At Ramada Encore we know how important your family's wellbeing is. At any time. This is why we have set up a service expressly dedicated to families, including connecting rooms, children’s menus and special initiatives dedicated to families at weekends.
Strategically located close to:
And after a long day exploring the streets of Bologna:
Triple room has a double bed plus a sofa bed.
The connecting room consists of one room with twin beds and and one room with king size bed and, on request, a sofà bed. The two rooms have connecting doors and one bathroom on each room
In July and August you will find:
Small animals are welcome at Ramada Encore hotel
Ramada Encore offers some special packages and initiatives for a relaxing, entertaining weekend. Find out what 's on in Bologna:
Overnight stay, breakfast and guided tour of Bologna’s historical centre. Tours are held every Saturday at 3.30 pm and every Sunday at 10.30 am starting from Bologna Incoming Office situated inside the Emporio della Cultura in Piazza Maggiore Square 1/e. The guided tours are provided by professional chartered Tour Leaders, are held in Italian and in English, are on foot and last approximately 2 hours. The following points of interest are included in the itinerary:
Piazza Maggiore Square - Fountain of Neptune - Palazzo Re Enzo - Palazzo d'Accursio - Saint Petronius Basilica - Archiginnasio - Saint Stephen's Church - Palazzo della Mercanzia - Two Towers.
Visit the town of Bologna aboard modern double-decker buses. This service is available every day with qualified staff on board and an audio guide in 8 languages. Stop&Go tickets are valid for one day and can be purchased on the bus. Departure from the terminal in Viale Pietramellara 63/A opposite the Central Railway Station of Bologna. For all information call +39 051 6335093.
Discovering of the water routes of Bologna. A “speleologic adventure” along the underground course of Aposa stream and a rafting route along the Moline channel in the very historical centre of the town. Every Sunday Price per person: Euro 12
Entrances: Via Santa Chiara, Porta Castiglione
Hours: april-september: 6-24, october-march: 7-18
Bologna’s main park. Thanks to its tree-lined walkways, oak groves, and small lake, it has hosted more than a century of Bolognese residents going on their customary strolls.
Piazza VIII Agosto Entrances: Via Irnerio, Via Indipendenza
Hours: april-september: 7-24, october-march: 7-19
Bologna’s oldest park, situated in the neighborhood of San Vitale. It has been open to the public since 1662, but the monumental entrance staircase dates back to the 1800’s
Via Saragozza, 228/230
Hours: tue-sun: 15.00-19.00
A green area on the heights of Monte Franco, near Colle della Guardia. Within the park one finds the Villa delle Rose, a 18th century summer residence
Via Cavaioni
Entrances: Via di Casaglia, Via S. Mamolo, Via dei Colli
Hours: april-september: 6-24, october-march: 7-18
One of the most extensive hillside parks in Bologna, with wooded areas, lawns, and cultivated land, plus a small lake and many animals.
Via Irnerio, 42
Hours: sun-fri: 8-15; sat: 8-12
Here one finds various types of plants, from medicinal plants to exotic species. Of particular interest is the forest’s ecosystem and the greenhouse of tropical plants.
Via San Luca, 36
Hours: 7-12.30; 14.30-17 (nov-feb), 14.30-18 (mar,oct), 14.30-19 (apr-sep);
weekends and holidays: continued schedule
This sanctuary on Monte della Guardia is a time-honored place of worship in which one may view a painting of the Madonna which is thought to have been created by Luke the Evangelist. Furthertmore, walk beneath the porticos which takes you from Via Saragozza to the sanctuary is breathtakingly beautiful.
Piazza Maggiore
Hours: winter: 7.30-13.00, 14.30-18.00 - summer: 7.30-13.30, 14.30-18.30
It is the fifth largest church in the world, but because it’s a symbol of municipal power, St. Petronius isn’t the “Duomo” (primary cathedral) of the city. The main door displays bas reliefs by Jacopo della Quercia, inside one finds the solar clock devised by Cassini in 1665.
Piazza S. Stefano
Phone: 051 223256
Hours: 9-13; 15.30-17.30
Known also as “The Seven Churches,” it is the sancta sanctorum (holy of holies) of Bologna and unites separate buildings dedicated to the Passion of Christ. The nucleus of the church was originally built in the 8th century on top of a pagan temple dedicated to Isis. It is here that the relics of St. Petronius are kept.
Via Dell'Indipendenza, 7
Phone:051 222112
Hours: 7.00-12.30, 15.30-19.30
Seat of the archbishop and spiritual center of Bologna, the church was erected around 1000 AD, but the current façade dates to a 1605 renovation. The bell tower (campanile) dates to 1184.
