
Hotels near Bridge of Sighs
Piazza San Marco, Venice, Metropolitan City of Venice, Italy
The Bridge of Sighs (Ponte dei Sospiri) is a 17th-century enclosed limestone bridge that spans the Rio di Palazzo, connecting the interrogation rooms of the Doge's Palace to the New Prisons. Designed by Antonio Contino around 1600, it earned its romantic name from Lord Byron, who imagined convicts catching their last glimpse of the lagoon through its small windows on the way to the cells. In reality most prisoners by that date were petty offenders - the Republic had largely abandoned hard sentencing.
Two ways to experience it. From the outside, walk to the Ponte della Paglia just behind Piazza San Marco for the classic postcard view of the white facade arcing over the canal between two stone walls. From the inside, the Doge's Palace standard ticket lets you cross it from the magistrates' offices to the prison cells - a 30-second walk in worn limestone with two latticed windows looking out over the same view convicts saw four centuries ago.
Pro Tip: For the best outside photo, stand on Ponte della Paglia just after sunrise when the canal is empty of gondolas and the early light hits the bridge's white Istrian stone full-on.
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