A space for professional and experiential connection where everyone is welcome. Each Starbucks® store aims to be your Third Place, an interconnected space between home, leisure and work. In this map we have marked your Third Place in Milan: a space where you can stop by on your way to the office and can become your office; a space that drives you out of home and can be your home.

 

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Must-see

Did you just grab your double espresso macchiato at the Starbucks Reserve™ Roastery in Piazza Cordusio?

This is your chance to take a grand walk in the center of Milano.

Piazza Duomo is just a few palazzos away: admire the largest Gothic cathedral in the world, visit Museo del Novecento and then enter Galleria Vittorio Emanuele, the historic shopping arcade full of cafés and luxury stores, leading to Piazza Scala, with the statue of Leonardo da Vinci and Teatro alla Scala, the world temple of opera.

Watching the new skyline

If you are in Viale Restelli and decide to have a coffee at Starbucks®, congratulations, because you are in the Isola district, where you can see the city skyline changing before your eyes.

This is one the coolest areas in the city and you can take a walk to experience the architectural dimension of the neighborhood and its alternative vibe.

If you walk along Viale Restelli, there is the skyscraper of Palazzo Lombardia and its complex. You will then arrive in Via de Castillia, with its restaurants and playgrounds, and see the Vertical Forest. Then there is via Borsieri, with artisan shops, pubs and cafés, which extends to Piazzale Lagosta, where you can find the new covered market serving delicatessen and gourmet foods.

Garibaldi and the Brera Art District

Starbucks® Garibaldi is an ideal starting point to explore Brera, Milano’s artsy neighborhood.

If you don't want to get lost in the cobbled and charming alleys of Brera, follow our path.
With your frappuccino, do window shopping in Corso Garibaldi until you reach Via Moscova.
You have arrived in Largo Treves: take the historic Via Solferino (where Corriere della Sera has its HQ) which then takes you to Via Brera and the immortal art of Pinacoteca di Brera, accompanied by the Brera Botanical Garden and the Braidense National Library.

From there, it is easy to get to Piazza del Carmine and Parco Sempione.

Don’t disturb the flamingos

Going out with a coffee at Starbucks® Durini, you can discover a truly special area of Milano: Quadrilatero del Silenzio. Not to be missed is Via Mozart, where you can visit Villa Necchi Campiglio, with its garden open to the public.
Villa Locatelli hosts a population of pink flamingos by its fountain. Our advice is to admire the facades of the majestic neoclassical and liberty-style buildings walking in the direction of Piazza Elenora Duse, where you arrive in Corso Venezia passing under the majestic arch of the architect Portaluppi.
Here you can choose between the green of the Palestro Gardens, where you can find the Municipal Museum of Natural History , the Modern Art Gallery GAM, or the dazzling combination of Etrurian and modern art of the Rovati Foundation Museum, just opened.

L.O.V.E. is in the air

 

Via Torino is one of the commercial streets of the city, so if you’ve had a coffee at Starbucks® in Via Torino, you certainly have the energy to do a shopping streak from Piazza Duomo to Colonne di San Lorenzo, where Roman vestiges are the background for the Milanese movida, which starts there and extends into the night along the Navigli canals.

Alternatively, you can walk downtown to 5 Vie, the five streets.

Take Via San Maurilio and then Via Santa Marta, up to this very special intersection, where five different medieval streets converge. Each of them enables the discovery of art galleries, courtyards, flowered balconies and windowsills, exclusive boutiques.

Very near is also the Ambrosiana Gallery, home of some unique masterpiece such as Caravaggio's Fruit Basket and the Atlantic Code by Leonardo da Vinci.

For us, the ideal destination of this itinerary is Piazza Affari, with the incredible L.O.V.E. sculpture by Cattelan.

Centrale has memory and power

A takeaway coffee from Starbucks® Stazione Centrale is the perfect way to say goodbye or hello to Milano, on arrival or departure.

If you have time before your train leave explore the Milano central station itself. This massive monumental building in Babylonian art deco style holds many surprises.

You can take a tour of the shopping floors that precede the platforms: from clothing to books and accessories, you can find all kinds of items there.

Stazione centrale is truly a place to discover, rich in history and memory.

 

Milano’s masterpiece

Starting from Starbucks® Corso Vercelli, we advise you to take Corso Magenta, up to Santa Maria delle Grazie, where the world-famous Last Supper is in display. From there, you can head to the Leonardo da Vinci National Museum of Science and Technology, full of intriguing exhibits for the whole family.

The chapel of San Maurizio is also very interesting, with its splendidly frescoed ceilings and walls, adjacent to the Archaeological Museum.

Or you can go to Piazza Tommaseo and be awed by its Liberty splendor, which in the spring offers the additional spectacle of magnolias in bloom.

Your favorite Starbucks® coffee to explore the city!