It was commissioned in the mid-19th century by Ferdinand II of Bourbon. Its purpose was strategic, almost mysterious: a rapid and secure military escape route intended to connect the Royal Palace with the Chiaia barracks, passing beneath the Pizzofalcone hill. It was a project ahead of its time, designed by the great architect Errico Alvino, which intersected the ancient aqueducts and cisterns already running through the underground.
But in Naples, history never follows a straight line.
The king's dream soon became something else. During the Second World War, these immense tunnels became a refuge for thousands of Neapolitans. Down here, entire families found shelter from the wail of the sirens and the horror of the bombardments. To walk here today is to feel the echo of those voices, read the graffiti left on the walls, and witness the city's resilience firsthand.
And then, oblivion.
In the post-war period, the Bourbon Tunnel became an incredible judicial depot. For decades, vintage cars, Vespas, and impounded motorbikes were lowered into and amassed in this dark womb, only to be forgotten.
Visiting the Bourbon Tunnel today is a breathtaking experience. It is a surreal journey, walking among remnants of the war and the husks of 1950s and '60s vehicles, frozen in time and covered in the dust of ages.
This is not a mere visit: it is an exploration into the most hidden folds of Neapolitan history, an immersion into a real-life film set, where every object tells a story cut short.
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