This ticket allows you to enter without waiting into a unique building: on the ground floor a church filled with works of art by Renaissance artists, on the first floor, a grain warehouse, intended for the city's needs.
It was for centuries a symbol of the power and political influence of the most important families over the city of Florence.
The skyscraper granary of 14th-century Florence comes back to life. The Orsanmichele complex halfway between the Duomo and Palazzo Vecchio - as if to represent its role first civil and then religious - reopens after 400 days with new restoration and layout. Orsanmichele began as a loggia for the sale of grain with two floors of storage. In 1347 the Florentines brought Bernardo Daddi's Madonna delle Grazie, which would soon be protected by the Orcagna Tabernacle. The granary closes and is transformed into a church. Today, the thirteen marvelous statues - works by the greatest sculptors of the Renaissance including Ghiberti, Donatello, Andrea del Verrocchio, Baccio da Montelupo, and Giambologna - that adorned the building's exterior niches return to cross the eyes of visitors at the height intended by the artists.
You will make your own way to the meeting points