The City
Historic Milan lies at the centre of a web of streets, within
the inner Cerchia dei Navigli , which follows the route of
the medieval city walls. Piazza del Duomo is the city
centre's main orientation point: most of the city's major sights
lie within this area, as well as the swankiest designer shops and
most elegant cafés. Visits to art galleries and museums ,
the Duomo and other churches can be punctuated with designer
window-shopping in the so-called Quadrilatero d'Oro, or sipping
overpriced drinks among the designer-dressed clientele of the
pavement cafés of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele or around
the Pinacoteca di Brera art gallery. The second
cerchia , the Viali , skirts behind the centre's two
large parks - the Parco Sempione and Giardini
Pubblici - to the canal sides of the Navigli in the
south, following the tracks of defensive walls built during the
Spanish occupation. Within lie the Castello Sforzesco and
the church of Santa Maria delle Grazie , which houses
Milan's most famous painting, Leonardo's The Last Supper .
What follows is a wedge-by-wedge account of the city: Milan is not
an easily wanderable city, so make a judicious selection, walking a
little but where necessary hopping between places by way of the
metro or other public transport.
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