Poggioreale Antica: the town frozen on that night in 1968
Poggioreale Antica, in the Belice Valley of Sicily: the town emptied by the 1968 earthquake, walkable again since 2026 through its old streets.
Foto: Leop81 at Italian Wikipedia (Public domain) — Wikimedia Commons
There are places that time has not erased, but only stopped. Poggioreale Antica, in the province of Trapani, is one of them. On the night between 14 and 15 January 1968, the Belice earthquake, magnitude 6.4, devastated this corner of western Sicily. The inhabitants were evacuated and the town was never rebuilt: a few kilometres away Poggioreale Nuova was founded, while the old centre stayed empty, at the foot of Monte Castellazzo, in the valley furrowed by the Belice river.
What you find today is not a heap of rubble, but an urban fabric that is still legible. Along Corso Umberto I you can make out the facades of the houses, the squares, the public buildings. The remains of the Chiesa Madre stand with its bell tower, and all around the emptied homes tell of a community crystallised in the 1950s and 1960s. To walk here is to move through an involuntary stage set, where every threshold is a door onto memory.
For a long time the ruins were accessible only with caution, fenced off and awaiting safety works. Since 10 June 2026, after years of closure and thanks to a regeneration project funded by PNRR resources, Poggioreale Antica has once again been welcoming visitors in an orderly and protected way.
Far from mass tourism, this is a place to be visited on tiptoe. At Palazzo Agosta, one of the few buildings made safe, the Poggioreale Antica association has set up a museum of memory with photographs and objects gathered among the abandoned houses: the best way to understand who lived here before that night.
The advice is to rely on the visits organised on site, respecting the routes and the prohibitions that protect a fragile heritage. No rushing, no distracted selfies: Poggioreale asks to be listened to. And it offers, in return, a silence worth more than many crowded destinations.
Getting there
The ruins of Poggioreale Antica, the town abandoned after the 1968 Belice earthquake, lie in western Sicily. They are reached by car, leaving the A29 motorway (Palermo-Mazara del Vallo) and continuing along the provincial roads towards Poggioreale, following the signs for the 'Ruderi di Poggioreale'; alternatively you can arrive via the fast Palermo-Sciacca road, taking the Poggioreale exit. Visiting the site is organised in guided form, so it is best to check access arrangements in advance. The reference airports are Palermo and Trapani-Birgi.
Practical guides for Trapani
Practical info
When is the best time to visit Poggioreale Antica?
The recommended time is April, May, June, September and October, when it is less crowded.
Is Poggioreale Antica crowded?
Poggioreale Antica is a very quiet destination compared with the more touristy ones.
Where is Poggioreale Antica?
Poggioreale Antica is located in Poggioreale, Sicily, Italy.
How to get there
- 🚆 Nearest station: Gallitello ~10 km as the crow flies
- ✈️ Nearest airport: Aeroporto di Palermo Falcone e Borsellino PMO ~43 km as the crow flies
Nearest points as the crow flies (source OpenStreetMap): actual times depend on the roads, often mountain ones.