Peccioli, Pisa

Peccioli: the Tuscan village that bet on contemporary art

A medieval village in the Pisan countryside transformed into an open-air museum: installations, cultural foundations and a community that reinvented itself.

Peccioli: the Tuscan village that bet on contemporary art

In Tuscany everyone knows San Gimignano, Volterra, Montepulciano. Nobody knows Peccioli — and that's exactly the point. This village of three thousand souls on the Valdera hills, between Pisa and Volterra, has taken a different path from mass tourism: it has bet on contemporary art, culture and smart regeneration.

An open-air museum through the streets

Walking through Peccioli you stumble upon installations by international artists without warning. Monumental sculptures pop up in small squares, signed murals transform barn walls, and a modern amphitheater — the Fonte Mazzola — occupies a hill overlooking the Tuscan countryside. Art isn't confined to a museum: it is the very fabric of the village. The Peccioliper Foundation manages the cultural program and commissions new works regularly.

From landfill to technology park

Peccioli's most surprising story concerns its landfill. In the 1990s the municipality turned an environmental problem into an economic resource: the waste treatment plant became a technology hub generating revenue reinvested in the community. With those funds Peccioli has financed restorations, artist residencies, an open-air arena and even an experimental autonomous transport system. It's a model of circular economy applied to a medieval village.

Piazza del Popolo and the Parish Church

The historic center is gathered around Piazza del Popolo, dominated by the Pieve di San Verano with its Romanesque bell tower. The narrow streets descending toward the countryside are silent and intact: stone walls, green shutters, cats in the sun. There isn't a souvenir shop. There isn't a tourist restaurant. There's a pharmacy, a grocery, a bar where old men play cards. The village still functions as a living organism, not as a photo set.

The Green Triangle and the hills

Peccioli is surrounded by hill country of rare beauty: cypresses, olive groves, wheat fields and clay badlands reminiscent of the Crete Senesi but without anyone. The Green Triangle is a loop route between Peccioli, Ghizzano and Lajatico (Andrea Bocelli's hometown) that can be driven in an hour or walked in a day. Ghizzano is another gem: a hamlet of a few dozen inhabitants where David Tremlett painted an entire facade and Alicja Kwade installed a sculpture in the wheat field.

Eating in Peccioli

The cuisine is that of the Pisan countryside: pappa al pomodoro, ribollita, wild boar, pecorino from the hills. The trattorias in town are few and authentic — none starred, no pretensions, generous portions and prices that would be laughable in San Gimignano. Wine from the Valdera hills is emerging as an alternative to Chianti: less famous, less expensive, equally good.

Why go to Peccioli

Peccioli is the Tuscany you won't find on Instagram. No queues, no paid parking, no tourist menus. A village that instead of selling its medieval past decided to invest in the present. If you're looking for authentic Tuscany — the one that lives, produces and experiments — Peccioli is one of the best answers.

Practical info

When is the best time to visit Peccioli?

The recommended time is March, April, May, June, September, October and November, when it is less crowded.

Is Peccioli crowded?

Peccioli is a almost deserted destination compared with the more touristy ones.

Where is Peccioli?

Peccioli is located in Peccioli, Pisa.

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