Piazza della Santissima Annunziata
This perfectly proportioned Renaissance square showcases Brunelleschi's elegant arcade wrapping around three sides, creating Florence's most geometrically harmonious public space.
About Piazza della Santissima Annunziata
This perfectly proportioned Renaissance square showcases Brunelleschi's elegant arcade wrapping around three sides, creating Florence's most geometrically harmonious public space. You'll find Giambologna's bronze statue of Grand Duke Ferdinando I commanding the center, while the Ospedale degli Innocenti displays Andrea della Robbia's famous blue and white terra cotta roundels of swaddled babies. The square connects the Basilica della Santissima Annunziata with Europe's first purpose-built orphanage, now housing an excellent museum.
The space feels intimate compared to Piazza della Signoria, with locals cutting through on their way to work and mothers pushing strollers under the graceful arches. You can walk the entire perimeter in five minutes, studying the perfectly matched proportions that influenced Renaissance urban planning across Europe. The morning light hits the arcade beautifully, casting geometric shadows that shift throughout the day. Students from the nearby university often sit on the steps, giving the square a lived-in quality that tourist-heavy piazzas lack.
Most visitors snap photos and leave, missing the real treasure inside the Ospedale degli Innocenti. The Museo degli Innocenti costs €7 and takes 45 minutes, but it's worth it for della Robbia's ceramics and the fascinating history of Renaissance childcare. Skip the basilica unless you're seriously into Mannerist frescoes. The square works best as a peaceful pause between the crowds at the Duomo and Accademia, both a 10-minute walk away.
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