No Result
View All Result
Mobile
Subscription
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
Thursday, March 12, 2026
中文
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
Sky Eco News
No Result
View All Result

New Rome metro stations showcase ancient treasures after years of delays

New Rome metro stations showcase ancient treasures after years of delays

The Colossuem is seen through a window of the new metro line of the Colosseum metro station which promise to dazzle locals and tourists with museum-like displays of archaeological discoveries, in Rome, Italy December 16, 2025. REUTERS/Remo Casilli

After years of delays and spiralling costs, Rome inaugurated two new metro stations on Tuesday, including one by the Colosseum, showcasing archaeological discoveries that might become tourist attractions in their own right.

The driverless Metro C line now stretches from the Italian capital’s eastern suburbs to Porta Metronia and the Colosseum, extending its reach into the historic city centre.

Future plans will take it even deeper under Rome’s baroque heart, beneath the river Tiber and onto the Vatican, though the next stop at Piazza Venezia is not expected to open before 2032.

Excavations for the new stations revealed remarkable finds, which slowed work as archaeologists painstakingly preserved layers of ancient Rome they hadn’t known were there.

At Porta Metronia, drilling rigs uncovered a military barracks dating back 2,000 years, as well as a residential house, complete with frescoed rooms and mosaics, which are preserved in a museum within the station.

During the Colosseum excavations, workers discovered 28 ancient wells and hundreds of everyday artefacts, including hairpins, phallic-shaped oil lamps, irrigation pipes, knives, and statues, many of which are on show.

“These two stations will travel around the world,” Transport Minister Matteo Salvini said on Tuesday, predicting they would soon flood social media.

“Beyond serving commuters and Romans, anyone who comes here from Italy or from abroad will stop in these stations. They might take the metro even if they don’t need it, just to enjoy the ride,” he added.

LONG DELAYS, COST HIKES

Rome’s Metro C was meant to link the city’s two main Basilicas by the year 2000.  Instead, the line only reached the imposing San Giovanni Basilica in 2018, and the Vatican station near St. Peter’s Basilica won’t be ready for at least another decade.

The initial plan to build 24 stations to the Colosseum was priced at 2.23 billion euros ($2.63 billion), but costs have surged past 3 billion euros, and the entire line could exceed 6 billion by the time the final seven stations are completed.

Engineers say Rome is among the most challenging cities in the world for metro construction, due to buried archaeological sites that require safeguarding and concerns that vibrations could damage the heritage above ground.

At the next stop, at Piazza Venezia, a construction team is digging an 85-metre deep (280 feet) ring around the site which will be filled with reinforced concrete to protect the six underground floors of the station that are being dug out.

Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri said it was worth the effort.

“Without these major works, we would never have discovered the barracks at Porta Metronia, we would never have found these wells, and today we would have known far less about our extraordinary past,” he said.

Metro C is intended to carry 600,000 passengers a day, easing Rome’s notorious traffic and speeding tourists between major landmarks. At present it carries 41,000 daily, but the new openings should see numbers climb.

(Reporting by Crispian Balmer)

Post Related

Amid wave of kids’ online safety laws, age-checking tech comes of age

Amid wave of kids’ online safety laws, age-checking tech comes of age

For years, tech companies successfully resisted pressure from child safety advocates to do more to keep kids off their services,...

From 1776 to 2026: Adam Smith’s lessons for the global economy

From 1776 to 2026: Adam Smith’s lessons for the global economy

Tax the rich. Trash the tariffs. End monopolies. Such are the rallying calls of many of today's most heated economic...

‘Everyone cheered’: stranded Gulf travellers gamble on their route home

‘Everyone cheered’: stranded Gulf travellers gamble on their route home

Stranded passengers in the Gulf states are waiting for one thing: a phone call confirming their flight home will depart....

Dancing robots bring support, company to Barcelona elderly

Dancing robots bring support, company to Barcelona elderly

Barcelona resident Irene Veglison had not danced for more than two decades until a robot moved into her home three...

Almost 8,000 died on migration routes in 2025 but toll likely far higher, says UN agency

Almost 8,000 died on migration routes in 2025 but toll likely far higher, says UN agency

Almost 8,000 people died or went missing last year on perilous migration routes such as across the Mediterranean and Horn...

How did Ivory Coast and Ghana’s cocoa sales crisis come about?

How did Ivory Coast and Ghana’s cocoa sales crisis come about?

The producers of half the world's cocoa - Ivory Coast and Ghana - have struggled to sell beans and pay...

Top news

  • Trump administration asks Supreme Court to end Haitian protected status
  • US opens new unfair-trade probes to rebuild Trump’s tariff pressure
  • Chile’s Kast sworn in as president in biggest right-wing shift in decades
  • Haleon makes oral-health push in China as other Western brands falter
  • Sony fighting $2.7 billion UK lawsuit over PlayStation Store prices
SKY ECO NEWS

© 2024 SEMG.

About Us

  • Chinese Emassy, London
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Xinhua
  • People’s Daily
  • China Daily
  • GlobalTimes
  • The Times
  • BBC

Message

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper

© 2024 SEMG.