Centrale Montemartini
Centrale Montemartini houses one of Rome's most surreal art collections - classical Greek and Roman sculptures displayed inside a decommissioned 1912 power plant.
About Centrale Montemartini
Centrale Montemartini houses one of Rome's most surreal art collections - classical Greek and Roman sculptures displayed inside a decommissioned 1912 power plant. You'll find headless torsos positioned next to massive diesel engines, marble gods sharing space with industrial turbines, and ancient mosaics spread across factory floors. It's part of the Capitoline Museums system, showcasing overflow pieces that couldn't fit in the main locations.
Walking through feels like stumbling into a steampunk fever dream where antiquity meets the industrial age. The contrast is genuinely striking - a Venus de Milo-style statue silhouetted against towering machinery, or Roman portrait busts lined up beside control panels. The lighting is dramatic, often theatrical, making even familiar classical pieces feel fresh and mysterious. You'll spend most of your time just absorbing the visual weirdness of it all.
Entry costs €7.50, making it excellent value compared to Rome's pricier attractions. Most travel guides oversell the 'undiscovered' angle - it's quiet because it's genuinely off most tourists' radar, not because it's difficult to reach. The collection isn't comprehensive enough to replace visiting the main Capitoline Museums, but if you're feeling museum fatigue from traditional displays, this offers a genuinely different perspective on classical art.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.






