Product Details
Waterproof Venice Map by Rough Guide Maps (Rough Guide Country/Region Map)

Waterproof Venice Map by Rough Guide Maps (Rough Guide Country/Region Map)
By Rough Guides Maps

Price: $8.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

32 new or used available from $3.63

Average customer review:

Product Description

Folded waterproof street and travel map in color. Scale 1:4,500. Legend includes main sights, shopping streets, pedestrian access only, churches, synagogues, police stations, lavatory, hospitals, Vaporetto stops, Vaporetto routes, railway station, taxi ranks, parking, bike hire, airport, Allaguna stops, highly recommended sights, hotels, restaurants, bars/cafes, entertainment/nightlife venues, waterbus routes. Includes inset map of Murano, Burano, Around the Lagoon, Torcello, Lido and Waterbus Routes. Contains time map (useful opening hours), street, hotel and sights index and recommendations for restaurants, cafe/bars and shopping.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #166147 in Books
  • Brand: Rough Guide Maps
  • Published on: 2007-07-16
  • Format: Folded Map
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Map
  • 2 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Rough Guides maps are cut from the same cloth as the Rough Guides themselves. Relevant, accurate, and easy-to-read, these rip-proof, waterproof maps are practically indestructible.


Customer Reviews

Best Venice Map5
I'm just back from three weeks in Venice. Because I'm obsessive, I ended up taking along four maps: Street Smart, Lonely Planet, National Geographic, and the Rough Guide map. I thought I'd share my experiences.

Many people who go to Venice stick to the main walkways between the most important tourist spots: the Accademia, the Rialto Bridge, and San Marco square. I am not that sort of person. I walked all over the city: along the waterfronts of Dorsoduro and Cannaregio, through the parks of Castello and Sant'Elena, and to all the churches I could find. I also found that taking non-standard routes between well-known places avoided the street merchants and pedestrian crush. You can see what I was putting my maps through.

The Rough Guide map was the most useful map I took to Venice. It's printed on waterproof plastic, which is useful in the drizzle. I'm rough on things: it never tore. It was easy enough to fold the map in such a way that it was convenient to carry and still showed the area I was walking through. Most importantly, time and again when using one of the other maps I'd find myself in some twistly little spot where the map and reality were not in sync: a missing bridge, roads not shaped this way, etc. Each time, I'd turn to the Rough Guide and find that it was correct where the others weren't.

The Rough Guide map is larger than the other maps, which makes it harder to use if you want a "big-picture" view of the city while walking. On the other hand, the Rough Guide map is larger than the other maps, which means you can read it without a spotlight and a magnifying glass ;). Its size is part of its utility: because it's easy enough to fold, its size was no problem.

If you are going to be hunting down specific addresses or leaving the beaten path, I believe the Rough Guide is a must-have. If you can afford two maps, take the National Geographic map for strategy and the Rough Guide for tactics, and you'll be delighted.

I love Rough Guide maps and the Venice map is no exception5
I spent six days in Venice in April of 2006. After using the
excellent Rough Guide map of Barcelona, I purchase Rough Guide
maps when ever they are published for my destination. What I love
about these maps is that they are complete, accurate and very
tough. You can carry them around in your pocket, bend them and
sweat on them and they still remain as usable as ever.

You cannot get lost in Venice in the sense that you don't know
how to get back to somewhere familiar because there is always
a waterbus stop nearby that you can take to some place you know.
But the twisty pedestrian streets can be very confusing, ending
in canals, so it can be difficult to get from place to place
or to find a place you want to go to. For this you want the
Rough Guide map. I walked all over Venice, including some off
the beaten track areas where I saw very few tourists.

In summary: for Venice my advice is get a wasterbus pass for the
days you are in Venice and get the Rough Guide map. Oh, and
unless you like crowds and higher costs, don't stay in San Marco.

Excellent Map5
I went to Venice for the first time in May 2007 and found this map indispensable. It was better than many other maps I had researched and better than maps that I saw for sale in Venice! Would definitely recommend to anyone going to Venice, particularly if it is your first visit to this beautiful yet very easy to get lost in city.