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Folding Road Maps & Atlases
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Italy Folding Road Maps & Atlases
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Map Image courtesy of
Philographikon Gallery
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Why Carry a Map?
Maps are an important part of planning and participating in your
Italian holiday. Sometimes you need a road map to help navigate your way across the winding Tuscan roads, or through the narrow streets
of Rome. Other times you look for a map just to help you pinpoint the location of a restaurant or
hotel.
Maps do what a guide book cannot. Maps help you learn about the geography of the area ... get
an overall picture of the layout of a region, province or city before you get there.
It is true that many rental cars come with GPS devices these days. While a GPS device can get you from point A to
point B with little trouble (most of the time) a map still gives you a better scope. Besides when you have figured out that the GPS device cannot do
what it states it can it's too late! Maps will always have value.
Map Scale
Map scale can be a confusing subject. Maps are generally considered to be 'large scale' or 'small scale'. Normally the wider the
scope of the map, the smaller the scale. For example, a map of the country of Italy has a wide scope. It has to cover all the way
from the Alps in the north to the sunny island of Sicily. Therefore it has to be a small scale map.
On the contrary, a map of Cinque Terre
covering a small distance of only a few miles would be a large scale map.
That is a very quick and general explanation of map scale but it should help clarify the difference.
Maps For Your Trip
So you've decided you need some maps. Which maps are right for you? That depends on your trip.
Most people visit the cities of Rome, Florence and Venice. They will move from city to city by train or by tour bus but will do very
little venturing beyond the main centers of the city. These type of tourists need city maps. There are a variety to choose from but one folding map
and one 'Streetwise'-type map for each city will do the trick. The folding map can be used before the trip to mark your hotel, sightseeing points and
restaurant locations. The 'Streetwise' map is small and laminated. It folds down to fit in a pocket or purse but has remarkable detail.
Others will venture around the countryside in addition to seeing the main cities. Most major cities are connected by
major highways and
good quality roads. Therefore a regional map will be sufficient. You will have to figure out what regions you will be visiting but the
regional map
will provide decent detail (they are a smaller scale) and have most roads on them. Normally they fold out and become quite large.
Don't rely on the
maps distributed by your car rental firm. These are normally just a country map and don't show all the roads.
Another type of visitor is a 'slow traveler'. They will stay in a villa or an apartment in the countryside and never
really move around
much. These type of travelers would best benefit from a provincial map. In Italy there are 20 regions. Each region is divided into a
few provinces.
The provincial maps are a large scale (normally between 1:100,000 and 1:150,000). The provincial maps are perfect when used to try and
find your villa
or when you want to get an idea of what is in the area of your villa.
Maps are specific and the right one can be invaluable. Our friends at TrekTools.com have a selection of 272 maps of Italy. Armed with the
information above, you
should be able to find and purchase the right mix of maps to help make your trip to Italy the best it can be.
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TrekTools.com, offers over 250 regional,
provincial, city and
tourist maps of varying sizes and scales. All the maps are useful to help navigate the Italy by car or on foot. These are
professionally produced maps by reputable companies such as Michelin, Touring Club Italiano and Litografia Artistica Cartografia.
Italian City Maps
City maps can be a great value when you are trying to find points of interest, navigate your way from point A to point
B, or just get a
general overview of the city. Sometimes it's not necessary to get a map in advance for the major cities, but for the less important
cities there is no
guarantee you will be able to find one on the spot.
City map scales vary from 1:7500 to 1:20,000 but they will always have good street data and most have points of interest
marked right on
them.
Find a complete list of Italian City Maps
at
TrekTools.com.
Italian Tourist Maps
Tourist maps are the only non-political maps TrekTools.com offers. These maps cover the tourist area instead of
provincial or regional
borders. These maps are often a superior scale (as little as 1:25,000) and provide good detail of paths and some topographical
information. It is
important to note though that these maps are not specific topographical maps or hiking maps.
See a complete listing of Italian Tourist
Maps to see if one
is right for you.
Italian Provincial Maps
Every Italian region has several localized areas called provinces. Often when you rent a villa and stay for a week or
so time is spent
in one particular province instead of moving around from city to city.
Italian Provincial maps are a greater scale (between 1:100,000 and 1:150,000) so they provide great detail for gravel
roads, small
churches and show towns not found on other smaller scale maps. You might need more of them to cover a larger area but they are also
easier to handle as
their unfolded size is more managable when you are driving.
