From Tarello Park to Parco Alcamo Morello
The gardens under the railway. And the last fields before the neighbourhood.
The gardens under the railway. And the last fields before the neighbourhood.

It’s a short variant of Route 6, but no less interesting. It starts from Parco Tarello and slips south under the Milan–Venice railway line, through a dense urban fabric dotted with small green areas.
The best part comes in the final stretch, between Via San Polo and Via Romiglia: here, between apartment blocks and car parks, you still find surviving agricultural views and old strips of cultivated land. A fragment of the city suspended between past and development, where greenery is not decoration but landscape.
The walk ends at Parco Alcamo Morello, which looks out towards the edge of the neighbourhood and seems to say: this is where the city ends. Or perhaps where it changes shape.
Angelidakis’ Columns – Bresciadue: where the metro becomes museum #4.
Underground, Greece appears. And it’s no mirage. Four enormous Doric columns invade the Bresciadue metro station. They’re the dramatic gesture created by Andreas Angelidakis for SubBrixia.
The artist plays with architecture and flips the rules: he turns the metro into a pop archaeological site, where the ancient meets the future without asking permission.
Forget the usual stop: here you descend into history, but on our own terms.
Mulberries, silkworms and threads of memory.
Between Parco Basaglia and Viale Duca degli Abruzzi, an old row of mulberry trees still survives.
Once, they were used to feed silkworms, a key source of income for many farming families.
Today they remain as silent witnesses to a rural economy built on patience, precision and hard-working hands.
The starting point is easily accessible from the Lamarmora or Bresciadue metro stations, while the Poliambulanza station is a short distance from the end of the route. Along the way, bus lines 2, 9, 10, 12, 13 and 16 provide additional access and return options.