Art, wine, and quiet countryside—this one-hour-and-change tour fits. I love the artworks in Filandetta Park and the Prosecco Superiore DOCG tasting with local snacks. It’s a calm walk through Valdobbiadene’s Prosecco landscape, with a stepped amphitheater and an organic vineyard setting the tone.
You’ll start at Via della Filandeta, 7, Valdobbiadene, and spend about 1 hour 30 minutes with a host who brings the place to life—think craftsmanship, family tradition, and plenty of time to ask questions. The atmosphere is clean, elegant, and intimate, with a small group size capped at 15 people.
One possible downside: the tour includes cheese and breadsticks, but if you’re hoping for a big meal or a long sit-down tasting, you’ll likely want to plan lunch separately.
In This Review
- Key highlights to know before you go
- Art and Nature in Valdobbiadene’s Filandetta Park
- The 1.5-Hour Flow: What Happens From Start to Finish
- Filandetta Park’s Art Route: Step-by-Step, Not Just Photo Stops
- Organic Vineyard Views and the Landscape You’ll Actually Remember
- Prosecco Tasting at Bortolomiol: What’s Included and How It’s Presented
- Price and Value: Is It Worth $40.51?
- Logistics That Matter: Timing, Location, and Getting There
- Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Find It Too Short)
- Small Details That Can Improve Your Experience
- Should You Book This Prosecco + Art Experience?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the tour?
- How long does the Valdobbiadene art and nature tour last?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- What’s included in the $40.51 price?
- Is lunch included?
- Is private transportation included?
- What is the maximum group size?
- How does cancellation work if I change plans?
Key highlights to know before you go

- Filandetta Park art and scenery: Works of art inside the park, plus a stepped amphitheater and vineyard views
- Bortolomiol founder-tour vibe: Small, focused winery energy rather than big production-floor glamour
- Prosecco Superiore DOCG tastings: Paired with cheese and breadsticks to keep it friendly and not stuffy
- Bees and the living vineyard: Hives in the story of the ecosystem around the vines
- Small group limit: Max 15 travelers means you’re not just a number in the line
Art and Nature in Valdobbiadene’s Filandetta Park

Valdobbiadene is one of those places where the landscape does half the work for you. Instead of rushing between viewpoints, this experience gives you a slower rhythm: art first, then vineyard, then Prosecco—set in the same place, not scattered across town.
What makes it special is the setting at Parco della Filandetta. You’re not just drinking in a tasting room. You’re walking through a park designed to be seen—works of art placed along the route, with the stepped amphitheater acting like a natural stage for the tour’s explanations and atmosphere.
And yes, the wine matters here. The tastings are built around Bortolomiol Prosecco Superiore DOCG, not random pours. That focus helps you understand why Valdobbiadene Prosecco tastes the way it does, instead of treating it like a checklist item.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Treviso.
The 1.5-Hour Flow: What Happens From Start to Finish

This is a single-stop tour, lasting about 1 hour 30 minutes. There’s one main experience in Valdobbiadene, and it ends back where it starts, so you don’t have to figure out a “second meeting point” thing.
You begin at Via della Filandeta, 7, 31049 Valdobbiadene TV, Italy. From there, the route takes you through the park and the winery property, guided in English. A big practical plus: you use a mobile ticket, and you’ll get confirmation within 48 hours of booking, based on availability.
Because the group is capped at 15 people, the pace stays human. I like experiences like this where you can hear the explanations without playing a guessing game over everyone’s heads. If you’re someone who loves questions—about craft, family, or why the place is organized the way it is—this format supports that.
Filandetta Park’s Art Route: Step-by-Step, Not Just Photo Stops

The park portion is the heart of the tour. You’ll see works of art inside Filandetta Park, and you’ll move along paths that connect the different pieces of the setting. The stepped amphitheater gives you that nice “pause here” moment, where the environment feels planned rather than accidental.
One of my favorite details from the experience’s vibe is how the art and the winery purpose overlap. The route isn’t only about aesthetics. It supports the story the host tells—how the winery thinks about place, tradition, and the people connected to Prosecco.
In particular, the recovered old spinning mill is part of the tour narrative. It’s a real-world touchpoint that fits the theme of labor and craft, and it’s the kind of detail that makes the whole stop feel grounded instead of purely decorative. Some tours also highlight the role of women and their dedication in the story of the spinning mill, which adds a meaningful layer to what might otherwise be just a pretty walk.
Organic Vineyard Views and the Landscape You’ll Actually Remember
After the art route, you shift into the “nature” side of the experience. The itinerary includes an organic vineyard, and that matters because it gives you more than scenic background. You get a chance to look at the vines and connect them to what you’re tasting.
Even if you’re not a wine nerd, seeing the vines where the wine starts helps your brain lock in the logic. You start to notice how the place feels: open, clean, and intentionally cared for. And the way the park is set up makes it easy to move—this isn’t one of those tours where you’re fighting through crowds just to get to the next view.
If you care about how the ecosystem works, pay attention to the bee-related parts of the tour. One review mentioned hives and the lesson that bees play a key environmental role here. That’s the kind of small detail that turns a tasting into a place-knowledge experience.
Prosecco Tasting at Bortolomiol: What’s Included and How It’s Presented
Let’s talk wine, because that’s why most people book. The experience includes Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore DOCG Bortolomiol and snacks: cheese and breadsticks.
The tastings are presented with pairing in mind, not just wine poured into a glass and sent on its way. Reviews describe the tasting as excellent and thoughtfully paired with local food, with the explanations helping each wine make sense on its own. That’s a quality cue: you’re guided to notice differences rather than just doing a fast sip-swatch.
Hosts like Juliana and Daniele show up in reviews, and that detail gives you a sense of what kind of experience you might get—warm, organized, and focused on craft. (Of course, the exact host can vary, but the hosting style described is consistent: attentive and passionate.)
One thing to be aware of: while reviews mention that wine tastings feel plentiful, another comment suggests snack volume could be a bit more if you’re very hungry. Cheese and breadsticks are included, and that’s enough to keep the wine comfortable, but it’s not the same thing as a full lunch.
Price and Value: Is It Worth $40.51?

