From all my experiences with italy, every little nook and cranny in the old alleyways there you can still drive your car legally which fucking sucks.
It never felt dangerous, admittedly, but there is 0 reason some guy has to drive even his Fiat 500 through an alleyway that the romans probably banned horse carriages in.
More photos, check this whole album:
https://scontent.faep8-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t31.18172-8/10860871_1574972182774312_6208361647734443807_o.png?_nc_cat=111&ccb=1-3&_nc_sid=cdbe9c&_nc_ohc=S5wdGmA9ZKsAX9NFgSE&_nc_ht=scontent.faep8-1.fna&oh=e0b8282140f3bee1e1e8e6919a92e7d5&oe=60D33ED1
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1571117649826432.1073741835.1571103763161154&type=3
The bridge was blowed up by the nazis when the yanks were taking over Italy, then the whole area (the city included) was wrongly bombed by yank planes. There's a cool museum in the city about it.
The style reminds me of a Roman aqueduct. It's probably not an accident.
Yes, and far away in the center right that's an even longer train bridge. Like really fucking long, but I couldn't find any good-enough resolution photos of it, the place is called Isernia, let me link some photos
https://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/media/photo-s/01/37/09/01/il-ponte-della-ferrovia.jpg
https://mapio.net/images-p/17461855.jpg
A town with high urban density surrounded by nice fields and forests, and with trains. In the lower part is a parking lot for cars.