ITALYHEAVEN.CO.UK: ITALY TOURISM & TRAVEL GUIDE
Images of Italy
Italy home Accommodation Airports Travel & transport Italy map Planning a trip Language Tours & packages Discover Italy
Destinations: Where to go in Italy & what to do there Holiday ideas: Itineraries, seaside resorts, islands, the best hotels ... Special interest: Activities, spas, art, cruises, events ...

Rome Venice Florence Sicily Amalfi Coast Italian Lakes Cinque Terre Tuscany Milan Verona Sorrento Puglia Sardinia More places


VENICE ACCOMMODATION GUIDE

Where to stay - location advice

Hip hotels - style and design

Hotels on the Grand Canal

Luxury hotels - smart five-star destinations

Mid-range hotels - 3 & 4-star choices

Budget hotels - cheap places to stay

Recommended B&Bs - affordable, with character

Hotel reviews

Hotel availability search





11 bus to Pellestrina



Travel from Venice to Chioggia


Chioggia is a fishing port at the southern end of the Venetian lagoon. It's picturesque in an unpretentious kind of way, and makes an interesting day trip. Taking public transport from Venice to Chioggia is time-consuming, but the journey around the outer rim of the lagoon can be part of the day's entertainment.

Travel to Chioggia from Venice

The explanatory ferry stop in Chioggia

For the long but interesting route, head first of all to the Lido (ferries 1, 51, 52 etc - check the ACTV timetable to find your quickest route). The Lido is one of the long thin islands separating the Venetian lagoon from the Adriatic sea. You are going to travel down the length of this piece of land, then down the next long thin island, then over the lagoon to Chioggia, which is on an island nestled into the southernmost corner of the lagoon. One ACTV transport route, the number 11, takes you all the way, by a combination of vehicles. The trip takes an hour and fifteen minutes, and if you already have a travel pass for transport in Venice, this should be valid for the journey.

Once you have arrived on the Lido and alighted from your ferry, the next stage of your journey is by bus. Cross the little open square to the beginning of the wide avenue crossing the Lido, Gran Viale Santa Maria Elisabetta. The bus stop for the number 11 is on the right hand side. Departures are usually half-hourly, but check timetables. Try to get a seat for the long journey; when we made the trip the service operated a little convoy of two vehicles so there was more space for passengers. There are some cheap restaurants and bars around here, if you want to refuel before moving on.

Pellestrina

The bus runs southwards down the entire length of the Lido, past the seafront buildings of the old Casino and the Palazzo del Cinema, home to the Venice Film Festival. The built-up areas merge rather as you head south. Out in the waters, on the seaward side of the modern settlement of Malamocco, is supposedly a lost island. History traditonally states that the early lagoon-settlers had their capital on an Adriatic island called Malamocco, now vanished beneath the waves.

At Alberoni, the leafy southern tip of the Lido, the bus drives onto a ferry. This crosses the central mouth of the lagoon, the Porto di Malamocco, to arrive in Pellestrina, an even thinner island running along the gigantic eighteenth-century sea walls, the murazzi.

Pellestrina is a strange and strung-out fishing village with its face to the lagoon and its back to the high white sea walls. The bus finishes its run by the town's cemetery next to a landing stage. If you have time you could break your journey here to see Pellestrina before catching the next service onwards to Chioggia.

Lagoon

Passengers then make the final leg of the journey on a passenger ferry which travels along the sea walls, past fascinating lagoon scenery where the waters are dotted with ramshackle fishermen's huts on stilts among their mussel farms. The walls extend for miles; an impressive piece of engineering completed in the dying days of the Venetian Republic. There is an additional ferry stop out here, Caroman, (only some services will call in and in the winter it is by request only) where there is a wildlife reserve. The name was once Ca'Roman, Roman house; the site's history goes back a long way.

The boat then crosses the lagoon's most southerly opening, the Porto di Chioggia, guarded by an old fortress. Here you may see fishing boats heading out to sea, or coming home with their catch. The passenger ferry follows the same path as the fishermen, veering into a little port at the northern end of the historic part of Chioggia.

The Lido, Pellestrina and Chioggia all offer opportunities to keen cyclists. You can take bicycles on the ferry from Pellestrina to Chioggia: you may need to buy a special ticket so ask for advice at an ACTV kiosk before you travel.

Alternative travel

If you don't fancy this varied journey, there is also an ACTV bus from Venice to Chioggia and Sottomarina. This service, the 80E, leaves from Piazzale Roma every half-hour, and the drive to Chioggia takes around an hour.

If you are staying in Chioggia and wish to visit Venice, there is a direct boat service, the Linea Clodia, which leaves every morning at 9.05am and returns in the evening, leaving Venice at 5pm. Do check the latest times as these are subject to change.

> Read about Chioggia


On this site

Chioggia

Sottomarina

The Lido

Pellestrina

Day trips


Useful external links

Venice travel journal

Lagoon environments



Advertising
Read Blog Instagram
Italy Heaven © Copyright Tourist Heaven Limited
This site provides tourist and visitor information for Italy, from Piemonte to Sicily. Designed for travellers from around the world who want to plan a trip, take a holiday, book accommodation in Italy, or just learn more about the country: its geography, art, football, culture and entertainment options.