Bologna (Rome Metro)

Bologna
General information
Coordinates41°54′48″N 12°31′14″E / 41.91333°N 12.52056°E / 41.91333; 12.52056
Owned byATAC
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
History
Opened8 December 1990 (1990-12-08)
Services
Preceding station Rome Metro Following station
Policlinico
towards Laurentina
Line B
Tiburtina
towards Rebibbia
Sant'Agnese - Annibaliano
towards Jonio
Location
Click on the map to see marker

Bologna is a station on Line B of the Rome Metro. It is an underground station located under Piazza Bologna (at the intersection of Viale XXI Aprile, Via Livorno, Via Michele di Lando, Via Lorenzo il Magnifico, Viale delle Province, Via Sambucuccio d'Alando, Via Ravenna). It was opened on 8 December 1990.

It was involved in the October 2005 building works for line B1, a branch line off line B, a fairly complicated construction project that required special mitigation to existing buildings.[1]

Its atrium houses mosaics from the Artemetro Roma prize, by Giuseppe Uncini and Vittorio Matino (Italy), Karl Gerstner (Switzerland) and Ulrich Erben (Germany).

Connections

Routes (terminate here): 309, 445;
Routes: 61, 62, 310, 542 workdays and holidays;
Nearby routes (via Catania direction): 490, 495, 649;
Night buses: n2, n2L, n13.

Surroundings and amenities

The Bologna Metropolitan Station is directly below Piazza Bologna. The Post office of piazza Bologna is located on the piazza's northwest side. The architect Mario Ridolfi designed the post office in 1932, which was built 1933–1935.[2]

The Nomentano neighborhood is primarily a residential suburb. The station is in walking distance from many cafes, restaurants, and shops, with pedestrian traffic heavy well past 1900 hours.

The major sites include the Sant'Agnese fuori le mura, about a 15 minute walk north from the Station, or about an 8-minute bus ride. Inside is the mausoleum of Santa Costanza. It is also close to the next station on line B1, Sant'Agnese - Annibaliano.

Chiesa di Sant'Ippolito is only a 4-minute walk south of the Station, but up a long flight of steps.

Services

The station has:

References

  1. ^ Sciotti, A.; Desideri, A.; Saggio, G.; Kummerer, C. (2012). Mitigation of the effects induced by shallow tunneling in urban environment: The use of 'compensation grouting' in the underground Line B1 works in Rome, in Geotechnical Aspects of Underground Construction in Soft Ground (ebook). CRC Press. ISBN 9780203803585. Retrieved 18 March 2026.
  2. ^ "Mario Ridolfi: Rome, Italy, born 1904". Archtectuul.com. Retrieved 18 March 2026. On the 30s he worked in many fascism competitions till to build the Nomentano Post Office in Bologna Square, Rome (1932).