Best of Florence and Tuscany Beyond the Uffizi: Where to Go From a Local
TheVoyageCo asked Massimo for his local insights for Florence and Tuscany. This is what he said.
Florence is more than the Uffizi and the Accademia. The churches come first: Santa Croce, Santa Maria Novella, and Santo Spirito contain centuries of art and none of the queues. Then Palazzo Vecchio on Piazza della Signoria, Piazzale Michelangelo at sunset for the view that explains everything, and a half-day in Fiesole above the city. Beyond Florence: Siena for the Piazza del Campo, Arezzo for Piero della Francesca's frescoes, and the Chianti countryside between them.

Massimo
My name is Massimo Coppo, I live in Florence, I am a tourist guide in English and French, I also work as a driver and sommelier, I have a degree in philosophy and a degree in literature, I love being able to introduce my country to those who come from far away and always learn something new.
After many years walking people through Florence and Tuscany, I can tell you the Uffizi and Accademia are beautiful, but they are not the only reasons to come. Let me tell you where Florence and Tuscany actually reveal themselves to those who look deeper.
Massimo was born in Florence and works as a walking companion, driver, and sommelier graduate, with a degree in philosophy and literature. He studies his region every day to know it better.
1. The Main Sites: Uffizi and Accademia
Florence Historic Centre
Yes, you must see the Uffizi and the Accademia. The art here is the reason Florence exists as a destination. But go in the early morning, before crowds, when you can think. Michelangelo's David in the Accademia will change you if you approach it with respect.
2. The Churches: Where Real Florence Lives
Florence
The churches are more important than many museums. Santa Croce, Santa Maria Novella, Santo Spirito. These churches contain centuries of artistic tradition. The Duomo and Baptistery show why Florence became what it became.
When I am with people, I spend more time in churches than in museums, because this is where spirit and art combine.
3. Palazzo Vecchio: Government and History
Piazza della Signoria
Palazzo Vecchio is where Florence's government happened, where power was centred. The rooms contain art and history together. The view from the tower is Florence complete.
4. Piazzale Michelangelo: The View That Explains Everything
Fiesole Hills
From Piazzale Michelangelo, overlooking Florence from the hills, you see why Florence is important. The red domes, the Duomo, the river, the hills beyond. This view explains Florence completely.
Come at sunset and watch the light change. This is worth more than any museum.
5. Fiesole: The Town in the Hills
Fiesole
Fiesole sits above Florence, in the hills. The archaeological museum shows ancient history. The church and convent show medieval development. From Fiesole, you see Florence clearly, in context.
It is cooler here in summer, quieter always. The Etruscans lived here before Florence. This is layers of history.
6. Arezzo: The Smaller Siena Alternative
Arezzo
Arezzo is often overlooked, but is beautiful. The church with Piero della Francesca frescoes is a masterpiece. The city is less crowded than Florence or Siena, but the quality of art is equal.
7. Siena: The Medieval Alternative to Florence
Siena
Siena is different from Florence. It is more medieval, less Renaissance. The Duomo is extraordinary, the Piazza del Campo is one of the most beautiful squares in Italy. The city keeps a medieval character in a way Florence does not.
8. The Countryside: Chianti Wine Region
Chianti Region
The countryside between Florence and Siena is the Chianti wine region. Rolling hills, cypress trees, vineyards everywhere. You understand why people love Tuscany when you drive through here. Stop at small wineries, taste wine where it grows, eat with a view.
9. Meditation on Tuscany: Why It Matters
Throughout the Region
Tuscany is not just a beautiful landscape. It is a demonstration of how a human can work with landscape to create something meaningful. The towns, the vineyards, the art. All come from people understanding their place and creating there.
This is why I love this region. The beauty here is not an accident. It is the result of centuries of people caring, building, creating. When you understand this, Tuscany becomes more than landscape. It becomes philosophy.
Florence in three days is a checklist. Florence and Tuscany in a week, at the rhythm of a Florentine, is a transformation. Walk Piazzale Michelangelo at sunset, sit in a church for half an hour, drive through Chianti without booking anything. And the region will give you something a museum never can.
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