Piazza S. Domenico, 13
Phone: 051 237017
Hours: mon-fri: 7.30-13, 15.30-20; sat:7.30-13 15.30-19.30; weekends and holidays:8-13,15.30-19.30
Dating back to 1221, the church dedicated to Saint Domenic, along with its attached convent, constitutes one of the most important complexes of the city. The arch of San Domenico, in which are conserved the relics of the saint, was designed by Nicola Pisano.
Piazza San Francesco
Phone: 051 221762; 051 263495
Hours: 6.30-12, 15-19
Constructed in the 13th century, it is the first example of French Gothic architecture in Italy, with spectacular rampant arches in the areas around the apses and bell towers from the 13th and 15th centuries. It houses a splendid marble pala dating to the 15th century.
Piazza Rossini
Phone: 051 225970
Hours: 6.30-12, 15-18
Erected in 1267 due to the influence of the Augustinian brethren, the church contains the Bentivoglio chapel in which are preserved the tombs of the noble Bentivoglio family of Bologna and which boasts an exquisitely elegant Renaissance portico.
Via Clavature, 10
Phone: 051 236245, 051 224002
Hours: winter: mon-sat:7.30-18; weekend and holidays: 16-18; summer: 8-12.30, 16.30-18.30; weekend and holidays: 16.30-18
This is the church of Bologna’s first hospital, founded in 1260. It hosts a group of di terracotta delle Marie Piangenti, created in 1463 by Niccolò dell’Arca.
Via S. Vitale, 48
Phone: 051 220570
Hours: mon-fri: 8.30-13.45; sat: 8.30-12.45
Dedicated to the early martyrs Vitalis and Agricola, the church dates back to the 1000’s and has kept its original aspect almost entirely intact. The Chapel of Santa Maria degli Angeli (Saint Mary of Angels) was added in 1400.
Strada Maggiore, 43
Phone: 051 226807
Constructed between the 14th and 16th centuries, this Gothic church contains a splendid quadriportico in which there numerous important works of art, including the Madonna with Child by the artist Cimabue.
Piazza di Porta Ravegnana
Hours: 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. (winter); 9 a.m.-5 p.m. (summer)
Symbol of “turreted” Bologna, the tower was erected by the Asinelli family in the 7th century. At a height of 97.2 meters (318.9 feet), it offers a spectacular view of the city and hills extending to the Adriatic Sea.
Interior closed to the public
Peculiar because of its marked lean, the tower originally measured 60 meters (197 feet) tall; in 1351 it was lowered to its current 48 meters (157.5 feet) due to fears that its slope, already pronounced at the time, would cause it to topple.
Piazza Galvani, 10
Hours: mon-fri: 8.30 a.m-01.45 p.m.; sat: 8.30 a.m.-12.45 a.m.
The Archiginnasio, erected in the 16th century to be the seat of the University, has been home to the Civic Library since 1838. Along the walls and ceilings, there are more than six thousand frescoes and engravings of coats-of-arms belonging to rectors, students, popes, and cardinals.
Via Collegio di Spagna, 4
Phone: 051 330408
Founded by the Archbishop of Toledo in 1365, the structure was intended to host Spanish students in Bologna. Inside one finds the Gothic church of Saint Clement and a cloister with a two-story loggia
Piazza Nettuno
Hours: mon 02.30 p.m.-09.30 p.m.; tue-fri 9 a.m.-09.30 p.m.; sat 9 a.m.-07 p.m.
This building is the seat of a vast multimedia library located inside the Palazzo d’Accursio. Through the glass floor one can admire the remains of a Villanovian (protohistorical) settlements from the seventh century BC, Etrustcan Felsina and ancient Bononia.
Piazza Maggiore, 6
phone: 051 203111 / 203040
The nucleus of Bologna in the 1200’s, identified by the Accursio tower, was extended to become a fortress. Today, it has become a cultural center open to citizens and houses the Morandi Museum and the Municipal Collections of Art.
Via Pignattari, 1
Hours: mon, wed, fri 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; tue, thu 3 p.m.- 6 p.m.
The headquarters of old of the Society of Notaries, it is composed of two buildings: the older part facing Saint Petronius dates from 1287, while the part on the right was constructed in 1442.
Via Castiglione, 7
Hours: fri 3 p.m.-7 p.m.; sat-sun 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
Erected one in front of the other, the first is a testimony to the Gothic and military-like architecture in use during the first half of the 14th century; the second illustrates the decorative elegance of the 17th century, thanks to its ample and richly frescoed salons.
Via Zamboni, 33
Hours: mon-sat 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Erected in 1549, this building has been the headquarters of the University of Bologna since 1802. The frescoed halls are remarkable examples of private 18th century architecture, while the Carducci Lecture Hall commemorates the hall in which the poet Giosuè Carducci held his lectures for 43 years.
Piazza Malpighi, 9
Symbols of the degree of importance that Bologna has always placed on culture, the marble arches covered in Majolica terracotta are dedicated to the first teachers of Bologna’s athenaeum and date back to the end of the 1200’s.
Piazza Maggiore