At $40.51 per person, you’re paying for a tight package:
- guided time (about 1 hour 30 minutes)
- English delivery
- access within the park/winery area during the tour
- Prosecco tastings centered on Bortolomiol Prosecco Superiore DOCG
- cheese and breadsticks
If you’ve ever compared tours that are basically a quick pour plus a distant view, this one looks more grounded. You’re not paying extra for a bus ride, because private transportation is not included. Instead, you pay for the experience content: the art-and-nature setting plus the tastings and explanations.
The small group cap of 15 travelers also nudges the value upward. When you’re not squeezed into a big crowd, you get better odds of hearing what matters and getting answers without rushing.
So here’s my value take: this is a good deal if you want an easy, high-quality tasting experience without turning your day into a logistics puzzle.
Logistics That Matter: Timing, Location, and Getting There
This tour starts and ends at the same address, so you can plan your day around it without complicated transfers. Meeting point is Via della Filandeta, 7, and the tour concludes back at that meeting point.
Duration is approx. 1 hour 30 minutes, which makes it a flexible choice:
- as a morning or early afternoon break in the Prosecco Hills
- as a calm alternative to a bigger winery day
- as a stand-alone stop if you’re already based nearby
If you’re coming from Venice by car, one review mentioned it’s about 1:15 from the canal hotels by car. That’s not an official schedule, but it gives a real-world sense of distance and timing.
A couple more practical notes:
- You’ll receive confirmation within 48 hours, depending on availability.
- The tour uses a mobile ticket.
- Most people can participate, and service animals are allowed.
Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Find It Too Short)
This is a strong match for you if:
- you like tours that combine place and story, not only tastings
- you’re interested in art in a landscape setting
- you want English guidance without a giant group
- you want a relaxing stop that still feels curated and thoughtful
It may not be the best fit if:
- you need a long, full-day winery schedule
- you’re hunting for lunch included as part of the ticket (it isn’t)
- you’re expecting private transportation (it’s not included)
If you’re doing this as part of a longer Prosecco day, plan your meal timing. A review mentioned Villa Sandi for lunch down the road, which could work well after your tasting window. Even if you choose a different place, the main idea is the same: eat after, not during.
Small Details That Can Improve Your Experience
Because this tour blends art, nature, and wine, a few small prep moves can make the experience feel smoother.
Wear comfortable shoes. The park walk includes paths and time spent standing and moving between different “stations” like the stepped amphitheater and the vineyard areas.
Go in with the right expectation on food. You’ll have cheese and breadsticks, and that’s part of why the tastings work well. If you tend to eat big meals, bring a snack idea for later rather than expecting lunch-style portions to fill you up.
Finally, if you care about the story behind the wine, lean into questions. Reviews highlight hosts who explain with warmth and clarity, including the family and craft side. When you ask about what you’re seeing—art route, spinning mill, bees, vineyard—you get a lot more out of the time.
Should You Book This Prosecco + Art Experience?
Yes—if you want a calm, elegant, and genuinely “about the place” Prosecco stop in Valdobbiadene. The combination of Filandetta Park art, an organic vineyard setting, and a Bortolomiol Prosecco Superiore DOCG tasting with real pairing makes it more than a quick drink.
I’d especially recommend it if you value small groups (max 15), English guidance, and a tour that feels focused rather than flashy. You’ll likely leave with a stronger sense of why Valdobbiadene Prosecco tastes the way it does—and where that character comes from.
If, on the other hand, you’re planning to spend the day eating and you want long transportation included, you’ll be happier pairing this with a separate lunch plan and using your own way to get there.
Overall: this is a smart, good-value choice for art lovers, wine lovers, and anyone who wants their day in the Prosecco Hills to feel tidy, scenic, and worth the time.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the tour?
The tour starts at Via della Filandeta, 7, 31049 Valdobbiadene TV, Italy, and it ends back at the same meeting point.
How long does the Valdobbiadene art and nature tour last?
It lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
What’s included in the $40.51 price?
The tour includes Prosecco Superiore DOCG from Bortolomiol, plus snacks: cheese and breadsticks.
Is lunch included?
No, lunch is not included.
Is private transportation included?
No, private transportation is not included.
What is the maximum group size?
The experience has a maximum of 15 travelers.
How does cancellation work if I change plans?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience starts. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded.



















