Rome, Italy
Flâneur knows more than 25,000 works of art across the cities it covers. In Rome, it knows which of them are in which room, how long they take to see properly, and how to build your day so you do not miss the ones that matter to you.
Plan my Rome itineraryThe problem
Rome has been accumulating art for two thousand years. Most visitors see the same fraction of it every time.
An art lover visiting Rome for three days will spend most of their preparation time reading guides that lead to the Vatican, the Colosseum, and perhaps the Borghese Gallery. All three are extraordinary. But Rome holds dozens of collections of equivalent depth that most itineraries never reach: late antique sculpture, Baroque painting cycles, medieval mosaics that predate anything in Western Europe. Flâneur knows where they are. It builds your itinerary around them.
What Flâneur finds for you in Rome
These are not obscure sites for specialists. They are some of the most significant collections in Europe, housed in buildings open to the public, that most Rome itineraries simply do not include.
One of the four branches of the Museo Nazionale Romano, housed in a Renaissance palace a few minutes from Piazza Navona. The Ludovisi collection: ancient sculpture assembled in the seventeenth century, including the Gaul Killing Himself, one of the most psychologically charged works to survive from antiquity. Almost no queues. Almost no crowds.
The best collection of Roman painting and mosaic in existence, including the frescoes from the Villa di Livia reassembled on the top floor: a garden room painted to make the walls dissolve into an orchard. There is also the finest numismatic collection in Italy and portrait sculpture of a quality that would anchor any museum in the world.
The least visited of the four Museo Nazionale Romano branches, built over the remains of a theatre from 13 BC. The permanent collection traces the material culture of Rome from antiquity through the medieval period in a single building, using objects excavated on site. For anyone interested in how the ancient city became the medieval one, there is nowhere else like it.
And many other works in Rome you might otherwise miss.
How it works
Flâneur is not a travel tool. It is a curated guide built on a database of more than 25,000 works. It knows what is in Rome, which museum holds it, and whether it belongs in your itinerary based on who you are as a visitor. General travel guides cannot do this. A generalist AI does not know enough to do this.
01
Tell Flâneur who you are
Curious, Enthusiast, or Expert. Your profile tells Flâneur which works matter to you and how deeply you want to engage with each one.
02
Flâneur selects what to see
From its database of works in Rome, Flâneur identifies what corresponds to your profile and builds the day around those works, not around the most popular venues.
03
Download and go
Your itinerary arrives as a PDF with times, addresses and maps. Everything you need to walk in and find what Flâneur found for you.
Your profile
Flâneur builds a different itinerary depending on how you engage with art, not just how many days you have.
Profile 01
Curious
You love art but do not want to spend an entire day in a single museum. Flâneur finds the essential works across several venues, with time left to breathe.
Profile 02
Enthusiast
You already know the main collections. You are looking for the next layer: the works that reward closer looking, the buildings most people skip.
Profile 03
Expert
You travel for a specific period, a specific technique, or a specific artist. Flâneur builds around your focus and fills the remaining time with works that relate to it.
Why Flâneur
Other tools plan your day. Flâneur plans it around the works that matter to you.
Flâneur is built on a database of more than 25,000 indexed works of art across the cities it covers: paintings, sculptures, frescoes, architectural spaces, each one associated with a museum, a room, an artist, a period. When you tell Flâneur your profile, it already knows which works in Rome correspond to your interests, which venues hold them, and in what order it is possible to see them in a single day. The itinerary is not a list of recommended places. It is the sequence that a well-informed art historian would plan for you, built automatically from the ground up.
Ready
Tell Flâneur how many days you have and which profile fits you. The expert does the rest.
Plan my Rome itineraryFrom €5 per city