Inside Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis’s new digs


Pope Francis's new residence, Casa Santa Marta, is a modern guesthouse offering more comfortable accommodations than the traditional conclave lodgings.
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The pope has moved out of the room he drew by lot before the conclave and into Casa Santa Marta's suite 201, a room that has slightly more elegant furnishings and a larger living room where he can receive guests.

The guesthouse was built in 1996 on the site of an ancient hospice for the poor. The five-story building has 106 suites, 22 single rooms, and one apartment and sits on the edge of Vatican City. It is regularly inhabited by a few dozen priests and bishops who work in the Vatican. Half the rooms are available for cardinals and bishops visiting Rome for audiences or other official occasions.

Casa Santa Marta's roots

Regulations for the conclave demand that cardinals live together, separated from the outside world, until a pope is elected. In the past, they'd slept on cots in small rooms adjacent to the Sistine Chapel.

It was Pope John Paul II who called for the construction of a residence where cardinal electors—the cardinals who can cast votes in papal elections—could live during the papal election.

From the Casa Santa Marta, they can reach the Sistine Chapel by shuttle bus or by a short walk inside the Vatican gardens. After the election, the regular occupants return to the guesthouse.

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