|
Borgo Marinaro
Borgo Marinaro is a small
port and adjacent buildings
(now
mostly restaurants and yachting clubs) built into the eastern niche
formed by
the Castel
dell’Ovo and the causeway that joins the castle to the mainland; it
is protected by a breakwater. Essentially, it is what is
left of the
historic seafront of Santa Lucia.
Borgo Marinaro came into
existence at the end of the 19th
century when large sections of the old seafront were torn down to make
way for
the new buildings of the risanamento,
the 30-year urban renewal of entire sections of Naples. Originally, as the name
implies
(“Sailors’ Quarter”) the new area was meant to house the fisherfolk
displaced
by the project. As it turned out, the project dragged on for so many
years that
most of the local population simply got tired of waiting and moved a
few blocks
inland into streets that run behind via Santa Lucia and up the
Pizzofalcone
hill. (Via Santa Lucia was originally
the seaside road but became an inside street, forever separated from
the sea by
an entire string of new hotels built on landfill and, themselves,
overlooking
the new seaside roads of via Partenope and via N. Sauro.) As a result,
Borgo
Marinaro was taken over by facilities of the more affluent, although
there are
still some fishermen who operate out of the port.
to main index
to urban portal
|