Rome is set to partly reopen Piazza Augusto Imperatore, the public square around the ancient Mausoleum of Augustus, by the end of this year, the city's mayor said on Tuesday. The tomb of Rome's first emperor and its surrounding piazza have been at the centre of parallel restoration and redevelopment works, overseen by the city's archaeological superintendency, in a project that dates back almost 20 years. Under the plans drawn up by the architect Francesco Cellini, the winner of an international design competition in 2006, the city is at work to reorganise the public space around the circular monument.
Cellini's plan involves integrating the mausoleum into an urban context by making the surrounding spaces fully usable and resolving the disparity in height between the ancient landmark and the square, originally designed by Vittorio Morpurgo in the 1930s. The city says that the first batch of works, in the southern part of the piazza, are set to conclude by the end of December with the opening of new travertine steps allowing the public "to cross the square and reach the mausoleum level". È a buon punto il primo lotto dei lavori in #PiazzaAugustoImperatore : interventi conclusi entro l'anno.
Stamattina sopralluogo del Sindaco al cantiere archeologico, il più grande mai aperto a #Roma . https://t.co/ETtZHk4Yio #RomaSiTrasforma #Giubileo2025 @Sovrintendenza pic.
twitter.com/faPnmbGNQw — Roma (@Roma) July 2, 2024 “We are giving back to the city and the whole world a hidden .
