying warm in the sun. Some say Mont Blanc and Col de la Chal (above Arc 1600 and 2000 respectively) offer some surefooted easier runs. Before Les Arcs was built, there really wasn"t a challenging resort: nothing matching the accommodation, hotels or slopes of the Trois Vallees. However, Les Arcs joined up with La Plagne and Paradiski was born. Which is to say, there"s now 425 km of skiing trails and slopes in the unbroken Paradiski area: roughly 106 runs, some 54 lifts and just south of 200 km of descents. The whole Les Arcs skiing sphere is so thick with skiing that even knowledgeable skiers can take a whole day traversing from one end and back again throughout the five areas-Arc 1600, Arc 1800, Arc 1950, Arc 2000-with skiing generally achieved at over 1,200 meters; the highest crest is the Aiguille Rouge. The nice thing about such a vast ski area is the accessibility of all the gondolas and chair lifts. Plus, you can escape Les Arcs and explore the local wilderness, perhaps not seeing another person for the whole day, room for everybody. Now you know: Les Arcs is truly an accommodation in all aspects of the word.