The Peripato Gardens are the urban park of the Borgo di Taranto, near the Mar Piccolo.
The National Archaeological Museum of Taranto (MArTA) displays one of the largest collections of artifacts dating back to the Magna Graecia era, including the famous golds of Taranto.
The Amati Palace in Taranto is one of the most prestigious buildings in the Old Town of the city.
The Latagliata Palace in Taranto is a building that houses the municipal offices in the Old Town of the city.
MUDI - Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art or Mu.di. is housed in the premises of the sixteenth-century Archbishop's Seminary of Taranto in the Old City. Considered one of the largest museum structures in Italy, MUDI is set up in the renovated structure of the former Archbishop's Seminary of Taranto, in the heart of the old town, just a few steps from the Cathedral of San Cataldo.
The ethnographic museum "Alfredo Majorano" is located in the historic center of Taranto, inside Palazzo Pantaleo.
The Palazzo Pantaleo in Taranto is an 18th-century building owned by the Municipality. From 2000 to 2007, it housed some collections from the National Archaeological Museum of Taranto in the Old Town. Currently, it is the headquarters of the Alfredo Majorano Ethnographic Museum.
The Aragonese castle (or Castel Sant'Angelo), with its quadrangular plan and vast central courtyard, occupies the extreme corner of the island on which the ancient village of the city of Taranto stands.
The church of San Domenico (formerly the church of San Pietro Imperiale) is a Romanesque-Gothic style church located on the western side of the historic center (Old Town) of Taranto, whose construction was completed around 1360.
The Cathedral of San Cataldo (or the Duomo of San Cataldo) is the cathedral of Taranto.