The statue was placed just outside the main palace entrance at the terminus of the
Via Appia in a large atrium of porticoes that divided the city from the private villa. The
Greek architect
Zenodorus designed the statue and began construction between AD 64 and 68. According to
Pliny the Elder, the statue reached 106.5 Roman Feet () in height, though other sources claim it was as much as . Shortly after Nero's death in AD 68, the Emperor
Vespasian added a
radiate crown and renamed it
Colossus Solis, after the Roman sun god
Sol. Around 128, Emperor
Hadrian ordered the statue moved from the Domus Aurea to just northwest of the Colosseum in order to create space for the
Temple of Venus and Roma. It was moved by the architect
Decriannus with the use of 24 elephants. Emperor
Commodus converted it into a statue of himself as
Hercules by replacing the head, but after his death it was restored, and so it remained. The last certain mention from antiquity of the statue is the reference in the
Chronography of 354. Today, nothing remains of the Colossus of Nero save for the foundations of the
pedestal at its second location near the
Colosseum. It was possibly destroyed during the
Sack of Rome in 410, or toppled in one of a series of fifth-century earthquakes, and its metal scavenged. The remains of the brick-faced masonry pedestal, once covered with marble, were removed in 1936 The foundations were excavated in 1986, and can be viewed by the public. ==Connection to the Colosseum==