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Fiammetta
Draghetti and her boyfriend, Marco, of Rome, Italy, visited Venice,
Italy during its famous
Carnival season (February 8-11, 2002) and returned with
2. A personal assistant can help you if the chair lift doesn't work, and, I suggest, that an assistant could help you discover other marvelous places of this enchanting town where you will scarcely believe your eyes. The hotel where we slept is "Hotel Il Violino D'Oro" ***, which is really close to St. Marco Square, (Tel 0039 041 2770841, Fax 0039 041 2771001). Warning: There is a bridge without a chair lift from the hotel to St. Marco Square.
In this hotel there is a really nice disabled room with a well-adapted bathroom for disabled people and a view of a canal. In the double room, there is 1 meter free space around the bed and a television. There are no steps either inside the room or in the common areas of the hotel. A wheelchair 60*90 can go into the hotel lift. The hotel’s main entrance has steps, but the secondary has a ramp and only one step in the end. The hotel staff is ready to help you.
When we travel, we usually prefer to have only one
dedicated personal assistant, and in Venice we found a wonderful
personal assistant (really friendly and pleasant) named Giovanni. Without
him, our holiday would have been completely different! We are convinced
that in a peculiar town like Venice the presence of a personal assistant
is essential in order to enjoy a wonderful
holiday without any problem. If you call Mr Frank Bastianello
at 0039 041
782760 - Mobile 0039 3281561023, he can help you to find a local
personal assistant, like Giovanni. A good thing to know is that between the bridges
there are no architectural features that deny access to handicapped
people, and there are also two "vaporetto" (=water bus) lines
adapted for disabled people: N°1 and 82.
It was Carnival in Venice, and you could see every kind of "maschere" in the town! Germans dressed up as shepherds, and, in the night, spermatozoons in St. Marco Square! Everywhere music captures you! From the "Gondole", in the square, at the street corners …Vivaldi, Bach walk with you. Also in a wheelchair, you can go on a
Gondola without any problem. A Gondola tour in the "canali" costs
about 80/100 € and lasts 45/50 minutes. Before starting the tour, you
have to negotiate the cost, and I suggest that the best moment to do
that is in the evening, at sunset, when there are not many motorboats in the
"canali," and the water reflects the evening's lights. The
gondoliers are usually young, and they can help you to put your
wheelchair on the gondola. I have some restaurant information in the section
titled "references" in this article, but here I would like to
say that if you have a special occasion to celebrate, there is no better
place than "The Terrasse" at the
Hotel Danieli! They stop the
revolving door for wheelchair users, and the central shutters are
opened. Then you enter the sumptuous reality of the hotel hall, (at Carnival
time it is full of mascheras and decorations). An elevator
takes you up to the highest floor, where the Danieli
Restaurant offers a
unique and spectacular view of the
Laguna and St. Giorgio Island. References There is a special Venice Card that covers the
price of the battello and of public toilettes. There is also a type of
Venice Card that covers also the price of museums. All info is on the
web site: http://www.venicecard.it The map also shows the locations of accessible toilettes for disabled people. Warning: if you are on a battello in the evening
and fog is coming in, it may happen that the battello stops working! Hostaria ai Coristi, Tel 0039 041 5226677, near "Teatro La Fenice. Da Raffaele, Tel 0039 041 5232317, near the Hotel "Violino For
additional access information on Venice, visit these website:
Global Access Disabled Travel
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