<p>A massive warehouse built by Agrippa on the NW slope of the *Palatine. Carandini has recently argued that this complex is in fact the later <i>horrea Germaniciana et Agrippiniana</i>, but the inscription to the <i>Genius horreorum Agrippianorum</i> found in the center of the courtyard secures the traditional identification (cf. Graziosi). The excavated portion of the Horrea Agrippiana indicates that its shape was rectangular, not trapezoidal, and that it was multi-storeyed (Bauer). There is now broad consensus that fragment 42 of the Severan Marble Plan (Carettoni <i>et al</i>., <i>Pianta</i> pl. 33; renumbered as 5a in Rodríguez Almeida, <i>Forma</i> pl. 33) does not, as was long believed, represent the Horrea Agrippiana.</p> <p>Excavations in 1983-85 in the area to the N of the Horrea Agrippiana, underneath the Church of S. Maria Antiqua, uncovered a late-Republican structure, either a house or a commercial building of some sort, and a later pavement in <i>opus spicatum</i>. Because the Horrea Agrippiana also had a pavement in <i>opus spicatum</i>, it has been suggested that this correspondence implies a thorough reworking of the whole area in the Augustan period (Hurst 475), but only further excavation will be able to confirm this hypothesis.</p>