There are 104 Italian provinces. Find the complete list of Italian Provincial maps at TrekTools.com
Italian Regional Maps
Italy has 20 regions. These are similar to states in the USA. The Italian regional names are what most people are most
familiar.
Regions such as Tuscany, Sicily and Calabria top the popularity list.
Because regions cover a larger area the maps covering them are a smaller scale. Scales from 1:200,000 to 1:250,000
provide good detail
for using even the less important roads but unfolded may not be as convenient. Regional maps are great for pre-trip planning when you
can lay the map
out on a table and see the entire region in one picture.
TrekTools.com offers two product lines for regional maps. The first is from Touring Club Italiano. These are better
scale and show
more detail, but they are larger. The variety from Litografia Artistica Cartografia (LAC) is also very good though a slightly smaller
scale. We use
and recommend either very highly. See the complete list of Italian Regional
Maps.
Italian Super-Regional Maps and Atlases
For those covering larger amounts of ground in a smaller amount of time you might find the line of maps from Michelin
most useful.
Michelin offers 4 maps covering 4 or 5 regions each. The scale is not good enough to depend on for countryside driving (1:400,000)but
for highway
driving and major regional highways these maps can be useful. The 4 maps offered are:
Michelin 561 -
Northwest Italy
Covers the regions of Piemonte, Lombardia, Valle d'Aosta and Liguria and offers small inset maps of the cities of
Torino, Milan, and
Genova.
Michelin 562 -
Northeast Italy
Covers the regions of Trentino Alto Adige, Veneto, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and Emilia Romagna and offers small inset maps
of the cities of
Venice, Verona, and Bologna.
Michelin 563 - Central
Italy
Covers the regions of Tuscany, Umbria, Marche, Lazio and Abruzzo as well as San Marino and offers small inset maps of
the cities of
Florence and Rome.
Michelin 564 - Southern
Italy
Covers the regions of Molise, Campania, Puglia, Basilicata and Calabria and offers small inset maps of the cities of
Naples and Bari.
If you want the coverage but also want better detail consider buying an atlas. Touring Club Italiano offers 3 regional
atlases which
are the same scale as regional maps above, but they are bound in a nice book form. The book is about 15"x11" but it provides good
quality maps easy for
a navigator to manage in the car.
TCI Atlas -
North
The Touring Club Italia's Northern Italy Road Atlas covers the Italian regions of Liguria, Piemonte, Valle d'Aosta,
Lombardia, Veneto,
Trentino Alto Adige, Friuli Venezia Giulia, and Emilia Romagna.
The 234 page atlas includes the regions denoted above in 1:200,000 scale, plus the areas of Turin (Torino), Milano
(Milan), Northwest
Milan, Northeast Milan, Varese, Como/Lecco, Bergamo, Verona, Padova, Venezia (Venice), Trieste, Genova, and Bologna in a special section
with 1:80,000
scale. There are also 55 city maps and an index of places.
TCI Atlas -
Central
The Touring Club Italia's Central Italy Road Atlas covers the Italian regions of Tuscany (Toscana), Umbria, Marche,
Lazio, Abruzzo,
Molise and Sardegna.
The 182 page atlas includes the regions denoted above in 1:200,000 scale, plus the areas of Pisa/Lucca, Pistoia/Prato,
Firenze
(Florence), Livorno, Perugia, Ancona, Pescara/Chieti, Roma (Rome), Colli Albani, and Cagliari in a special section with 1:80,000 scale.
There are also
45 city maps and an index of places.
TCI Atlas -
South
The Touring Club Italia's Southern Italy Road Atlas covers the Italian regions of Campania, Puglia, Basilicata, Calabria
and Sicily.
The 162 page atlas includes the regions denoted above in 1:200,000 scale, plus the areas of Caserta, Napoli (Naples),
the Sorrento
Penisula, Bari, Palermo, Reggio di Calabria/Messina, and Catania in a special section with 1:80,000 scale. There are also 47 city maps
and an index of
places.
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TrekTools.com, also offers an impressive selection
of maps in France as
well as Italy, so visit their site today.
Travel-Italy.com receives a small commission for purchases made from referred clients. This is one way we can
justify the cost of
operating this site. We thank you for your patronage!
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