Torre degli Asinelli (Asinelli Tower)
The Torre degli Asinelli is medieval Bologna's tallest survivor at 97.2 meters, leaning a dramatic 2.2 degrees from vertical.
About Torre degli Asinelli (Asinelli Tower)
The Torre degli Asinelli is medieval Bologna's tallest survivor at 97.2 meters, leaning a dramatic 2.2 degrees from vertical. Built by the wealthy Asinelli family between 1109 and 1119, it's one of only 24 remaining towers from Bologna's original forest of hundreds. You'll climb 498 wooden steps inside the narrow stone walls to reach what's genuinely one of Italy's best panoramic views: terracotta rooftops stretching to the hills, porticoes snaking along every street like ribbons, and on clear days, both the Alps and Apennines visible in opposite directions.
The climb is no joke, it's a proper workout in a claustrophobic medieval staircase that winds up with minimal lighting and no handrails on many sections. The final flights are nearly vertical ladders. Your legs will burn, you'll get sweaty, and the stone walls close in around you. But stepping onto the top platform is genuinely breathtaking, especially when you realize you're standing on a 900 year old structure that's been defying gravity and earthquakes for centuries. The shorter Garisenda tower beside it leans even more than Pisa's famous tower.
Most guides don't mention that 5 EUR is actually excellent value for this experience, unlike many Italian attractions that disappoint. Skip it in bad weather when it closes, and don't attempt it in summer heat unless you go early morning. The crowds thin out significantly after 4pm. Honestly, this beats climbing the Duomo in Florence, the view is better and the experience more authentic.
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