Goodbye plexiglass, and welcome back to the good old days. During this era of social distancing and anti-coronavirus containment measures, Florence merchants have brought back their so-called 'wine holes', reinstating them with their original function born during the plague: serving customers without contact.
Scattered around the Tuscan capital, in some the city's oldest buildings' walls, are small windows at street level. These are wine holes, an architectural curiosity adopted during the seventeenth century in the Granducato of Tuscany to implement remote trade. These were the years of the terrible plague epidemic, which swept through Italy and the whole of Europe between 1629 and 1633. To avoid coming into contact with their customers and getting infected, wine makers devised the sale of their products through 'doors' created on the side walls of the shops.