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What to See in Monza - Top Sights and Attractions

Discover 20 hidden attractions, cool sights, and unusual things to do in Monza (Italy). Don't miss out on these must-see attractions: Villa Reale, Monza Park, and Monza Cathedral. Also, be sure to include Stadio Brianteo in your itinerary.

Below, you can find the list of the most amazing places you should visit in Monza (Lombardy).

Villa Reale

Historical landmark in Monza, Italy
wikipedia / Paolobon140 / CC BY-SA 4.0

Neo-classical royal house and gardens. The Royal Villa is a historical building in Monza, northern Italy. It lies on the banks of the Lambro river, surrounded by the large Monza Park, one of the largest enclosed parks in Europe.

The Royal Villa, which is also called the Palace of Monza, is neoclassical palace built by the Habsburgs as a private residence during the Austrian domination of the 18th century.

It became the residence of the viceroy with the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy but it lost this function progressively during the Kingdom of Italy of Savoy, the last Royals to use it. Nowadays, it hosts exhibitions, and a wing hosts also the Artistic High School of Monza.[1]

Address: Viale Brianza, 1, 20900 Monza

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Monza Park

Park in Italy
wikipedia / Ashley Pomeroy / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Parco di Monza

Park in Italy. Monza Park is a large walled park in Monza, Lombardy, northern Italy. Extending over an area of 688 hectares, it is the largest walled park in Europe, and the fourth largest enclosed one after la Mandria of Venaria Reale, Richmond Park in London and the Phoenix Park in Dublin.

The park was commissioned by Napoleon's stepson Eugène de Beauharnais, during the French occupation of northern Italy, as external part of the garden of his royal palace (the Royal Villa of Monza); it was completed in 1808.

The park is crossed in its southern sector by the Lambro river. Some one third of the park is occupied by woods, while the rest is kept as lawn.

The Autodromo Nazionale Monza racetrack has been located inside the park since 1922. Meanwhile, the Golf Club Milano is a golf course that has hosted nine editions of the Italian Open.[2]

Address: Viale Cavriga, Monza

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Monza Cathedral

Cathedral in Monza, Italy
wikipedia / Rebecca South / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Duomo di Monza

Cathedral in Monza, Italy. The Duomo of Monza, often known in English as Monza Cathedral, is the main religious building of Monza, Italy. Unlike most duomos, it is not in fact a cathedral, as Monza has always been part of the Diocese of Milan, but is in the charge of an archpriest who has the right to certain episcopal vestments including the mitre and the ring. The church is also known as the Basilica of San Giovanni Battista from its dedication to John the Baptist.[3]

Address: Piazza del Duomo, 20900 Monza

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Stadio Brianteo

Stadium in Monza, Italy
wikipedia / Simonemb / Public Domain

Stadium in Monza, Italy. Stadio Brianteo, known for sponsorship reasons as the U-Power Stadium since September 2020, is a multi-purpose stadium in Monza, Italy, and the home of A.C. Monza. Mostly used for football matches, the stadium was built in 1988 and has a capacity of 18,568, though only 10,000 are fully operational. The stadium is also used for rugby matches, concerts and other events.[4]

Address: Monza, Via Franco Tognini 4, 20900

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Candy Arena

Sports arena in Monza, Italy
wikipedia / Simonemb / CC BY-SA 4.0

Also known as: Palazzetto dello Sport

Sports arena in Monza, Italy. The Arena di Monza is an indoor sporting arena in Monza, Italy. It is home to the Vero Volley Monza and Saugella Team Monza, volleyball teams. In 2011, it hosted matches for the 2011 Women's European Volleyball Championship. A few rounds of the Men's Volleyball World League were played in the arena in 2008. Its seating capacity is 4,500 spectators.[5]

Address: Viale Gian Battista Stucchi, 20900 Monza

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Arengario

Building in Monza, Italy
wikipedia / Remulazz / CC BY-SA 3.0

Landmark that served as the town hall. The Arengario is a historic building in Monza, northern Italy. It was built in the 13th century and is named after its original function as the town's "arengario". It is located in the most central square of Monza, Piazza Roma.

Its architecture is clearly inspired by that of the Palazzo della Ragione of Milan, with a portico surmounted by a single upper floor that was used for councils. The side of the building facing South has a small stone loggia (added to the main building in 1330) informally known as "la Parléra" (in Lombard, "the speaking place"), where the commune's decrees were declaimed to the population. In the 14th century, a bell tower was added, decorated with Ghibelline-styled merlons. In the original building, external stairs led to the upper floor; these have been replaced in 1904 with a new stairway inside the tower.[6]

Address: Piazza Roma, 20900 Monza

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Monument to Mosè Bianchi

Statue by Mosè Bianchi
wikipedia / sailko / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Monumento a Mosè Bianchi

Statue by Mosè Bianchi. The Monument to Mosè Bianchi is a bronze statue of the painter Mosè Bianchi that stands on the Piazza di Pietro in Monza, region of Lombardy, Italy.[7]

