Hard to say w/o knowing what you intend to pay for it.
Looking at the spec sheet it seems decent enough. Not a great bike, not a racing bike, but a good enough bike for exercise and entertainment purposes.
If you intend to start riding seriously, have the bike serviced first. That range of bikes, you never know what the bearing adjustment and spoke tension is. Assembly is often one place where a manufacturer will try to cut corners.
Road bicycles.
All the net has to say about Gramaglia bicycles is that it is/was a small italian bike builder/frame maker who did road and/or track bikes.
Yes, Montgomery Ward's in house brand for bicycles and mopeds was Open Road.
Pretty much as soon as there were enough bicycles to hold a race.
Pretty much as soon as there were enough bicycles to hold a race
my huffy roadside cruiser is from the early sixtys
Yes, bicycles can be classified by the number of wheels they have. There are two main classifications: two-wheeled bicycles (such as road bikes, mountain bikes, and hybrids) and three-wheeled bicycles (such as tricycles, recumbent trikes, and cargo trikes).
Colnago Cycling offer bicycles for sale. They produce high quality road racing bicycles. They were founded in 1954 and have their headquarters in Cambiago, Italy.
Road bicycles have distinguishing features such as the bent over handle bars that are lower to the ground that handle bars on a mountain bike. Other notable features including putting the rider closer to the pedals and their ultra light weight frames.
It's perfectly legal to ride bicycles on most roads. So ride on the road whenever you need or want to.
Anything and everything on the road. Bicycles, pedestrians, animal-drawn vehicles (e.g., horse and buggies in areas with an Amish population).
For human-powered bicycles - no. But some sure would need it.