Bacaro Osteria della Rivetta
Bacaro Osteria della Rivetta is a traditional Venetian bacaro-osteria in the historic centre of Venice, taking its name from the rivetta — a small rio (canal) bank or landing — that characterises the microgeography of this water city. Named places “della Rivetta” appear across Venice wherever a short canal stretch or bank offered a gathering point for gondoliers, fishermen, and traders. The establishment at 45.4389° N, 12.3236° E continues the bacaro tradition of cicchetti and ombra wine in an intimate neighbourhood setting.
At a glance
- Type
- Bacaro-osteria — traditional Venetian wine bar and eating house
- Period
- Venetian bacaro tradition; current establishment
- Style
- Venetian vernacular: rivetta canalside setting, cicchetti, ombre wine
- Location
- Historic centre, Venice, Veneto, Italy
- Coordinates
- 45.4389° N, 12.3236° E
Overview
The word rivetta in Venetian topography refers to a small embankment alongside a minor canal — the intimate-scale waterfront that gives Venice its distinctive character at a domestic rather than monumental level. Bacari and osterie that adopted canalside location names — della Rivetta, al Ponte, alla Fondamenta — typically served the watermen and tradespeople who worked the surrounding rii. Osteria della Rivetta continues this tradition, its name anchoring it to a specific geography within Venice’s labyrinthine water network and connecting it to centuries of canalside social life.
History
Canal-bank osterie in Venice developed alongside the city’s transport and trade infrastructure: wherever goods were unloaded or gondolas moored, an osteria or taverna would establish itself to serve the workers. The rivetta (diminutive of riva, bank) designated a shorter or less important canal bank than the grand fondamente of the main canals, giving these spots a more intimate and local character. The establishments that took rivetta names tended to serve the immediate neighbourhood rather than the through-trade, making them more resilient neighbourhood anchors than establishments on the main commercial routes.
What you see
Osteria della Rivetta offers the layered experience typical of a bacaro-osteria in a canalside setting: counter cicchetti for quick visits — seppie al nero (cuttlefish in its ink), folpeti (boiled baby octopus), crostini with various toppings — and table seating for fuller meals that might include spaghetti alle vongole (clams), risotto di gò (goby fish, a Venetian lagoon speciality), and fritto misto di mare. The view or proximity to a rio adds the ambient soundtrack of water and oars that is Venice’s most distinctive sensory experience.
Cultural significance
Canalside bacari and osterie in Venice encode the city’s relationship with its water infrastructure — they are not merely places to eat but points where the social life of the canal network crystallised into architecture and habit. The preservation of these establishments is recognised as part of Venice’s broader cultural heritage challenge: maintaining living, functional urban traditions alongside the monumental architectural heritage that draws millions of visitors each year. Osteria della Rivetta, as a neighbourhood institution, represents the human-scale social fabric that gives Venice’s stones meaning.
Practical information
- Address
- Venice historic centre, canalside location (see map pin for exact location)
- Hours
- Check official website or Google Maps listing for current hours
- Service
- Counter cicchetti and table osteria service
- Reservations
- Recommended for table meals; counter service walk-in
Getting there
The coordinates (45.4389° N, 12.3236° E) place Osteria della Rivetta in the San Marco or Dorsoduro area, west of the Rialto. Vaporetto lines 1 and 2 serve the Grand Canal stops in this zone (Sant’Angelo, San Samuele, Accademia). From Accademia the surrounding calli and rii of Dorsoduro are easily walkable. The location near a rivetta means there is likely a picturesque canal view nearby. GPS: 45.4389° N, 12.3236° E.
