The graffitti painted by Croatian artist Daniel Zezelj outside the Casa delle Culture in via Orlandini.
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one photo (a day) from Trieste, Italy
The graffitti painted by Croatian artist Daniel Zezelj outside the Casa delle Culture in via Orlandini.
Brightly coloured blocks of flats in Ponziana district. On the left, you can just make out a graffitti on the white wall of the Via Orlandini Culture House. We'll be seeing it close up in the near future. In the background, between the light blue and orange buildings, is the San Giovanni Bosco church.
The Johann Joachim Winckelmann steps take you from Piazza del Sansovino up to San Giusto castle.
The former gas holder, a classic example of nineteenth century industrial architecture, which has long since been disembowelled of its enormous cistern, has been standing unused for many years now. One day maybe, it'll be turned into a planetarium, a congress centre, or a museum. We'll just have to wait and see.
The Basevi garden is located in the area of San Giacomo.
On the skyline, embraced by the heavy clouds you can just make out the fortress and church of Monrupino, a village of about 850 inhabitants, situated in the Province of Trieste located about 9 km north of the city, on the border with Slovenia.
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Following "University of Trieste" comes another example of Italian architecture during the fascist regime: the police station.
The "Arco di Riccardo" is an Augustan gate built in the Roman walls in 33 A.D. It stands in Piazzetta Barbacan, in the narrow lanes of the old town.
The "Torrioni di Monrupino" are calcareous tower-like formations 10 m (33 feet) high, consisting of a rock mainly composed of fragmented shells, especially bivalves, cemented with calcite. The towers are a particularly interesting natural phenomenon because they undergo less corrosion by rainwater and have remained isolated from surrounding calcareous surfaces, which are more easily soluble. In addition, this rocky outcrop is settled in a saddle, where washing away is more intense: insoluble residuals of carbonate rocks do not remain in their original place, causing a greater difference in height between the towers and the surrounding field. The result is an impressive natural monument.
The parish church of S.M.Maggiore - Saint Mary the Great - also known as the "church of the Jesuits", is one of the largest holy buildings and one of the most important monuments of the baroque period in Trieste.
The view from San Leonardo Hill
“Jazera” ( ice box)
"Wheel of the Thirteen Families"