San Gimignano
Understand
Get in
By bus
Buses leave from Florence's bus station (next to the train station) hourly, and take 1.25 - 2 hr including a change in Poggibonsi, costing €6. From Siena take bus #130, which takes 1 hr and costs €5.20, operated by Tiemme SpA. Volterra has 4 buses to San Gimignano every day, that take 2 hours and change in Colle di Val d'Elsa. Sunday buses are fewer and more crowded.Buses leaving San Gimignano depart from Porta San Giovanni, with tickets sold at the bar just inside the gate or at the Tourist Info.
By car
You may also arrive by car. You can't drive inside the town walls, but there are several pay parking lots just outside the town walls, with free places further away. The handiest lot, Parcheggio Montemaggio, outside Porta San Giovanni, fills quickly, but they let 1 car in for every one that leaves, so you can wait (€2/hour). There is free parking on the side of the road going down from the turnabout.By train
The historical town of San Gimignano on the hill has no train station, but you can easily reach San Gimignano by taking a train to Poggibonsi (labelled "Poggibonsi-S.G.") and then a bus from the Poggibonsi train station to San Gimignano. These buses cost €3.60 (2007) each way, leave every 30-40 minutes, and you can inquire for information, schedules, and tickets at the tourist information office which is located ahead toward the right as you walk out of the train station. As of November 2018, there is construction: buses leave from the main road and do not stop at the station.If you are going from Florence (Firenze) to Poggibonsi, direct trains are not so frequent but you will find many connections to Poggibonsi via Empoli.
Get around
On foot
San Gimignano is very small (you can walk from the gate to the other side of town in 20 minutes), and you must disembark from your car or bus outside the city walls, in any case.By shuttle bus
An electric shuttle bus goes all day from Porta San Giovanni to Piazza della Cisterna to Porta San Matteo. The fare is €1, 2 per hour, and you can buy a ticket at Tourist Info or the Tabacchi shop.See
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phone: +39 327 439 5165address: Via Berignano n. 17The visit to the museum is an ideal opportunity to learn about the architectural, social, and historical aspects of the Middle Ages in Tuscany. The museum has a massive reconstruction of the city of San Gimignano dated between the 13th and 14th century. Audioguides available.
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Collegiata di Santa Maria Assunta
address: Piazza Duomo, 2The nearest to a duomo (cathedral) in this small city. Beautiful and contains a splendid series of frescoes on Old and New Testament subjects. Museo Civico and Torre GrossaThe Museo Civico (civic painting gallery/museum) in the Palazzo Pubblico is small but has beautiful art inside. Includes Torre Grossa, which is the tallest tower in the city at 60 m (200 feet). You can climb the tower and get a good view of the city.
Porta San GiovanniA gate at the southern end of the town's 13th-century walls.
Sant'AgostinoThe church of Sant'Agostino in the northeastern part of the city contains a set of great frescoes on the life of St. Augustine by Benozzo Gozzoli and friendly, English-speaking friars to tell you about the church.
Rocca di MontestaffoliLiterally, a big rock, but a ruined fortress in actuality. A panorama of the Tuscan countryside can be seen from it.
Do
- Thursday is market day in Piazza del Duomo
- Tourist Information is also in the Piazza del Duomo, which is open March to October 09:00-13:00 & 15:00-19:00, November to February 09:00-13:00 & 14:00-18:00. They offer free maps, a room-booking service, bus tickets, a free bag check, & €5, 2-hour audioguides for exteriors only. This is also where a walking tour starts from at 15:00 daily except Sunday, in English & Italian, March-October, for €15
- If you want to escape the crowds of tourists, there is a footpath that runs around the outside of town that is peaceful and affords some nice views of the countryside. It doesn't seem to go all the way around town, but it's long enough to work up a good thirst. Look for the signs with an icon of a hiker.
Buy
You will notice shops where free wine tastings are offered. If you consider the wines a good value, buy some bottles. You may find the wine expensive.
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phone: +39 3497743726address: Via San Matteo, 74 / Via San Martino, 32Two small studios full of the works of two brothers that use wood, watercolor and oil painting to tell the stories and carry on the ancient tradition of their region, Tuscany.
