The Neighbours
As you now are aware, we have settled in Aventino. We have made a “Google Maps” map that marks our abode and Ian’s office – (apologies that earlier versions of this post left you in limbo but) the reference is:
To enter our flat we negotiate three doors – one to the street, one shared with the next-door unit and our own door. We don’t have a terrace but we are very secure. From the door next to the street, about ten steps down our marble spiral staircase, we can see two churches within 200 metres and there are at least another three further up the hill. Our street rubbish bins are 50 metres up the street on our side – blue for bottles, glass and plastic, white for paper and green for general rubbish. We have never forgotten to put the bin out – it’s always out.
Turning left outside our door, we walk past the entrance to the nearby apartment building, veer left past the service station, dodging puddles of oil on the cobblestones and the traffic. The servo does not have any clear start or ending and just “merges” with Via di Santa Prisca. So on weekday mornings, as the rat-runners whiz up the street, and as others jockey for a place at the servo pumps, and as the mechanics and customers wheel and deal for the day’s repairs, we blissfully stroll around and on the roadway with an eye to the on-coming vehicles.
That obstacle behind us we are then on Viale Aventino, a broad avenue that runs from its intersection with Via di Santa Prisca to the Circo Massimo (and to my office). Probably six lanes wide, Viale Aventino is in three parts. A central corridor is a busway and tramway with raised platforms where the buses and trams stop. Only two bus routes run through this centre path along with taxis and limousines and ambulances and police cars. Oh! And some Romans in a hurry and prepared to break the rules. Other buses take the two lanes either side of this central “divider”, along with the bulk of other vehicles – mostly small cars and “motos”.
As a pedestrian, one has choices. Those with death wishes jaywalk. The careful and patient find the remnants of paint that used to mark zebra crossings and cross (basically jaywalk). Or there are some pedestrian lights, some automatic, some requiring a button push. The green, amber and red symbols (or sometimes the “avante” and “stop”) are interesting. When green goes to amber, the Roman gets to guess how long will elapse before the red. If misjudged, he or she finds themselves in front of the whining vespas. A lot of ineffectual horn tooting results, some uniquely Roman hand gestures and a fair amount of “Eh!”ing.
So we walk towards the city, past a small pizzeria, and alimentaire, and currently some delightful hedges of star jasmine in full perfume. Onwards are three bars (coffee and alcohol) with street-side tables, the supermercado, a ristorante, a pharmacy, two hairdressers, an antique restorer, a moto dealer, and a lot of other places that we are yet to really work out. Around the corner, with the UN flag fluttering to our right, we are on Via del Circo Massimo and we are walking along the valley between our Aventine hill and the Palantine hill, past the Metro station (Circo Massimo).
There a couple of very sweet (very expensive) hotels on the hill and a range of apartments, villas and convents running down to our home. The Aventine hill has an air of serenity to it, even at its base where we live. Although we tend to walk into the Centro historico, or old city, we are well supplied by buses and metros. We have been attending some great private dinners at colleagues’ apartments across Rome lately and find little difficulty in getting around, with only one cab needed.
A certain lack of clarity on our part led the driver to want to take his two “gringos” to the Hotel di Santa Prisca rather than to Via di Santa Prisca. A certain outrage on our part that we were being taken for anything other than residents, but a certain lack of enthusiasm (and Italino) to argue the point … it was a nice night so we got out and walked the last kilometre home. After all, it is a nice neighbourhood.
1 comment:
How sweet - you have a loving room?
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