The sign outside this shop says “Idee per la casa” and means ideas for the house. This winter the Tuscan sun is not so warm, but we are not going to live in igloos for a while yet...
This is a monument to Leopold II, Grand Duke of Tuscany, by the Livornese sculptor Paolo Emilio Demi (1798-1863). The statue was damaged in the riots of 1849, kept in storage for about a century and then placed in “Piazza XX Settembre” in the years after the Second World War. Today it is sadly seen among the decrepit stalls of the “Mercatino Americano” (American Market), soon to be trasferred inside the area of the port.
I took this photo few days ago from a bridge on the “Fosso Reale”, I liked the shot, but it has been somewhat left behind. It was just before the holidays and everything was eerily calm in a not so quiet part of a not so quiet city. I liked that moment though it lasted only until the next scooter speeding down the street.
A platoon of climbing Santas is storming this apartment in the city center. They are terribly late... If you click and enlarge the photo you can count up to 19 Santas of different sizes, but probably more are hiding behind the parapet!
A trio of fancy portable toilets in “Via San Giovanni”. We can see the “Clock Tower of Westminster” for London on the left and the “Mona Lisa” for Paris on the right, with the middle toilet still showing the unmistakable remains of a “Leaning Tower of Pisa”. One could wonder at the wisdom of putting any Pisan iconography on a toilet in Livorno, due to the long-standing rivalry between the cities.
“Piazza Cavallotti” is our main open air market for fruits and vegetables, where vendors holler here and there offering their produce for the best price in town. Here, in a building now replaced by more recent one, the composer Pietro Mascagni was born in 1863.
This is not a photo of mine: it is taken from Google Maps just to show you that what I am saying in the title is true.
The “Pentagono del Buontalenti” (Pentagon of the Buontalenti) is delimited by the “Fosso Reale” (Royal Canal) as a former defensive structure by the architect and military engineer Bernardo Buontalenti (1536-1608).As you can see from my first post I live close the Central Market, which is at the half of the southeastern side of the Pentagon. In the middle of this picture you can see a white squared building: that is where I work.
So, I live and work inside the Pentagon...
This bookstore has opened about a week ago: it's huge, central and open till midnight. It has a bar, but not so many books: anyway a nice thing to have a block from home!
This is my first post, so the image must be significant: this is the “Mercato Centrale” (Central Market) on the “Scali Saffi”. “Scali” means something like “landings” and it is a kind of street quite common in Livorno because a local canal called “fosso” (in origin a moat) runs along one of the sides. You can see several leisure boats moored alongside the wall of the “fosso” and also the arched entrance at sea level where provisions were delivered by barges. What is so peculiar about this photo? The simple answer is that I live nearby.