Why Bologna needs a local guide
Bologna has the oldest university in Europe (1088), forty kilometres of arcaded sidewalks, and a food tradition that gave the world ragu, tortellini, and mortadella. It is not on most tourist itineraries, which means it still works like an actual Italian city. The two leaning towers predate Pisa's by decades.
Bologna is the Italian food capital that most international tourists skip entirely. The city gets around a million visitors a year — a fraction of Florence, an hour south by train — and the ones who come are almost always here to eat. La Grassa, the Fat One, earned its name with tortellini in brodo, tagliatelle al ragu, and mortadella sliced so thin you can read through it. To become a tour guide in Bologna means becoming a food translator first. The Quadrilatero market streets are where the city has shopped since the Middle Ages, and a walk through them with a guide who knows every stall is worth more than any restaurant reservation. But Bologna is not only food. The university, founded in 1088, is the oldest in Europe, and the porticoes — forty kilometres of arcaded walkways — are now UNESCO-listed. Become a tour guide in Bologna and you also serve the Emilia-Romagna food corridor. Modena for balsamic vinegar and Ferrari, Parma for Parmigiano-Reggiano and prosciutto — both are an hour away and make natural day-trip extensions. To become a tour guide in Bologna is to work a city that is still under the radar, where the competition is thin and the product sells itself.