Terranobile Metaresort

Terranobile Metaresort

Hotel Class: 4 out of 5 stars4 Stars - 5 Opinions

Via Bitritto, 101, Bari, 70124, Italy

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80%

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4.0 our of 5 stars 5 Opinions

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Photos

The Petruzzelli TheatreThe Petruzzelli Theatre

St-Nicolai churchSt-Nicolai church

The San Vito piers,near Polignano a MareThe San Vito piers,near Polignano a Mare

The conical roofsThe conical roofs

Forum Posts

bari national holidays

by evi1980

Hi to everybody! I am planning holidays at bari on 6th January. Please help, 6th of January is a national holiday, so shops are closed;if so, they open at 7th January and then begin winter sales;


Τhank you

Re: bari national holidays

by Ina08

Hi evi... what exactly is your question?

6th is a national holiday that is correct and shops are closed and on the 7th it is likely that the sales begin (each region has slightly different dates).

Re: bari national holidays

by evi1980

ina thank you. I have planned my holidays in Bari for shopping, that 's why i am asking. So, it ;s not the appropriate period.....Is it likely for some shops not to open at 7th January because of the previous public holiday;

Re: bari national holidays

by Ina08

Shops will be open on the 7th as it is a Friday and business will run as usual.

Re: bari national holidays

by evi1980

ina thanks a lot, you were really helpful

Re: bari national holidays

by Ronaldinho86

Unfortunetely I've read your question too late...however shops were open 6th and 7th,in fact sales began on 6th.

Travel Tips for Bari

Second Pearl Harbor

by karenincalifornia

Here's a fact I didn't know until I visited Bari, Italy. Bari was actually occupied by British and American forces during World War II. Bari was used as a strategic port by the Allies for supplies used to conduct raids in other parts of Italy and Germany.

On December 2, 1943, the Luftwaffte launched an air attack on Bari. Traditional bombs and mustard gas bombs were dropped on the city. The raid resulted in more than 1,000 casualties, including hundreds of deaths from the mustard gas, and the sinking of 17 Allied ships. Much of the old town Bari, which is close to the port, was reduced to rubble.

The Bari raid was dubbed "the second Pearl Harbor" and became known as one of the most notable Luftwaffe exploits of the war. It was also the only poisonous gas incident of World War II.

Walk along the harbour......

by hvk

Walk along the harbour... Visit the part called 'The Old City'... See some castle-like buildings and cathedrals... Sit by the ruins of the old city (which really seem to be recent, not old) and watch the sea. Visit the big theatres and wide streets where you can do shopping. You can find very big shops of fameous brands.
Nice place for shopping and having some quiet time. But the big streets are very crowded by nights. Full of teens with motorcycles; smoking, drinking and kissing etc.

Bari - First Impressions...........

by johngayton

"...........don't let them fool you!"

After reading the negative comments on VT it was with a degree of trepidation that I detrained from Bari Centrale to find that perhaps those warnings were indeed to be heeded. Arriving about 7 pm: before I had even left the railway platform there was a homeless guy crashed-out on a bench in the evening heat. A guy with a very oily misfit of a suit asked if I wanted a taxi, despite the rank of white cabs lined up at the main exit. Needless to say I declined but before getting a cab to my hotel I decided to check on the map at the local tourist info booth, next to which another homeless guy was also crashed, exactly where my hotel was. The tourist booth itself was shut but the faded map in the window gave me a rough idea of the expected route.
The piazza in front of the station was teeming with local youths whilst the cars dropping and picking people up from the station provided a cacophonous backdrop to the bustle of the city as the taxi drivers did their “take no prisoners” act as they departed into the traffic flow. For a late May evening the setting sun was still surprisingly viscous and the moisture and smog laden air oppressive. The narrow streets lined with 8 and 10 storey office and residential buildings, many of the latter with the day’s laundry strung out on the balcony added to the oppressiveness of the heat.

If ever a stereotype was to be affirmed my taxi driver was it. Despite the 4-directional traffic: cars, buses, vans, a very attractive mini-skirted woman on a scooter and a few suicidal pedestrians, I don’t think his speed ever went below 30 mph with odd ten yard accelerations whenever the slightest gap emerged and we had covered the roughly 1 mile journey to the hotel, through traffic as thick as any London rush-hour’s, in less than 5 minutes.

Double-parking outside the hotel the meter clicked just over the 6 euros, “Call it 6.” he said, “Ach, call it 7.” I replied, having noted that the route, with all its weaving between main drags and cross streets, looked, from my mental city map, to have been the most direct possible.

This is when it all started to look up. The hotel is surprisingly modern and clean and despite my almost total lack of the language, check-in is informal but swift. My room is functional with its dark-green stained wood furniture, parchment beige walls and designer lighting giving it a touch of chicness.

Bari as a city is very interesting having two distinct components: The modern city of high density housing, the commercial buildings and the docks, and then the old city with its maze of narrow alleys, piazzas, churches, its castle and palace. The old city is no museum piece and its inhabitants are local people, living and working within the local area. Walking the narrow streets in the evening every shaded corner seems to have a group of people passing the time, chatting, laughing, eating, playing cards or just generally watching the world go by, giving one an immediate impression of community and also a certain guilt about being a tourist - as if walking through the streets is like walking through the people’s living rooms.

The piazzas of the old city are teeming, the terrace bars and restaurants a hubbub of chatter and laughter, groups of friends, pairs of lovers (of all ages) - I have since discovered that this is the Passagiata.

Children, some still babies being carried, abound, with the odd shrill mother’s admonishments to not stray too far. A runaway little girl, perhaps 5 years old, is chased by her mother along the street just outside the city walls, to be scooped up by perhaps a stranger, perhaps a family friend, and squirmingly delivered back to the mother with much “Grazie, Grazie!” and then a good telling-off for the child.

As late as 11 pm the bars and restaurants are still doing good business, people still arriving, the cars still parking up around the Corso’s and the Lungomare, double-parking, nose-parking any form of parking goes. Within the old city walls two cars come nose-to-nose at the 90 degree turning between two streets, neither is giving way, strangely enough no horns are blown (maybe they both have sufficient respect for the local residents), manouvering isn’t going to create the space for them to pass and by now both have other cars behind them. This is being too much of a voyeur and so I squeeze past and leave them to their own devices.

"A City in the Makeover Process."

There is not much that can be done to change the way that the Modern City functions, short of razing it to the ground and starting again. The Old City, on the other hand, is in the process of being restored using traditional materials and techniques, though it must be allowed to maintain its character too, and not become another of those craft and gift shop places with overpriced bars and faux-artisans.

Looking back on the older reviews both here and elsewhere, and then looking at more modern ones: there seems to be a definite rise in satisfaction of outsider's perceptions of Bari. Adding my own impressions, I would say that this change is down to the citizens themselves - as if there is a collective will to enhance visitor's experiences - smiles and helpfulness replacing the old "scowl and shrug", mentality.

And THAT is a true makeover.

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