Scaffolding, traffic chaos as Rome readies for pope's Jubilee
ROME, Italy — Rome is undergoing a facelift for the pope's 2025 Jubilee celebrations, but a month before it starts, much of the Eternal City remains a building site.
Key monuments are hidden by scaffolding, while statues are covered with plastic sheeting.
"It's weird to see a city totally under construction," Clara Jay, 20, told AFP during a visit to the Trevi fountain, where a walkway has been installed over the Baroque masterpiece and the waters stopped while it is cleaned.
The Italian capital is "still very beautiful", she added. Her 25-year-old brother Maxime, surveying a temporary pool into which tourists throw their coins, admitted to being "a bit disappointed".
A short walk away is the fountain and obelisk in front of the Pantheon, one of the best-preserved relics of ancient Rome. It, too, is boarded off.
And it's the same story across the Italian capital, as it prepares for the arrival of the 33 million people expected in 2025 for the Jubilee, a year of pilgrimage declared by Pope Francis.
Organised roughly every 25 years by the Catholic Church, the Jubilee is an opportunity for pilgrimage and prayer, and marked by religious and cultural events held across the Vatican and Rome.
At the official Jubilee shop a stone's throw from the Vatican, everything from water bottles to T-shirts bearing the event logo and its anime-inspired mascot are already on sale.
But with just a month to go until Pope Francis launches proceedings by opening the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica on December 24, the preparations seem far from complete.
Across the historic centre and beyond, new cobbled streets are being laid and pavements redone, the noise and dust of the diggers and jack hammers filling the air.
Traffic jams -- already endemic in a city where the car is king -- form between diversions, the beeping of horns adding to the din.
Dotted among the construction sites, a small army of specialists clean marbled statues and monuments sheathed in boards or plastic sheeting.
"It's a bit of a shame because it obstructs the view of things," said Susanna Catellani, a 22-year-old from northern Italy visiting Rome. "Luckily I've seen it other times, so I can get over it."
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