Doge’s Palace Opens a Restored Venice Landmark
One of the most important ceremonial rooms in the Doge’s Palace is back on the visitor route after a major conservation project. The Sala delle Quattro Porte, or Room of the Four Doors, has reopened in Venice following work supported by Save Venice, Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia and The Gritti Palace, a Luxury Collection Hotel.
Inside the Restored Palace Room
- Place: Sala delle Quattro Porte, Doge’s Palace, Venice
- Conservation period: 22 November 2023 to 30 January 2026
- Public presentation: 5 February 2026
- Partners: Save Venice, MUVE and The Gritti Palace
- Restored features: vaulted ceiling, stone portals, windows, sculptural groups and painted canvases
- Before visiting: check Doge’s Palace tickets, opening hours and room access notices
The room was a formal passage into some of Venice’s most powerful political spaces, including the Senate, the Collegio and the Council of Ten. Foreign diplomats, royal guests and Venetian patricians passed through it before official meetings. After a fire damaged part of the palace in 1574, its rebuilding and decoration brought in leading artists and architects of the period.
A visit to the restored room gives the Doge’s Palace route more depth, especially for people who have already seen Venice’s headline sights. It sits close to St Mark’s Square, the palace courtyard, the Senate Hall and the waterfront at Riva degli Schiavoni. Art-focused visitors can build a stronger day around the palace, Museo Correr and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection.
“The Gritti Palace and our associates were proud to lend our efforts to this historically important restoration. This room is a source of pride for Venetians. It carries the memory of the glory of the Venetian Republic and how Venice once presented itself to the world. We were excited to play a role in the preservation and continue to care for the city’s cultural heritage, helping ensure the magnificence of the Sala delle Quattro Porte and other historic landmarks can be experienced for generations to come."
The restored room gives visitors a clearer reason to spend more time inside the Doge’s Palace, beyond the usual quick stop near St Mark’s. The room shows how Venice used architecture, art and ceremony to impress the people who entered its government buildings. For a short city break, it makes the Doge’s Palace worth slowing down for, instead of treating it as one more crowded stop near St Mark’s.