Pescia is an Italian city in the province of Pistoia, Tuscany, central Italy.
It is located in a central zone between the cities Lucca and Florence, on the banks of the homonymous river.
Restaurants in Pescia
5.0 based on 11 reviews
4.5 based on 43 reviews
Hesperidarium is a unique, international garden with over 200 varieties of Citrus plants from all over the world. A real botanical garden where visitors can admire citrus plants from the 15th century but also rare exotic varieties as well as more recent ones originating from the southern hemisphere. An alternative and fascinating way to spend a few hours among the colours and perfumes of Citrus plants!
4.0 based on 274 reviews
4.0 based on 533 reviews
Those who reach the Villa Garzoni Garden without having seen any image before, are struck by the extraordinary glance that it offers as soon as you leave the building now used as a ticket office and look inside. In fact, the flat space, on which the garden could be developed, is limited, therefore the most typical geometric solutions of the Renaissance "Italian garden" can be deployed in a limited space as well. However this flat space is cleverly organized, by the round basins of two large fountains, in which the water sprays are a constitutive part of the architecture. But this isn't a Renaissance garden; it's a baroque one. Moreover, thanks to its very long building period, it denotes by its features an intellectual restlessness that can also make us speak of Enlightenment, or of pre-Romanticism. These more modern styles have driven the extension of the garden on the steep back hill: if the nymphaeum recalls the artificial cave by Bernardo Buontalenti at the Boboli Gardens in Florence (thus giving a taste of late Renaissance), the terraced slope or the hill modeled by the dense vegetation, which leads to the summit and draws the gaze towards it, allows us the comparison (though in miniature) with other more recent and more famous examples of gardens: the names, among others, of the Royal Palace in Caserta and of the Wilhelmshöhe in Kassel, were made. Indeed, among the architects who worked in the garden, or in the nearby villa, Ottaviano Diodati, translator in Italian of the Encyclopédie; or the renowned Filippo Juvarra, are mentioned. Last but not least, the scenographic effect of the garden is enhanced by the clear, almost fairy-like façade of the Villa; behind it the extraordinary, steep row of the Collodi hamlet's ancient houses, peeps in turn.
3.0 based on 1,958 reviews
We were in Tuscany for two weeks, and our boys (5 & 1&1/2) had visited a bunch of old towns with us so we thought we'd do something more child friendly. We loved it. The vintage fairground rides were a lot of fun, the statues were cool, their picnic area was great, with musical instruments and crafts for kids. The icing on the cake was their high-ropes type course with an aerial runway over the river for children aged 5+. It's not a theme park but it's a great day out!
1.0 based on 1 reviews
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