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    Sans Papiers

    3.0 (3 reviews)
    Closed 6:00 pm - 1:00 am (Next day)

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    AntiCafé

    AntiCafé

    (17 reviews)

    San Giovanni, Appio San Giovanni

    AntiCafe, especially in contrast to most Italian cafes, sets out to do something different, to…read moreappeal to students and casual coffee drinker alike. If you simply want a place to step in out of the weather, you can pay for a coffee normally and drink it at the bar or tables inside at the front. Yet, if, like me and many other students, you are looking for a place to work for hours, you have come to the right place. AntiCafe allows you to pay for time spent at the cafe, offering a quiet workspace, coffee, and light snacks, as many as you wish to have. The WIFI functions properly and you can focus on what needs to be done, instead of whether or not the place will throw you out if you overstay your welcome. You simply take a ticket at the front as you walk in, take a seat at any of the tables behind the counter, and pay when you leave. Make sure to show your student ID too, as there is a discount offered for students. Otherwise, if you don't need to study, there are board games available to play with friends. Try this place out!

    AntiCafé is a lovely establishment that saved my butt (more on that later), so I'm obviously…read morebiased, but here are some other reasons why AntiCafé is a great spot! AntiCafé is workspace/internet cafe that offers you unlimited refreshments, snacks, and WiFI in a comfortable atmosphere for working or relaxing. You pay per hour, with their no-stress system of paying when you leave, as opposed to a fixed set of time upfront when you first enter. Printer services are also offered at the cafe for 10 cents per color page. AntiCafé has really accessible hours (9/10am to 10pm) and is exceptionally easy to find (2 minute walk from San Giovanni Stazione on the A/red metro line, 3 stops away from Termini Stazione). The prices are extremely cheap and reasonable, and clearly laid out on their website (4€ first hour/3€ for next hour/14€ for the day; + several subscription options). There is also a student discount! The cafe itself is well lit, modern, cozy, and clean. If I wasn't in such a rush at the time I visited, I wouldn't loved to take a little break from the hustle and bustle of the city here. There is a variety of set-ups available within the cafe, from larger tables for groupwork, couches (with board games!) to lounge, or individual tables for those flying solo. How AntiCafé saved my day: as a first time Ryanair flier, I did not have the foresight to double check that their wild policies of charging for check-in/boarding pass printing at the airport. I knew that I could circumvent these charges by checking in online/via the App, and showing my electronic boarding pass at the airport. I did not double check that FCO (Fiumicino Airport) does not accept electronic boarding passes. In a mad dash to print out my boarding passes before my flight the next day, I found AntiCafé and made it in roughly 40 minutes before closing. The staff was wonderfully patient with the non-Italian-speaking me, and informed me that for the printing services I did not have to pay for my time (just for each page instead!). For their printing services, you must email your documents to the staff and they will print out your documents for you. As I flubbed around with my phone, suddenly forgetting how to technology in my frazzled state, the staff calmly helped me navigate the mobile website and get everything printed out for me accordingly. It was a refreshing experience compared to some other less pleasantly patient service experiences I've had in Italy. Really memorable for me, personally. All in all, a really neat spot with everything you could ever want from a workspace cafe!

    Colosseo - Arch of Constantine

    Colosseo

    (1.1k reviews)

    Aventino

    The Colosseum is the most incredible thing I've ever seen on this planet. Nothing prepares you for…read morestanding in front of it in real life. The scale, the power, the history, everything about it is absolutely breathtaking. You can feel the history the moment you step inside. Knowing what happened there centuries ago gives you literal shivers. It's emotional, intense, and awe-inspiring all at once. Every stone tells a story, and it makes you feel so small in the best way possible. This is not just a landmark, it's an experience that stays with you forever. If you come to Rome and don't see the Colosseum, you missed everything. Rating: 10/10 -- unforgettable, unreal, legendary

    Holy shit, the Colosseum. It's one of the craziest things I've ever seen, a massive historical…read moremarvel, a monument to human ingenuity and cruelty, the highs and lows of our entire existence. You have to see it before you die. No photograph, no movie, can fully conjure the real thing. Its scale, its majesty, the psychic bridge it provides to a violent and fascinating past. Standing in the Colosseum is about as close as I've gotten to time travel. We booked a three-hour tour with Crown Tours, covering the Forum, Palatine Hill, and the Colosseum. This was definitely the way to go. I loved both the simplified logistics and the live, on-site history lesson. That said, if you're not the guided tour type, the Colosseum does kind of speak for itself. We went around noon on a Friday during low season, when it was busy but nowhere near peak crowding. I imagine a summertime visit with kids would be pretty uncomfortable. But the Colosseum is worth a fair amount of physical suffering. Maybe not being mauled and eaten by lions, but definitely a little body odor and heat. The Colosseum is both the largest standing amphitheater in the world and the largest ancient amphitheater ever built. These may be the least surprising facts I've ever read on Wikipedia. The place is named for its colossal size, and honestly that alone would make it worth visiting. The size, though, is maybe its third or fourth most notable feature. The architecture is iconic. I was about to start describing it, but everyone knows what the Colosseum looks like: it looks like the Colosseum. It looks both more and less like the Colosseum up close and from within. I don't remember the striations in the travertine walls from any history books. The interior is breathtaking. Our guide sat us down and we gawked at the tiered seating and arena of this enormous world wonder, a place that once accommodated some 50,000 spectators for any given event, where an estimated 400,000 people and a million animals met violent ends. It's kind of wild that any of this was a) allowed and b) how people got their kicks, but the enthusiasm for brutality is comprehensible enough in 2025. I know exactly who would be in the stands with popcorn, watching people whose lives hold no value for them fighting to the death. Our tour ended on the ground floor of the Colosseum, and we wandered the upper level on our own, looking down at the arena and the exposed underground, which required its own ticket and didn't seem to have many visitors. We visited the gift shop and bought a postcard for our kids, though I don't quite know how to explain this place to our five- and three-year-old sons. I hope to bring them in person one day, when they're older and more knowledgeable about the ways of the world. There might be heat, there might be crowds, but they'll have to see the Colosseum.

    Sans Papiers - venues - Updated May 2026

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