McDonalds in Italy Embraces Off-Menu Item: Slice of Roman Road
'MARINO, Italy Its a common enough story in Italy: An ancient ruin in this case, a tract of Roman road is discovered during the construction of a building in this case, a McDonalds and puts a halt to the work until the site can be excavated.
Rather than fret about lost time and money, McDonalds decided to sponsor the dig, and it worked with the archaeological authorities to preserve the road, built between the second and first centuries B.C.
As of Tuesday, visitors to the fast-food restaurant, about 12 miles southeast of central Rome, could walk along the 147-foot stretch of road without even having to buy a Big Mac.
Many parts of Italy contain subterranean riches, and over the centuries, countless edifices have incorporated or adapted the ruins of previous eras. Several restaurants in Rome, for example, have an important historical or archaeological lineage, like being the site where Julius Caesar was murdered, or a place where oil amphorae were stocked in ancient times. Even the McDonalds in Termini Station in Rome includes a section of the Servian Wall, from the fourth century B.C.
But the work at the McDonalds in Marino more precisely in the hamlet of Frattocchie, known as Bovillae in ancient times stands out because the project incorporated the road, which would otherwise have been reburied.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/22/world/europe/mcdonalds-rome-road.html?
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