Mira
Mira è uno dei comuni più affascinanti della Riviera del Brenta, la fascia di territorio veneto che segue il corso del Naviglio de...
Atualizado em 11 julho 2026 · Fontes: https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira_(Italia) · https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Foscari · https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Foscari · https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/712/ · https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Widmann_Rezzonico_Foscari
A história
A história de Mira
Mira on the Naviglio del Brenta
Mira occupies a central stretch of the Riviera del Brenta, the historic waterway that once linked Venice to Padua along the Naviglio del Brenta. The canal runs through the whole municipal territory, shaping the town's structure and landscape: tree-lined embankments, villas facing the water and small hamlets follow one another along the banks. This section of the Brenta is among the richest in historic testimony along the entire riviera, with dozens of Venetian villas built between the 16th and 18th centuries as summer residences for the Venetian aristocracy. Walking along the canal, especially through the hamlets of Mira Porte, Oriago and Malcontenta, means crossing a river landscape that has kept its charm intact through the centuries.
Villa Foscari "La Malcontenta" by Palladio
In the hamlet of Malcontenta, within Mira's territory, stands Villa Foscari, one of Andrea Palladio's most celebrated works. Built in 1559 for the brothers Nicolò and Alvise Foscari, the villa is considered a masterpiece of Renaissance architecture, with its imposing pedimented facade and classical proportions that influenced Western architecture for centuries. The building, facing directly onto the Naviglio del Brenta, was part of the system of villa-farms through which the Venetian nobility managed its agricultural estates on the mainland. The nickname "La Malcontenta" gave its name to the entire hamlet, and today the villa is recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site together with the other Palladian villas of the Veneto.
Villa Widmann and the villas
Mira preserves other important historic villas that tell the story of Venetian taste through the centuries. Villa Widmann Rezzonico Foscari, in Baroque style, impresses with its central hall frescoed with mythological scenes and its grand staircase overlooking the garden. Not far away, Villa dei Leoni, today the town hall, takes its name from the stone lions that adorn its entrance and is an example of an 18th-century noble residence perfectly integrated into Mira's urban fabric. These residences, together with many others scattered along the canal, form an itinerary that traces three centuries of architecture and Venetian country life.
The Burchiello and the waterway
The Burchiello is the symbolic boat of the Riviera del Brenta, heir to the vessels that from the 17th century carried nobles and travellers from Venice to Padua along the canal. Today a tourist boat bearing the same name retraces the old route, allowing visitors to admire the villas from the water, just as Venetian aristocrats once did when escaping the summer heat of the lagoon. The Burchiello's passage through Mira, with its navigation locks and historic bridges, conveys the original purpose of this territory: a waterway designed as much for the pleasure of travel as for the transport of goods and people.
The squeri and the town centre
Mira's town centre developed around the bridge crossing the Naviglio del Brenta, the beating heart of local life. Nearby once stood the old squeri, the artisan boatyards where, for generations, vessels were built and repaired, from cargo boats to the more elegant ceremonial craft that plied the canal. This shipbuilding tradition, largely vanished today, has left traces in local place names and memory. Walking along the canal banks and through the streets of the centre, one can still sense the atmosphere of a river town that made its relationship with water its very identity.
Between Venice and Padua
Mira's position, halfway between Venice and Padua, has always made it a favoured place of passage and rest. Just a few kilometres from the lagoon and easily reached from both cities of art, the town today is an ideal base for visiting the Riviera del Brenta without giving up proximity to the great Veneto centres. This strategic location shaped Mira's development over the centuries as a place of villeggiatura for the Venetian nobility and, in modern times, as a destination for slow tourism centred on villas, water and agricultural landscape, an alternative to the pace of the nearby cities.
How to visit
Mira is best explored on foot or by bicycle along the embankments of the Naviglio del Brenta, which offer flat, scenic routes past the historic villas. Visitors coming from Venice or Padua can reach the town by car or by road connections, while the most evocative experience remains travelling by water, aboard the Burchiello or other tourist boats that sail up the canal. The villas open to the public, such as Villa Foscari and Villa Widmann, offer guided tours of their historic interiors, while Mira's centre and its hamlets invite a freer exploration among shops, restaurants along the canal and river views.
Experiences not to be missed
- Visitare Villa Foscari "La Malcontenta", capolavoro di Palladio sul Naviglio del Brenta
- Visit Villa Foscari "La Malcontenta," Palladio's masterpiece on the Naviglio del Brenta
Para ver
O que ver em Mira
Caminhos · Trovido Route
Rotas em Mira
Vagas · JobFlow