Transfer from Pescara
to L'Aquila

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Trip details

Departure from Pescara
Selected sights
Estimated arrival to L'Aquila
10:27h

Trip duration: 87min

Passengers & Extra luggage
1 x
0 x
Book this transfer

Trip details

Departure from Pescara
Passengers & Extra luggage
1 x
0 x

Places you can visit along the way

Quality photo of Stiffe Caves - Italy

Stiffe Caves
Italy

105 min

Stiffe Caves are a natural spectacle that shouldn’t be missed! The well informative tour of this natural wonder takes approximately 1 hour on a 700... meters long path. During this tour visitors will explore different halls like the Hall of Silence with dazzling white rocky walls, or the Waterfall Hall with a beautiful 20 meters long waterfall. The oldest part of the caves features a lake and another, even bigger, waterfall. A visit to Stiffe Caves is truly an unforgettable and awe-inspiring experience.

Quality photo of Rocca Calascio - Italy

Rocca Calascio
Italy

60 min

The solitary fortress, built in the 10th century, today looks like it has grown out of the hilltop stone and became an integral part of... the mountain itself. It was first built as a single tower but over the course of centuries it was expanded and, at one point, even a small village sprung up around its walls but it was destroyed in an earthquake and the fortress was abandoned. Today, the rigorous fortress is a precious filming location and 3 movies were filmed here: Lady Hawke, The Name of the Rose and The American.

Quality photo of Santo Stefano di Sessanio - Italy

Santo Stefano di Sessanio
Italy

75 min

This tiny but extremely lovely village, dating from the Roman times, has seen a sad destiny of continuously losing its inhabitants. In the 19th century,... the residents living mostly from agriculture became greatly impoverished. By the 1990s the town had lost more than 80 percent of its population; only around 100 remained. Fortunately, in the 1970s an ambitious Swede Daniele Kihlgren, bought a house here and began massive restoration of the village. He made a deal with the local authorities to invest his money in village restoration but under only one condition – the historic architecture of the village must be utterly preserved. A quarter of the town of Santo Stefano di Sessanio is today a part of a “dispersed hotel” called Sextantio. The “rooms’” of the hotel are scattered all around the village in ancient buildings, allowing guests to be immersed in the community. The success of Sextantio has influenced the development of entire village that features today cafes, restaurants, shops and galleries.