Plane Rome has two main international airports: •
Leonardo da Vinci/Fiumicino International Airport (
Rome-Fiumicino) – Rome's main airport is modern and connected to the center of the city by public transportation. •
Ciampino International Airport [https://web.archive.org/web/20100205074839/http://www.adr.it/portal/portal/adr/Ciampino/GB_Pastine (
Rome-Ciampino) – Located to the southeast of the capital, this is the city's low-cost airline airport, serving Easyjet, Ryanair and Wizzair flights, among others (see
List of low-cost airlines in Europe). This small airport is closer to the city center than Fiumicino but has no direct train connection.
Airport transportation From Leonardo da Vinci/Fiumicino airport, there are two train lines;
Leonardo Express trains and
Metropolitan train and
COTRAL/Schiaffini operates buses from both airports to the city.
Taxis in Rome are white.
Train Rome's main railway station is
Termini Station.
Car The city is ringed by a motorway, the GRA.
Boat Most
cruise ships dock in
Civitavecchia, •
Grimaldi Lines provides ferry service to/from
Barcelona,
Tunis,
Toulon (France),
Porto-Vecchio (
Corsica). •
Moby provides service to/from
Olbia, Sardinia.
Taxi Taxis are the most expensive forms of travel in Rome. Roman taxis within the city walls run on meters. Rome has several taxi cooperatives: • La Capitale • Roma Sud • Cosmos
Public transport (ATAC) Tickets for public transport must be bought before boarding (from a 'Tabacchi' or directly at the metro). Tickets for regular ATAC buses, Metro, and trams are the same fares and are compatible with each other. ATAC polices the buses, Metro, and trams for people riding without tickets. Tickets must be validated, on entering the Metro station or on boarding a bus.
Roma Pass The cost of a Roma pass is 34 euros and entitles holders to free admission to the first two museums and/or archaeological sites visited, full access to the public transport system, reduced tickets and discounts for any other following museums and sites visited, as well as exhibitions, music events, theatrical and dance performances and all other tourist services. There is also a pass called OMNIA Vatican and Rome that includes the services provided by Roma Pass, free entry to Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel, fast track entry to St Peter's Basilica and hop-on-hop-off bus tour for 3 days. It costs 95 euros for 3 days.
Bus Rome has an extensive bus system, which largely coalesces around the major transportation hub of
Termini Station. In the historic core of the city, bus routes are largely confined to the main boulevards which transect the medieval and ancient neighborhoods, where roads are far too narrow for buses to access.
Tram The tram routes mostly skirt the historic center, but there are stops near the Vatican, the Colosseum, and the Trastevere area.
Metro There are three lines.
Line A (red line) runs northwest past the Vatican, and south.
Line B (blue line) runs southwest past the Colosseum and northeast, and it center forks into line B1.
Line C (green line) runs from the Saint John's Lateran Basilica in the center to the city limits far east.
Commuter rail There is a network of suburban rail lines that mostly connect to smaller towns and conurbations of Rome. The FL lines consist of 8 commuter rail lines operated by
Trenitalia, converging on the city of Rome. There are also 2 commuter rail lines operated by Astral and
Cotral: •
Rome-Lido railway: is an urban railway line connecting Rome to Lido di Ostia, Rome's seaside neighborhood. •
Rome–Civita Castellana–Viterbo railway: is a
regional railway line connecting Rome with
Viterbo and various towns in the
province of Viterbo. ==References==