Rome, city of water

Water is what made Rome great—and the Trevi Fountain is its perfect symbol

Rome, city of water

Many know the Trevi Fountain as the romantic symbol of the Italian ‘Dolce Vita’, but the fountain once served as a hub for the city’s water system.

Fontana di Trevi by Nicola Salvi, Giuseppe PanniniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

A gift to the city from the Pope

The fountain as we know it today was completed in the 18th century. Pope Clement XII wanted to gift the city with a monumental fountain, so he launched a public competition to find an architect; Nicola Salvi won, and it took him almost 30 years of work to complete his late baroque masterpiece, a triumph of marble and zealous sculptures.
But a fountain had already been there for a long time. In fact, the Trevi Fountain was first built during the Roman times as the hub of the city’s water system. It was meant to grant citizens access to a source of prime quality water. The fountain was located (as it is today) at the intersection between three roads (‘tre vie’): that explains the name ‘Trevi.’

Tap to explore

“Trevi”: At the crossroad of three streets

Back then, it looked much more modest that it does now: it was a fountain with three separate basins, where passersby could drink, wash and find solace. The fountain was the final destination of the Virgin Aqueduct, the only Roman aqueduct that still works today, after more than 2000 years since it was built.
Rome was the first city to introduce the idea of fountains with free, drinkable water, and to this day it still is the city with the highest concentration of drinking fountains in the world.

The Grand Tour of Italy - RomaYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

Floating School (1968-11-20) by Loomis DeanLIFE Photo Collection

By Carl MydansLIFE Photo Collection

More than 2500 “Nasoni”

There are more than 2,500 ‘nasoni’ (big noses) across Rome and the traditional water fountains are often dubbed “democratic” as they can be found everywhere.

Fontana del Tritone by Gian Lorenzo BerniniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

The Fountain of the Triton and other masterpieces

Besides, many others beautiful fountains can be found everywhere across the city. See here for example the Fountain of the Triton.

Fontana delle Api by Gian Lorenzo BerniniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

Fontana della Barcaccia by Pietro BerniniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

Fontana dei LeoniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi (1648/1651) by Gian Lorenzo BerniniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

Fontana di Trevi by Nicola Salvi, Giuseppe PanniniYouth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

A reference standard

Roman aqueducts remain a standard for modern day water supply systems.

Tap to explore

Undefeated solidity and functionality

This both from a durability and functionality standpoint. One one hand, most aqueducts built today will last more or less 50 years, the ones in Rome are still working after more than 2000 years. On the other, they are an engineering model around the world for their capacity of bringing water in deserted and arid areas, such as the deserts of Israel.

Credits: Story

Exhibition edited by Youth Committee of the Italian Commission for UNESCO - Lazio: Antonio Geracitano, Marco Anzellotti, Vittoria Azzarita, Andrea Bangrazi, Ilaria Cacciotti, Francesca Candelini, Giovanni Cedrone, Carlotta Destro, Caterina Francesca Di Giovanni, Alessandra Feola, Paolo Ianniccari, Marta Lelli, Laura Leopardi, Ginevra Odone, Dario Saltari, Paolo Scipioni.

Youth Committee of the Italian National Commission for UNESCO

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Related theme
The Grand Tour of Italy
Celebrate the past. Define the future.
View theme
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites