Via dei Condotti
Via dei Condotti connects the Spanish Steps to Via del Corso in a perfectly straight 400-meter line of Italy's most expensive real estate.
About Via dei Condotti
Via dei Condotti connects the Spanish Steps to Via del Corso in a perfectly straight 400-meter line of Italy's most expensive real estate. You'll walk past flagship stores for Gucci, Prada, Bulgari, Hermès, and Cartier, all housed in elegant 18th-century palazzos with original frescoed ceilings. The street feels like an outdoor luxury mall, but one where every building has been here for centuries. Historic Caffè Greco, founded in 1760, sits halfway down and serves espresso to tourists willing to pay €8 for the privilege.
The experience is pure window shopping unless you've got serious money to burn. Most stores have security guards who'll watch you carefully, and salespeople only warm up if you look wealthy. The cobblestones are original Roman travertine, polished smooth by millions of footsteps. You'll share the narrow sidewalks with well-dressed Romans, tourists clutching shopping bags, and street performers near both ends. The atmosphere shifts from touristy chaos at the Spanish Steps to more local energy as you approach Via del Corso.
Honestly, you can see everything in 15 minutes of walking, not the suggested 90. The prices are astronomical: Gucci handbags start around €1,200, Bulgari watches begin at €3,000. Skip the overpriced caffè and just admire the architecture. The real value is photographing the beautiful storefronts and soaking up old Roman elegance for free.
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