Nino

Tridente, Trevi & the Quirinale


With a look that has endured since this restaurant opened in 1934 (wrought-iron chandeliers, polished dark wood and white tablecloths), Nino is enduringly popular with well-heeled locals. Waiters can be brusque if you’re not on the A-list, but the food is quality Tuscan fare, including memorable bean soup and steaks.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Tridente, Trevi & the Quirinale attractions

1. Keats-Shelley House

0.04 MILES

This house next to the Spanish Steps is where English poet John Keats died of tuberculosis aged only 25. Its bookshelf-lined rooms, practically unchanged…

2. Fontana della Barcaccia

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This 1627 fountain of a sinking boat is believed to be by Pietro Bernini, father of the more famous Gian Lorenzo Bernini. It was supposedly modelled on a…

4. Via dei Condotti

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High-rolling shoppers and window-dreamers take note: this is Rome’s smartest shopping strip. At the eastern end, near Piazza di Spagna, Caffè Greco was a…

5. Chiesa della Trinità dei Monti

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Sitting in majesty above the Spanish Steps, this landmark church was commissioned by King Louis XII of France and consecrated in 1585. Apart from the…

6. Galleria d'Arte Moderna

0.21 MILES

This gallery housed in an 18th-century Carmelite convent has a collection of art and sculpture from the 20th century that includes works by Italian…

7. Villa Medici

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Built for Cardinal Ricci da Montepulciano in 1540, this sumptuous Renaissance palace was purchased by Ferdinando de' Medici in 1576 and remained in Medici…

8. Gagosian Gallery

0.22 MILES

The Rome branch of Larry Gagosian’s contemporary art empire has hosted the big names of contemporary art since it opened in 2007: Cy Twombly, Damien Hirst…