It is located in the north-western area of the city, very close to the
Aurelian Walls. The territory of the
quartiere, whose shape recalls that of an irregular triangle, sits on a slight wold. It also includes the
urban zone 3A Nomentano.
Urban planning The quarter is crossed by two relevant routes, the road axis of Viale Regina Elena and Viale Regina Margherita, a rectilinear artery connecting
Parioli to the
Campo Verano cemetery, and the road axis of Viale del Policlinico, Via Morgagni and Viale della Lega Lombarda, linking
Via Tiburtina with Porta Pia and Corso d'Italia. The bridge of Ponte Lanciani, moreover, brings in a huge traffic flow from the adjacent quarter of
Pietralata. The road system is mostly modern. Just Via Torlonia, Via de'Rossi and Via Tomassini (the roads corresponding to the ancient Vicolo di Pietralata) as well as the streets surrounding Villa Blanc belong to the original urban tissue of the early 20th century. The area among Via Nomentana, Viale del Policlinico and Via di Villa Massimo is the elegant portion of the quarter, with refined cottages and small buildings built between 19th and 20th centuries. Just behind Viale Ventuno Aprile and Piazza Bologna, as well as along Viale delle Province, is a well-maintained council housing area dating back to the 1930s. Another pretty council housing area (the so-called ''Quartiere Sant'Ippolito
or Tiburtino II'') is located between the
Via Tiburtina and the
station of the same name. It is among the smallest quarters of the city, with a moderate population density: about 75.000 inhabitants which, on average, belong to a medium-high social class. Data reveals a high aging index and a high immigration rate. Moreover, given the position of the quarter and the presence of tertiary poles and office buildings, above average levels of traffic and pollution have been observed.
Boundaries The quarter borders: • to the north-west, with the quarter Q. IV
Salario, from which it is separated by the stretch of Via Nomentana between Piazzale di Porta Pia and Viale Regina Margherita; and with Q. XVII
Trieste, whose limit is marked by the stretch of Via Nomentana between Viale Regina Margherita and the FL1 regional railway; • to the east, with the quarter Q. XXI
Pietralata, along the stretch of the
Tangenziale Est between Via Nomentana and
Via Tiburtina; • to the south, with the quarter VI
Tiburtino, from which it is separated by the stretch of Via Tiburtina between the Tangenziale Est and Via del Castro Laurenziano, by Via del Castro Laurenziano itself and by Viale dell'
Università up until the Aurelian Walls; • to the south-west, with the
rione R. XVIII
Castro Pretorio, along the stretch of the Aurelian Walls between Viale dell'Università and Piazzale di Porta Pia.
Odonymy The majority of the streets and squares of the area around Piazza Bologna and Viale delle Province is named after Italian provinces (hence the nickname
Nomentano - Italia), whilst around the
Policlinico Umberto I there is a group of street named after physicians and anatomists. Other roads are named after archaeologists (mainly in the area around
Villa Torlonia) and after medieval personalities or events. The odonyms of the
quartiere can be categorized as follows: •
Archaeologists, e.g. Piazza
Mariano Armellini, Via
Costantino Corvisieri, Via
Giovanni Battista de Rossi, Via
Ariodante Fabretti, Piazza
Domenico Gnoli, Largo and Via
Rodolfo Lanciani, Piazza
Orazio Marucchi, Via
Famiano Nardini, Via
Antonio Nibby, Via
Giuseppe Vasi, Piazza
Giovanni Winckelmann. •
Italian provinces and historical regions, e.g. Viale and Piazzale delle
Province, Via
Carnia, Via
Catanzaro, Via
Como, Via
Lucca, Via
Imperia, Piazza
Lecce, Via
Livorno, Via della
Marsica, Piazza
Massa Carrara, Via Padova, Via
Pavia, Via
Pisa, Via
Ravenna, Piazza
Sassari. •
Middle Age personalities and events, e.g. Piazza delle
Crociate, Via
Eleonora d'Arborea, Via
Giovanni da Procida, Via della
Lega Lombarda, Via
Lorenzo il Magnifico, Largo
Guido Mazzoni, Via
Michele di Lando, Piazza
Ruggero di Sicilia, Via
Stamira, Via
Teodolinda, Via
Teodorico, Piazza
Vespri Siciliani. •
Physicians and anatomists, e.g. Via
Mondino de Luzzi, Via
Gabriele Falloppio, Via
Gerolamo Fracastoro, Piazza
Galeno, Viale
Ippocrate, Via
Giovanni Maria Lancisi, Via
Marcello Malpighi, Largo
Ettore Marchiafava, Via
Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Via
Augusto Murri, Via
Francesco Redi, Via
Lazzaro Spallanzani, Via
Andrea Vesalio, Via
Paolo Zacchia. ==Places of interest==