Grand Canal, main waterway of Venice, Italy, following a natural channel that traces a reverse-S course from San Marco Basilica to Santa Chiara Church and divides the city into two parts.
Slightly more than 3 km (2 miles) long and between 30 and 70 metres (100 and 225 feet) wide, the Grand Canal has an average depth of 5 metres (17 feet) and connects at various points with a maze of smaller canals. These waterways carry the bulk of Venetian transportation, as automobiles are banned throughout much of the city. Traditional poled gondolas are a favourite with tourists but are now vastly outnumbered by motorized public-transit water buses (vaporetti) and private water taxis. Siren-equipped boats belonging to the police, fire, and emergency medical services traverse the Grand Canal at high speed, and barges are responsible for the delivery of goods throughout the city. The connection between Venetians and their city’s main thoroughfare does not end at the grave: funeral barges can be seen transporting the dead to Isola di San Michele, an island northeast of the city that has been the site of Venice’s largest cemetery since the early 19th century.
The Grand Canal is lined on either side by palaces, churches, hotels, and other public buildings in Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance styles. Although comparatively few examples of earlier styles remain, a concerted effort has been made to preserve some of Venice’s more famous palaces. The Ca’ d’Oro, a 15th-century palace designed for Marino Contarini, of the eminent Contarini family, was extensively renovated in the late 20th century, and its ornate facade remains one of the Grand Canal’s most-arresting sights. The Palazzo Pesaro is a remarkable example of the Classical style. Completed in 1710, nearly three decades after the death of its chief designer, Baldassare Longhena, it now houses Venice’s International Gallery of Modern Art, as well as the Museum of Oriental Art.
The Grand Canal is bridged at four points. The oldest, and easily the most famous, span is the Rialto Bridge. Designed by Antonio da Ponte in the late 16th century, the Rialto Bridge crosses the canal at roughly its halfway point. The first Accademia Bridge was built in the mid-19th century at the canal’s east end to facilitate foot traffic. It was replaced in 1932 by a wooden bridge that was intended to be temporary, but it was later reinforced with steel to lend it a degree of permanence. That same year the Scalzi Bridge was built at the west end of the canal to provide easier access to the city’s railway station. The Constitution Bridge, designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava and unveiled in 2008, lies to the west of the Scalzi Bridge. It links the railway station to the bus terminal and parking complex at Rome Square.