Two Free Stunning Gardens, One Perfect View: Florence’s Seasonal Escape

Florence has a very public side. Churches, museums, queues, masterpieces you feel you should see. And then there’s a more natural Florence, one that opens only for a few weeks a year and feels almost secrete, when it’s not, nor should it be.

The Giardino degli Iris and the Giardino delle Rose sit just below Piazzale Michelangelo, slightly removed from the main tourist flow, and together they form one of the most beautiful—and seasonal—walks in the city. I never miss their opening and I am glad I don’t.

The Giardino degli Iris: A Garden Born from a Competition

The Giardino degli Iris: A Garden Born from a Competition (Photo Credits: Roberta Bianchi)

The Giardino degli Iris is one of Florence’s most peculiar and charming institutions. It opens only for a short window each year, usually between late April and mid-May, timed precisely with the blooming of the irises, when the garden immerses visitors in an almost nonstop swirl of color.

The garden was created in the 1950s as a direct result of the International Iris Competition, founded by a group of Florentine women with a passion for botany and beauty. The idea was simple and brilliant: invite hybridizers from around the world to submit new iris varieties, judge them in Florence, and create a permanent space to celebrate the flower most closely associated with the city. The iris, after all, is Florence’s historic symbol.

What you find today is not a manicured formal garden, but a sloping, almost wild landscape filled with thousands of iris varieties from all over the world. Paths wind through terraces, olive trees frame the view, and the flowers themselves feel almost sculptural—dramatic shapes, improbable colors, delicate veins. It’s intimate, and because it’s only open for a few weeks, there’s a shared sense among visitors that you’re all there at exactly the right time.

Piazzale Michelangelo: The Perfect Intermezzo

The Giardino degli Iris: A Garden Born from a Competition (Photo Credits: Roberta Bianchi)

Between the two gardens sits Piazzale Michelangelo, Florence’s most famous viewpoint—and in this context, the perfect pause. Yes, it’s busy. Yes, it’s iconic. But after the quiet intensity of the Iris Garden, it works almost like an intermezzo in an opera. You stop, you look out over the city, you recalibrate. From here, Florence spreads out in full clarity: the Duomo, the river, the rooftops, the hills beyond. And then, just as importantly, you move on.

The Giardino delle Rose: Roses, Art, and Breathing Space

The Giardino delle Rose: Roses, Art, and Breathing Space (Photo Credits: Roberta Bianchi)

Just below Piazzale Michelangelo, the Giardino delle Rose offers a different mood. Larger, more relaxed, and open for a longer season (typically from May through October), this garden feels like a place Florentines actually use.

The Rose Garden was created in the 19th century and today hosts hundreds of rose varieties, along with lemon trees, pergolas, and contemporary sculptures by Jean-Michel Folon. The layout is open and welcoming, with benches, wide paths, and views that shift as you move through the space. Unlike the Iris Garden, which feels like a fleeting event, the Rose Garden invites lingering. People read, talk quietly, sit with the city spread out below them. It’s generous, informal, and deeply pleasant. When the roses are in bloom, the scent alone is reason enough to stay longer than planned.

Why This Walk Works So Well

What makes this sequence special is rhythm. The rarity of the Iris Garden. The visual reset at Piazzale Michelangelo. The relaxed openness of the Rose Garden. Together, they form a Florence that’s less about consumption and more about timing, seasonality, and presence.

It’s also a reminder that some of the city’s best experiences don’t last all year.

How to Get There

The easiest way to reach both gardens is to walk uphill from the historic center, crossing the Arno and heading toward Piazzale Michelangelo. From areas like Santa Croce or San Niccolò, the walk takes about 20–30 minutes and is scenic but steep.

If you prefer not to walk uphill, city buses stop directly at Piazzale Michelangelo. From there, the Giardino degli Iris is just beside the square (check opening dates carefully), and the Giardino delle Rose is a short downhill walk. Once you’re there, everything connects naturally on foot. No tickets, no rush—just timing.

Practical Notes

  • Giardino degli Iris: Open only for a few weeks in spring (usually late April to mid-May). Free entry, limited hours. Donations welcome.
  • Giardino delle Rose: Open from spring through fall, free entry.
  • Best time: Late morning or late afternoon for softer light and fewer people.
  • Bring time: This is not a quick-stop itinerary.

<p>The post Two Free Stunning Gardens, One Perfect View: Florence’s Seasonal Escape first appeared on Travelbinger.</p>

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