
Benvenuti al Taylor’s Love Solferino B&B, situato nel cuore storico di Milano. Il nostro B&B offre un rifugio accogliente e raffinato per i viaggiatori in cerca di comfort e praticità. Posizionato in Via Solferino 56, Milano (CAP 20121), ci troviamo a pochi passi dalle principali attrazioni della città, inclusi i migliori quartieri per lo shopping.
Milano è conosciuta in tutto il mondo come una delle capitali della moda, e fare shopping qui è un’esperienza unica. Che tu sia alla ricerca di brand di lusso, boutique esclusive o tendenze all’avanguardia, la Zona 1 all’interno del Cerchio dei Bastioni è il posto perfetto. Ecco una guida alle migliori mete per lo shopping in questa vivace area di Milano.
Via Monte Napoleone
Nessuna esperienza di shopping a Milano può dirsi completa senza una visita a Via Monte Napoleone. Questa strada iconica ospita alcuni dei marchi di lusso più prestigiosi al mondo, tra cui Gucci, Prada e Versace. A pochi passi dal nostro B&B, potrai scoprire le ultime collezioni dei più grandi stilisti e vivere il meglio della moda italiana.
Via della Spiga
Un’altra destinazione imperdibile per lo shopping di lusso è Via della Spiga. Nota per la sua atmosfera elegante e sofisticata, questa via accoglie boutique di alta gamma come Dolce & Gabbana e Roberto Cavalli, dove troverai capi esclusivi che incarnano lo stile milanese.
Corso Como
Per un’esperienza di shopping più eclettica, dirigiti a Corso Como. Quest’area è famosa per le sue boutique di tendenza e i concept store che combinano moda, arte e design. Qui si trova il celebre 10 Corso Como, uno dei concept store più rinomati al mondo, dove potrai scoprire pezzi unici e vivere un’esperienza di shopping all’insegna dello stile.
Quartiere Brera
Con il suo fascino bohémien e la sua atmosfera artistica, il Quartiere Brera è un’altra ottima meta per chi cerca boutique esclusive. Passeggiando per le sue stradine, troverai negozi indipendenti e gallerie d’arte che offrono gioielli fatti a mano, abiti vintage e opere d’arte uniche. Un luogo perfetto per acquistare oggetti originali e sostenere gli artigiani locali.
Corso Vittorio Emanuele II
Se sei alla ricerca delle ultime tendenze, Corso Vittorio Emanuele II è la meta ideale. Questa vivace via dello shopping è costellata di negozi di marchi popolari come Zara, H&M e Mango. A breve distanza dal nostro B&B, potrai trascorrere una giornata intera tra shopping e una vivace atmosfera urbana.
Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
Accanto al celebre Duomo di Milano, la Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II è non solo un capolavoro architettonico, ma anche un paradiso per lo shopping. Tra marchi di lusso e boutique eleganti, troverai anche caffè e ristoranti perfetti per una pausa, immersi in uno scenario mozzafiato.
Rinascente
Se desideri acquistare articoli per la casa e il lifestyle, Rinascente è una tappa obbligata. Questo grande magazzino di lusso offre un’ampia gamma di prodotti, dalla moda di alta gamma agli oggetti per l’arredo. Situato nel cuore di Milano, è una meta comoda per gli ospiti del nostro B&B.
Eataly
Per gli amanti del buon cibo, Eataly nel quartiere Porta Nuova è un vero paradiso. Qui troverai prodotti gastronomici italiani, utensili da cucina e una vasta scelta di ristoranti. È il posto perfetto per acquistare souvenir gourmet o per goderti un delizioso pasto dopo una giornata di shopping.
Che tu sia alla ricerca di brand di lusso, boutique esclusive o capi di tendenza, la Zona 1 all’interno del Cerchio dei Bastioni offre un’esperienza di shopping ricca e variegata. Soggiornando al Taylor’s Love Solferino B&B, ti troverai nel cuore di Milano, con tutti questi straordinari luoghi a portata di mano. Scopri il meglio della moda e dello stile milanese, godendo di un soggiorno confortevole e conveniente.
Why Milan Has Always Been a World-Class T
Long before the 2015 World Exposition put Milan on every international traveller's shortlist, the city had already been quietly captivating visitors for centuries.
The Myth of Milan's "Discovery"
It became fashionable, in the years following EXPO 2015, to speak of Milan as though it had been rediscovered — as though the city had suddenly emerged, blinking into the international spotlight, from decades of obscurity. This narrative was always somewhat insulting to Milan, and deeply inaccurate. The city has been one of Europe's great cultural and commercial capitals since the Middle Ages, and serious travellers have always known it.
What EXPO did was amplify. It brought infrastructure, investment, and media attention. But the bones of an extraordinary tourist destination were already there, laid down over two thousand years of continuous occupation, creativity, and ambition.
