Montemartini Power Station
The Centrale Montemartini is a branch of the Capitoline Museums located in the Ostiense district of Rome. Housed in the city’s first public electricity plant, built in 1912, it presents a striking juxtaposition of ancient Greek and Roman sculptures set against the backdrop of massive early-twentieth-century industrial machinery.
At a glance
- Type
- Industrial heritage museum · branch of the Capitoline Museums
- Period
- Power plant built 1912; converted to museum 1997
- Style
- Early 20th-century industrial architecture; exposed machinery halls
- Location
- Via Ostiense 106, 00154 Rome, Italy
- Coordinates
- 41.8665° N, 12.4780° E
Overview
The Centrale Montemartini is one of Rome’s most unusual museum spaces, blending the ancient and the industrial in a single setting. Named after Giovanni Montemartini, the city councillor who championed Rome’s first public electricity network, the plant supplied power to the city from 1912 until it was decommissioned in the 1960s. Today it operates as a permanent museum venue under the Capitoline Museums, displaying hundreds of ancient sculptures recovered from excavations across the city.
History
The power station was inaugurated in 1912 as part of Rome’s push to modernise its public infrastructure during the early twentieth century. Its two main halls — the Engine Room and the Boiler Room — housed diesel and steam turbines that served the capital for over half a century. After closure, the building languished until 1997, when the Capitoline Museums used it as a temporary venue to house sculptures displaced during the renovation of the Palazzo dei Conservatori. The exhibition proved so successful that it was made permanent in 2005.
What you see
Visitors walk through two vast industrial halls where marble statues, portrait busts, and sarcophagi stand between original diesel engines, boilers, and turbines preserved in situ. The collection spans finds from the Esquiline Hill, the Gardens of Sallust, and the Flaminian Way, ranging from Hellenistic originals to Imperial Roman copies. The visual contrast — pale stone gods and Roman senators framed by black iron machines — is the defining aesthetic experience of the museum.
Cultural significance
The Centrale Montemartini is considered a pioneering example of industrial heritage reuse, recognised internationally as a model for adapting disused infrastructure into cultural venues. The decision to keep the machinery in place rather than clear it out transformed what could have been a conventional sculpture gallery into a space that simultaneously preserves two distinct layers of Roman history: the ancient and the modern industrial.
Practical information
- Address
- Via Ostiense 106, 00154 Rome, Italy
- Hours
- Tuesday–Sunday 09:00–19:00; closed Mondays. Check official website for updated schedules and ticket prices.
- Admission
- Included in the Capitoline Museums combined ticket
- Website
- Check official website for current information
Getting there
The museum is located in the Ostiense district, reachable by Metro Line B to Garbatella station (approx. 10 minutes on foot) or by tram line 3. Bus lines 23 and 769 stop on Via Ostiense near the entrance. Parking is available on surrounding streets.
Sources & resources
Find it on the map
See this place and what’s around it →Historical events at this place (3)
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