Grotta Gigante (Giant Cave of Sgonico)
Grotta Gigante — the Giant Cave — is a spectacular limestone cavern on the Trieste Karst plateau near the village of Sgonico in Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy. Its single central chamber measures 107 metres high, 65 metres wide, and 130 metres long, earning it a place in the 1995 Guinness Book of Records as the world’s largest show cave. First explored in 1840, it has been open to tourists since 1908 and is home to two of the world’s longest geodetic pendulums, used for scientific measurement of Earth’s crustal movements.
At a glance
- Type
- Show cave (karst cave open to the public)
- Period
- First explored 1840; fully mapped 1897; open to tourists since 1908
- Style
- Natural limestone formation (karst speleogenesis)
- Location
- Borgo Grotta Gigante / Briščiki, Municipality of Sgonico, Province of Trieste, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy
- Coordinates
- 45.7097° N, 13.7646° E
Overview
Set within the dramatic limestone karst landscape above Trieste, Grotta Gigante is the largest accessible single-chamber show cave in the world by volume. It forms part of the extensive karst cave network that underlies the Carso plateau, shaped over millions of years by the dissolution of limestone by mildly acidic rainwater. The cave is not only a natural spectacle of towering stalactites and stalagmites but also an active scientific laboratory, housing precision pendulum instruments that monitor geophysical activity. A Museum of Speleology adjacent to the entrance complements the underground experience.
History
The cave was first entered in 1840 by Antonio Federico Lindner, who was searching for underground water sources for the Trieste aqueduct. Systematic exploration and full mapping were completed by Andrea Perko in 1897. The cave was equipped for tourist visits and inaugurated for the public in 1908. A major expansion of visitor infrastructure in 1957 brought electric lighting and improved access, significantly increasing visitor numbers. The 1995 Guinness World Records designation as the world’s largest show cave was superseded in 2010 when La Verna cave in France — measuring 255 by 225 by 195 metres — opened to visitors.
What you see
The descent into the cavern reveals a vast underground cathedral of limestone formations: immense stalactites hanging from the ceiling and stalagmites rising from the floor, including distinctive “dish-pile” formations created by water droplets falling from 80 metres above and depositing calcium carbonate in broad, layered sheets. Two horizontal pendulums, approximately 100 metres long, hang suspended in the cave’s upper reaches; these are the longest geodetic pendula in the world and are used by researchers to measure micro-movements of the Earth’s crust. The guided tour follows a steep electrically-lit path through the main chamber, lasting approximately one hour.
Cultural significance
Grotta Gigante is among the most visited natural heritage sites in Friuli Venezia Giulia and represents one of the iconic expressions of the Trieste Karst landscape, which has shaped the local culture, language, and even global scientific vocabulary — the very word “karst” derives from the Slovenian name for this plateau. The cave’s dual identity as a natural wonder and scientific station makes it an unusual site where geological tourism and geophysical research coexist.
Practical information
- Address
- Borgo Grotta Gigante 42, 34010 Sgonico TS, Italy
- Opening hours
- Open year-round; check official website for seasonal timetables
- Tours
- Guided tours only; duration approximately 1 hour; steep path — wear comfortable shoes
- Admission
- Check official website for current prices
- Virtual tour
- A 360° virtual tour is available online — check culturalheritageonline.com for the link
Getting there
Sgonico is located approximately 15 km north of Trieste city centre on the Karst plateau. By car, follow the SS202 or the road towards Opicina and Sgonico from Trieste. Bus line 42 (Trieste Trasporti) runs from Trieste central station (Piazza Oberdan) to Borgo Grotta Gigante. The nearest international airport is Trieste Airport (TRS) at Ronchi dei Legionari, approximately 30 km away.
