<p>Augustan-era residence on the E *Caelian, located outside the *Servian Wall near the *“Via Caelimontana” (Pacetti). Excavations in 1989-91 unearthed portions of two large structures, perhaps <i>insulae</i>, built in <i>opus reticulatum</i> that faced a row of small shops across a street (*Caelius Mons: Building [5]). The E edifice housed a luxurious, ample residence; remains of a central <i>impluvium</i> (perhaps part of an atrium), two fine pavements, a small courtyard with a fountain, and a large underground cistern suggest that the <i>domus</i> was well-appointed (Pacetti 460-61). The W structure, which was separated from the E <i>domus</i> by a small alleyway, has rather scant remains that defy easy interpretation, though one room may have served as a shop (Pacetti 460-61). In addition, the NE sides of these two buildings, which are in perfect alignment with the row of shops opposite, suggest the axis of an Augustan-era street, which probably continued E to intersect the “Via Caelimontana”, which lay some 50 m distant; while the excavators hypothetically extend this street across the Caelian (Pavolini, 450 with fig. 2), the absence of corroborative evidence for this extended course in the Augustan-era prohibits such a depiction on our map.</p>