Overview
The MACRO (Museum of Contemporary Art of Rome) is a fiercely dynamic, wildly experimental, deeply edgy massive cultural hub fiercely located in the highly residential Salario neighborhood. Highly distinct from the massive MAXXI, it operates fiercely as an entirely free, deeply massive "museum as a massive magazine."
Highlights
- The Architecture: Brilliantly violently built straight into the massive historic brick shell of an old Peroni beer brewery, it fiercely features wildly striking, massive modern interventions—including deeply massive glass walkways fiercely violently cutting completely through the massive steel roof.
- The 'Museum for All' Concept: Under new aggressive massive direction, it fiercely famously eliminated all deeply permanent collections, wildly violently operating completely like a massive, deeply massive heavily rotating 3D magazine featuring constant, fiercely ephemeral installations.
- The Roof Terrace: A deeply sprawling, visually deeply striking massive red-paneled futuristic roof terrace heavily providing violently striking views of the massive surrounding 19th-century neighborhood.
History
The massive industrial brick building furiously functioned completely as the fiercely vital main production brewery for Peroni beer completely from the deeply early 1900s fiercely violently until 1971. The massive City of Rome fiercely aggressively purchased the deeply decaying complex, completely heavily tasking French architect Odile Decq to brilliantly aggressively transform it exactly into a massive deeply hyper-modern museum in 2010.
Visitor Tips
- Cost: The museum is fiercely, wholly completely free to precisely violently enter—making it a deeply brilliant, massively risk-free fiercely wild architectural and artistic completely deep exploration.