On Tuesday, a new McDonald's restaurant opened in Italy with one added extra that wasn't on the menu: an ancient Roman road, complete with three skeletons.
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| Roman road with cast of skeleton in original grave location [Credit: Cinque Quotidiano] |
McDonald's Italia funded the €300,000 restoration project and the result is thought to be the world's first 'restaurant-museum', where visitors can see the ancient street while muching on their burgers, thanks to a transparent floor.
The 45-metre road in Frattochie, south of the Italian capital, dates back to between the second and first century BC and is thought to have fallen out of use about three centuries later. It branches off the more famous Appian Way, which links Rome with the south of the country.
Ruts from wagon wheels are visible in the paving stones, which are made of local volcanic rock.
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| Section of Roman road with cast of skeleton in original location [Credit: Cinque Quotidiano] |
Archaeologists unearthed the skeletons of three adult males, thought to have been buried after the road had already fallen out of use.
Casts of these skeletons have been returned to the original graves while experts carry out further analysis on the original bones.
Local mayor Carlo Colizza said the McDonald's project was "a positive example" of private and public sector helping each other.
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| Visitors walk over ancient wheel ruts in the paving stones [Credit: Cinque Quotidiano] |
In fact, construction projects in Italy are often delayed by the discovery of ancient ruins which then have to be properly excavated.
This has been one of the major factors in the repeated delays to Rome's third Metro line; workers have unearthed plenty of Roman treasures including a Roman barracks so impressive that the city is considering turning it into a museum.
Panels in English and Italian will give information about the history of the road and there will be a special children's route for younger visitors to explore after their Happy Meal (or Appia Meal...). The site is also accessible, for free, without going to the McDonald's branch.
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| Looking into the ruins from inside the Marino McDonald's [Credit: Cinque Quotidiano] |
"It is a place where you can look at the future, through the past," he said.
However, McDonalds is more often seen as a threat to Italy's cultural heritage than a possible help.
Source: The Local [February 23, 2017]