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Santa Maria in Strada

Church in Monza, Italy
wikipedia / Francescogb / CC BY-SA 3.0

Church in Monza, Italy. Santa Maria in Strada is a church in Monza, Lombardy, northern Italy.[8]

Address: Via Italia, 20900 Monza

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Small Church of Saint Anne

Small Church of Saint Anne
wikipedia / Comune di Brugherio - Ufficio Urbanistica / CC BY-SA 4.0

Also known as: Chiesa di Sant'Anna

The Chiesetta di Sant'Anna, or Small Church of Saint Anne, is a Roman Catholic church located in San Damiano, a hamlet of Brugherio, in the Province of Monza and Brianza, Italy.[9]

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Villoresi Park

Park in Italy
wikipedia / Public Domain

Also known as: Parco Villoresi

Park in Italy. Villoresi Park is a large park in Monza, northern Italy. Measuring 3.5 hectares, it was inaugurated in July 2010 by the Mayor Marco Maria Mariani. For the area of Brianza this is the second green area after Park of Monza, and was built in the district of San Fruttuoso, near the fishing lake of the same name via Boscherona flowing channel, Canale Villoresi.[10]

Address: Via Tagliamento, Monza

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Villa Torneamento

Building
wikipedia / Public Domain

Building. The Villa Torneamento is a historical building in Monza, northern Italy, in the Taccona Street, in the northern suburbs of the city, in the district of San Fruttuoso. It is 400 metres from the residential district of Triante. Known as The Castle by residents, it is used by the Daughters of Divine Zeal for a nursery school and primary school called Padre Annibale di Francia.[11]

Address: Via della Taccona 16, 20900 Monza

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Villa Archinto Pennati

Villa Archinto Pennati
wikipedia / Albertomos / Public Domain

The Villa Archinti Pennati is a Neoclassical style rural palace outside of the town of Monza, in the Region of Lombardy, Italy.[12]

Address: Via Francesco Frisi 22, 20900 Monza

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Chiesa di San Gerardo al Corpo

Chiesa di San Gerardo al Corpo
wikipedia / Francescogb / CC BY-SA 3.0

The church of San Gerardo al Corpo, dedicated to Saint Gerardo of the Dyers, co-patron of the city of Monza, is located at 2 San Gerardo Street.

Address: Via S. Gerardo, 4, 20900 Monza

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Church of San Pietro Martire

Church of San Pietro Martire
wikipedia / MarkusMark / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Chiesa di San Pietro Martire

The church of San Pietro Martire is a 14th-century church in Monza, in Piazza San Pietro Martire.

Address: Piazza San Pietro Martire, 20900 Monza

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Sacro Cuore

Sacro Cuore
wikipedia / Public Domain

Sacro Cuore is a church in the Italian city of Monza, in the neighborhood of Triante, dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.[13]

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Cappella Espiatoria

Cappella Espiatoria
wikipedia / MarkusMark / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Expiatory Chapel in Monza is a monument-chapel built to atone and commemorate the site at which the king Humbert I was murdered on July 29, 1900, by the anarchist Gaetano Bresci. It stands near the entrance to the Royal Villa of Monza on Viale Regina Margherita and Via Matteo da Campione. Humbert's son Vittorio Emanuele III commissioned the aged architect Giuseppe Sacconi, and the work was completed by his pupil Guido Cirilli, and completed in 1910. Obelisk-like crosses emerge from a stone chapel, and are surmounted by bronze crown and royal symbols of the House of Savoy. The entrance is surmounted by a Pieta by the sculptor Lodovico Pogliaghi.

There is another such expiatory chapel to atone for a regicide, the Chapelle expiatoire in Paris, built to atone for the execution of Louis XVI.[14]

Address: Via Matteo da Campione 7/a, 20900 Monza

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Muggiò

City in Italy
wikipedia / Bozzoking / CC BY 3.0

City in Italy. Muggiò is a city in the Province of Monza and Brianza in the Italian region Lombardy, located about 15 kilometres northeast of Milan. It received the honorary title of city with a presidential decree on September 27, 1992.

Muggiò borders the following municipalities: Lissone, Desio, Monza, Nova Milanese, Cinisello Balsamo.[15]

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Museo d'Arte Contemporanea

Museo d'Arte Contemporanea
wikipedia / Author / Public Domain

Specialty museum, Museum, Art museum

Address: Viale Padania, 6, 20851 Lissone

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Church of Saints Peter and Paul

Church of Saints Peter and Paul
wikipedia / Francescogb / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Chiesa dei Santi Pietro e Paolo

The prepositural church of the Holy Apostles and Martyrs Peter and Paul is the largest house of worship in the city of Lissone and the deanery.

Address: Piazza Giovanni-XXIII, 7, 20851 Lissone

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Royal Gardens

Royal Gardens
wikipedia / MarkusMark / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Gardens of the Villa Reale in Monza are period gardens located in Monza, around the perimeter of the Villa Reale. They form a green whole with the Monza Park, although they are actually separated from it by a fence--part masonry, part gated--that nonetheless has several gates, the gates that are open at almost the same times as the park is open.

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