Access to Venue / Accommodation / Transportation
The conference will be held at NH Napoli Panorama, which is located in the center of Naples, near to the Port of Naples.












The map highlighting Hotel NH Napoli Panorama can be viewed larger at Google Maps application or webpage. The “nearby” option can be used to see and select the hotels around the Venue, and on the public transportation lines.
TRANSPORTATION FROM AIRPORT TO THE CONFERENCE VENUE:
For travellers arriving at Naples-Capodichino Airport (NAP) and heading to the NH Napoli Panorama, the following are the most reliable transportation options. Here are some information on how to plan travel route from airport to conference hotel, including ticket purchasing options:
Taxi / Private car
- A taxi from the airport will take ~ 8-10 minutes (roughly 6.3 km) and costs about €23–29. (Rome2Rio)
- This is the fastest, most direct and convenient — especially if passengers have luggage or arrive late.
Airport shuttle bus + short walk
- Use the official airport shuttle Alibus. It leaves every ~20 minutes and the ticket costs about €5. (NH Hotels & Resorts)
- Get off at the “Piazza Municipio” stop. From there, the hotel is about 650 metres — roughly a 5–10 minute walk. (NH Hotels & Resorts)
- This option is cheaper than a taxi and still relatively straight-forward.
Bus + Metro (if you want a variation or shuttle not available)
- You can take a bus from the airport to Naples city centre / central station, then switch to the metro. (Rome2Rio)
- For example: shuttle to central station (or suitable stop), then metro/subway or short taxi/walk to hotel. (Rome2Rio)
- Costs are low (few euros), but total travel and transfer time will be longer than a direct shuttle or taxi.
For the most current schedules and ticket prices, it is advisable to check the respective booking platforms prior to the travel.
Naples
Naples, city, capital of Naples provincia, Campania regione, southern Italy. It lies on the west coast of the Italian peninsula, 120 miles (190 km) southeast of Rome. On its celebrated bay—flanked to the west by the smaller Gulf of Pozzuoli and to the southeast by the more extended indentation of the Gulf of Salerno—the city is situated between two areas of volcanic activity: Mount Vesuvius to the east and the Campi Flegrei (Phlegraean Fields) to the northwest. The most recent eruption of Vesuvius occurred in 1944. In 1980 an earthquake damaged Naples and its outlying towns, and since then Pozzuoli to the west has been seriously afflicted by bradyseism (a phenomenon involving a fall or rise of land).
Naples is located near the midpoint of the arc of hills that, commencing in the north at the promontory of Posillipo and terminating in the south with the Sorrentine peninsula, form the central focus of the Bay of Naples. To the south of the bay’s entrance to the Tyrrhenian Sea, the island of Capri forms a partial breakwater, visible from the city in clear weather and at times of impending storm but increasingly screened by polluted air from the industrial zone developed, since World War II, between central Naples and the Vesuvian slopes. Pollution also afflicts the waters of the port, obliging the more scrupulous practitioners of the immemorial Neapolitan fishing industry to withdraw ever farther from their native shore.
While the importance of Naples as the principal port of southern Italy is at last in decline, the city remains the centre of the nation’s meridional commerce and culture, beset by inveterate difficulties, and distinguished by an adroit and original spirit that retains many suggestions of the classical past and of assimilated historical experience. Of all the cities of southern Italy with Greek origins, Naples presents the most striking example of a lively continuity. It is also perhaps the last great metropolis of western Europe whose monuments, albeit often in decay, may still be seen in their popular context, without distractions of tourism or self-conscious commercialism.
Since World War II, during which Naples suffered severe bombardment, modernization has increasingly altered the city’s setting and character; and a measure of long-deferred but often speculative prosperity is reflected in new suburbs now proliferating in once-rural surroundings. However, Naples remains arcane and compelling, a city whose richness requires from the visitor time, accessibility, and some knowledge of the Neapolitan past. Its historic centre was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1995. Pop. (2022 est.) 914,758; metropolitan area, 3,054,956.
Source: Britannica