About

The B & B YooRoom is located a few minutes walk from the Maritime Station of Palermo, in a central area full of monuments, avenues, pedestrian areas, shopping services, restaurants. It is a few steps from Piazza Ruggero Settimo, where you can admire the Teatro Politeama and from which begins via Libertà, a long and wide tree-lined avenue, ideal for pleasant walks admiring the beautiful buildings and the large windows of the many shops.

In the opposite direction, just a few steps to reach Piazza Verdi, with the monumental Teatro Massimo, from which begins the Via Maqueda, which leads to the oldest part of the medieval and baroque city.
The “Cassaro”, a road that crosses Via Maqueda in the so-called “Quattro Canti” square, next to Piazza Pretoria, leads from one side to the “Cala” (the old port), to Steri (on Piazza Marina), an ancient magnificent fortress of Norman style, home of the Spanish viceroys.
In the other direction the Cassaro leads to the Cathedral of Palermo and the Palazzo Reale (or Palazzo dei Normanni), where those who visit the city for the first time can not go to admire the Palatine Chapel.

The B & B YooRoom is located a few minutes walk from the Maritime Station of Palermo, in a central area full of monuments, avenues, pedestrian areas, shopping services, restaurants. It is a few steps from Piazza Ruggero Settimo, where you can admire the Teatro Politeama and from which begins via Libertà, a long and wide tree-lined avenue, ideal for pleasant walks admiring the beautiful buildings and the large windows of the many shops.

In the opposite direction, just a few steps to reach Piazza Verdi, with the monumental Teatro Massimo, from which begins the Via Maqueda, which leads to the oldest part of the medieval and baroque city.
The “Cassaro”, a road that crosses Via Maqueda in the so-called “Quattro Canti” square, next to Piazza Pretoria, leads from one side to the “Cala” (the old port), to Steri (on Piazza Marina), an ancient magnificent fortress of Norman style, home of the Spanish viceroys.
In the other direction the Cassaro leads to the Cathedral of Palermo and the Palazzo Reale (or Palazzo dei Normanni), where those who visit the city for the first time can not go to admire the Palatine Chapel.