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phone: +39 0577 940207address: Via San Giovanni 56Contemporary art gallery featuring only art works of 24 Italian sculptors.
Eat
The main piazzas are crowded, but there are small alleys which have much cheaper restaurants.
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Trattoria Chiribiri
phone: +39 0577-941-948address: Piazza della MadonnaCheap, homemade pastas and desserts. -
La Mangiatoia
phone: +39 0577-941528Wild game served by candlelight. Outdoor seating, near Porta San Matteo at Via Mainardi. -
La Grotta Ghiotta
phone: +39 0577-942-074Soup and sandwiches for there or to go, open daily 12:00 to 22:00, on Via Santo Stefano. -
Locanda di Sant'Agostino
phone: +39 0577-943141On a square at Sant'Agostino Church. Cheap & cheery for lunch & dinner daily (closed January), usually filled with locals and away from all the daytrippers. - Co-op Supermarket is great for picnic food, open Monday to Saturday 08:30 to 20:00, closed Sunday, at parking lot below Porto San Giovanni
Sleep
Casa di GiovannaLocated on the main street, 100 metres from the main gate of the town.
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phone: +39 0577-942-014address: via San Matteo 8718 rooms, historical residence within the city walls. Wi-fi, air conditioning, garage on-demand, sky-TV, elevator.
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Hotel la Cisterna
phone: +39 0577-940-328address: Piazza della CisternaWith 49 rooms, some with panoramic views from the terraces. Buffet breakfast, elevator, restaurant with great view, discounts off season, closed January & February. - In-town Rossi Apartments Owned by same family as Ponte a Nappo, in town center. Double w/bathroom €55, fancier double w/bathroom overlooking town square €85. Same contact info as Ponte a Nappo farm
- Locanda il Pino Clean, quiet, & small with only 5 rooms, is run by a family over their restaurant inside Porta San Matteo. Double w/bathroom €55, no breakfast, parking right by gate on via Cellolese, far from bus stop, but fine if you have a car. Telephone: 0577-940-415
- Palazzo al Torrione Inside Porta San Giovanni, is quiet & handy, with 10 rooms but no full-time reception. Double w/bathroom €70-110, breakfast €5-€10, family suites, cheap parking, at Via Berignano. Telephone: 0577-940-480 or Mobile: 338-938-1656
- Ponte a Nappo Run by Carla Rossi, who doesn't speak English, but her son does, has comfortable rooms in a farm outside town. Double w/bathroom €70, apartments for 2-6 people €90-180, breakfast €8. Air-conditioning, parking, 15-minute walk or 5-minute drive from Porto San Giovanni, on Via Vecchia. Telephone: 0577-955-041 or Mobile: 349-882-1565
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phone: +39 0577 940701address: Via Matteotti 15On a hill just below the city walls. Set in private grounds with garden and swimming pool.
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Le Terre Rosse Hotel San Gimignano
phone: +39 057790704Hotel with 55 rooms and 4 apartments surrounded by a large park with pool. Wi-fi, air conditioning, sky-TV, safe. -
Villasanpaolo Spa Hotel San Gimignano
phone: +39 057790704address: Strada provinciale per CertaldoResort spa hotel overlooking San Gimignano with inner spa and pool. -
phone: +39 0577 941294address: Piazza Cisterna 53037, San Gimignano (Siena)3-star hotel in the main square of San Gimignano city center. The hotel offers rooms with panoramic view over the Chianti Hills and a panoramic terrace where the free breakfast is served everyday. It also features a relaxing jacuzzi on the terrace.
Go next
- Florence, the city of the Brunelleschi Dome of the Duomo, the Ghiberti Doors of the Baptistery, the Palazzo Vecchio, the Uffizi, the Bargello, the Ponte Vecchio and so many other things to see and do
- Siena, a larger walled hill city than San Gimignano though much smaller than Florence, is the city of the Palio and the Piazza del Campo, with its own spectacular Duomo and Baptistery and unique style of art
- Volterra, another of the ancient Etruscan cities, with Etruscan, ancient Roman and Medieval sights
- Monteriggioni, the small walled hill town that was Siena's diehard Medieval ally in the wars with Florence