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Rome' Colosseum opens its underground passages to tourists after two and a half years of restoration work
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  • Rome' Colosseum opens its underground passages to tourists after two and a half years of restoration work

Rome' Colosseum opens its underground passages to tourists after two and a half years of restoration work

The Associated Press • June 26, 2021, 11:57:32 IST
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Colosseum director Alfonsina Russo said tourists will be able to stroll down a walkway 160 meters (530 feet) long to view some of what were originally 15 corridors that circled the underground levels.

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Rome' Colosseum opens its underground passages to tourists after two and a half years of restoration work

Rome: After 2 1/2 years of work to shore up the Colosseum’s underground passages, tourists will be able to go down and wander through part of what what had been the ancient arena’s ‘backstage.’

Italy’s culture minister on 25 June formally announced the completion of work to shore-up and restore the underground section in the presence of the founder of Tod’s, the shoe and luxury goods maker, who has footed the bill.

During the centuries when spectators filled the Colosseum to watch spectacles replete with gladiators and wild animals, the public was forbidden from venturing below stage level. The ban lasted from 80 AD when the amphitheater was inaugurated, until the last show in 523.

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Dozens of mobile platforms and wooden elevators were employed in ancient times to haul up to stage level vivid scenery as well performers and animals for dramatic entrances.

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[caption id=“attachment_9754681” align=“alignnone” width=“640”] ![A view of the newly restored lower level of the Colosseum. Image via The Associated Press/ Andrew Medichini](https://images.firstpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Colosseum_640.jpg) A view of the newly restored lower level of the Colosseum. Image via The Associated Press/ Andrew Medichini[/caption]

Colosseum director Alfonsina Russo said tourists will be able to stroll down a walkway 160 meters (530 feet) long to view some of what were originally 15 corridors that circled the underground levels.

Restoration work by teams of engineers, surveyors, construction workers, architects ad archaeologists was interrupted during part of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Tod’s founder Diego Della Valle responded several years ago to an Italian government call for private sector funding for restoration projects in light of the country’s inability to come up with the cash to care for its immense art and archaeological treasures.

Della Valle also paid for a multi-million-euro (dollar) cleaning of the Colosseum, a monumental project which removed decades of soot and grime which made the arena look dull and dreary.

Last month, Culture Minister Dario Franceschini detailed a project to build a lightweight stage inside the area so visitors can admire the ancient monument from a central viewpoint. The stage will be retractable.

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The original arena had a stage, but it was removed in the 1800s for archaeological exploration of the underground level. The new stage will also allow for holding cultural events that the minister said would be respectful of the Colosseum as a symbol of Italy.

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