
Hotel Lungarno - Lungarno Collection
When you book Hotel Lungarno - Lungarno Collection in Florence, Italy through our Virtuoso partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability
- Daily Buffet breakfast for up to two guests per bedroom, served in the Hotel Restaurant
- $100 USD equivalent Food & Beverage credit to be utilized during stay (not combinable, not valid on room rate, no cash value if not redeemed in full)
- Early Check-In / Late Check-Out, subject to availability
Location
The Oltrarno district unfolds on the south bank of the Arno, where artisan workshops and neighbourhood trattorias outnumber tourist crowds even in high season. Palazzo Pitti anchors the quarter with its sprawling Boboli Gardens, while Santo Spirito's austere Brunelleschi facade presides over a piazza that becomes the neighbourhood's living room each evening. Via Maggio runs parallel to the river, lined with antique dealers and frame-makers whose trades have passed through generations. The district's narrow streets still echo with the tap of mallet on leather at family-run workshops, a working heritage that separates Oltrarno from the museum-dense centre across Ponte Vecchio.
Florence rose to prominence under the Medici in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and that legacy saturates every corner of the historic centre, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Florentine dialect became the foundation of modern Italian through the works of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. The Duomo's terracotta dome dominates the skyline from nearly every vantage point across the river. Florence Airport at Peretola sits six kilometres northwest with taxi connections to the city centre in twenty minutes, while Pisa International Airport offers an alternative seventy kilometres west.
Borgo San Jacopo occupies the hotel's ground floor, where chef Peter Brunel's one-Michelin-starred kitchen delivers modern and classic Italian cooking with views directly onto the Arno. The restaurant takes its name from its location in the heart of Oltrarno, steps from Ponte Vecchio's medieval span. Book a table at Enoteca Pinchiorri, housed in a seventeenth-century palazzo on Via Ghibellina less than a kilometre east, where three Michelin stars crown a temple of Italian contemporary cuisine with one of Europe's most revered wine cellars. Santa Elisabetta occupies the Byzantine Torre della Pagliazza, Florence's oldest circular tower, half a kilometre northeast in a quiet square away from the tourist current, its two-starred creative Mediterranean menu a study in restraint and precision.
Mercato del Porcellino spreads its leather goods and straw vendors three hundred metres north of the river, while the more authentic Mercato di Sant'Ambrogio operates 1.3 kilometres east, where locals shop for pecorino and lampredotto among iron-and-glass market stalls built in the 1870s. The Uffizi Gallery and Palazzo Vecchio command the historic centre across Ponte Vecchio, their collections spanning six centuries of Tuscan art. Piazzale Michelangelo offers the city's definitive panorama from its terrace above the southern hills, reached by a steep but manageable climb through the Bardini Gardens.
Summer arrives with force in July and August, when temperatures push past thirty degrees and the city's ochre walls radiate heat well into the evening. The Arno slows to a trickle, and locals abandon the centre for the coast or the cooler hills around Fiesole. Morning light before ten and late afternoon after six offer the most forgiving conditions for walking the cobbled streets.
Spring and autumn bracket the year with temperate days in the high teens and low twenties, ideal for exploring without the crush of August crowds. April brings sudden showers that clear as quickly as they arrive, leaving the city's stone facades darkened and glistening. October sees longer rains, but the soft light filtering through clouds makes the Renaissance facades even more dramatic. November through February turns cold but rarely harsh, with occasional frosts and grey skies that empty the museums.
Winter mornings can feel raw along the river, but the season reveals a quieter Florence where you might have the Brancacci Chapel frescoes nearly to yourself. December temperatures hover near nine degrees, and the city takes on an introspective quality, its cafes filled with Florentines rather than tour groups.
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