Roman Mediolanum: The Empire's Second Capital
Milan's history as a destination begins with the Romans, who established Mediolanum as the capital of the Western Roman Empire in 286 AD under Emperor Diocletian. At its peak, Milan was arguably more important than Rome itself as an administrative centre — the city where Ambrose served as bishop, where Augustine was baptised, where the Edict of Milan in 313 AD guaranteed religious tolerance throughout the empire.
This heritage runs deep beneath the contemporary city. The Columns of San Lorenzo, standing since the 4th century, are a miraculous survival from Roman Milan. The Basilica di Sant'Ambrogio, consecrated in 379 AD, continues to hold mass in one of the most beautiful early Christian basilicas in the world. Milan history is not a museum piece — it's written into the living city.
The Sforzas and the Renaissance Moment
In the 15th century, Milan became one of the dynamos of the Italian Renaissance under the Sforza family. Duke Ludovico Sforza assembled at his court the finest minds of the age: Bramante redesigned the city's churches and invented the architectural vocabulary that would spread across Europe; Leonardo da Vinci spent nearly twenty years in Milan, producing not only The Last Supper but engineering projects, sculptures, and scientific notebooks of breathtaking ambition.
The result was a city of extraordinary cultural density. The Milan tourist attractions of today — the Castello Sforzesco, Santa Maria delle Grazie and its refectory, the Pinacoteca di Brera — are direct descendants of this Sforza patronage. When Grand Tour travellers began crossing the Alps in the 17th and 18th centuries, Milan was an obligatory stop precisely because of this Renaissance inheritance.
The Grand Tour: Milan's First Tourist Boom
The Grand Tour — the educational journey through Europe undertaken by wealthy young men and women — was the world's first organised tourism industry. And Milan was firmly on the itinerary. Stendhal lived here and set his Charterhouse of Parma in its environs. Goethe visited and was struck by La Scala's magnificence. Byron and Shelley passed through. Mark Twain, in The Innocents Abroad, wrote of the Duomo's "wilderness of pinnacles" with awe.
What they came for was what Milan tourism still offers: La Scala, the Duomo, Leonardo, the Pinacoteca. The raw material has not changed. Only the packaging has.
La Scala: Two and a Half Centuries of Excellence
Teatro alla Scala opened its doors in 1778 and has never really closed them since. For 250 years it has been the global benchmark for operatic excellence — the stage where Verdi premiered Otello and Falstaff, where Toscanini set standards that conductors still aspire to, where Maria Callas defined the modern soprano.
To visit Milan and attend even a single performance at La Scala is to participate in a living cultural institution of unmatched prestige. And the theatre's museum, open daily, allows non-ticket-holders to walk through its gilded halls and understand why this building has drawn music lovers from every continent since the 18th century.
Fashion and Design: The 20th-Century Chapter
Milan's transformation into the global capital of fashion and design was the great 20th-century chapter in its tourist story. Giorgio Armani, Gianni Versace, Prada, Dolce & Gabbana — all built their empires from Milanese ateliers. The Quadrilatero della Moda became in the 1970s and 80s what it remains today: the most concentrated luxury shopping district on earth.
Simultaneously, Milan became the world capital of furniture and industrial design. The annual Salone del Mobile, first held in 1961, is still the largest and most influential design fair in the world. Every April, the city reinvents itself as a laboratory of ideas — hundreds of thousands of designers, architects, and design enthusiasts transforming every palazzo, courtyard, and canal-side space into an exhibition.
The Duomo: A Destination in Itself
No account of Milan tourist attractions is complete without the cathedral. Construction of the Duomo began in 1386 and wasn't technically completed until 1965 — nearly six centuries of continuous work that produced the third-largest cathedral in the world and the finest example of Flamboyant Gothic architecture in Italy.
The rooftop terraces offer one of the most extraordinary urban panoramas in Europe: 135 marble spires stretching in every direction, with the Alps visible on clear days beyond the city's edge. On the cathedral's highest point, a golden statue of the Madonna — la Madonnina — has watched over Milan since 1774. She remains the city's most beloved symbol.
Why Milan Deserves Its Place on Every Itinerary
EXPO 2015 gave Milan new confidence and a renovated Porta Nuova district. But the city's claims as a world-class tourist destination rest on foundations far older and more enduring: Roman ruins, Renaissance masterpieces, centuries of operatic tradition, the global leadership of fashion and design, and a quality of daily life — the coffee, the aperitivo, the civic pride — that visitors absorb almost by osmosis.
Milan does not need a world fair to justify your visit. It never did.
Taylor's Love Solferino B&B places you in the heart of all this — 9 minutes' walk from Stazione Garibaldi, 12 minutes from La Scala, in the Brera neighbourhood that connects old Milan to the new.