Campanile View 2
The view from the Campanile di San Marco, looking East. The Basilica and Palazzo Ducale are immediately below.
This is the bell tower of Santa Maria dei Carmini, a large church in the neighbourhood of Dorsoduro.
VENICE, ITALY, OCTOBER 10 2016: The Chiesa di San Barnaba is a neoclassic-style church in the Dorsoduro neighbourhood of Venice.
A church has existed at this sit esince the 9th century, but was reconstructed in 1776 in this neoclassic style.
This channel is named after the 'Palazzo Michiel di Malpaga,' built in the 15th century.
The Rio De la Toletta is a small waterway which links to the Grand Canal.
Three Venetian icons in one shot! The impressive 17th-century Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute, being passed by a pair of gondolas on the Grand Canal.
Detail of the brickwork on the Palazzo Ducale, one of the most iconic and impressive buildings in Venice.
VENICE, ITALY, OCTOBER 10 2016: The Campanile San Marco is an imposing bell tower and one of the most recognisable structures in Venice. It overlooks the National Library of St Mark's.
A lot of the buildings around Venice are painted in vibrant colours. This one is near Arsenale.
The Rio del Vin was given the name from the boats which carried wine addressed to Rialto, the central area of Venice.
VENICE, ITALY, OCTOBER 10 2016: This Restaurant is located on the Rio del Fuseri- it can be reached either on foot or by water taxi. This was the location of George Clooney's last dinner before his marriage to Amal Alamuddin in 2014.
This is one of the very few locations within Venice from where the Campanile di San Marco can be spied along a canal.
The Rio de la Torre channel is named after a house with two towers, which was built here in the 12th century.
The Rio de la Torre passes the gateway at the end of this canal.
The Rio de San Agostin gets it's name from the Sant Agostin Church, which used to be on the site (it burned-down and was rebuilt several times, before finally being demolished in 1873).
This view shows the condition and history of the houses and commercial units along the side of Rio de San Panatalon in the Dorsoduro district of Venice.
The name of this channel derives from the convent of Augustinian nuns of Jesus and mary, which exists today as the University Institute of Architecture.