
Strasbourg
The UNESCO World Heritage island that is the entire centre of Strasbourg: the cathedral, Palais Rohan, the pedestrian shopping squares, the best winstubs, and the Christmas market stalls in December.
The Grande Ile (Big Island) is the historic heart of Strasbourg, a UNESCO World Heritage site surrounded on all sides by the River Ill and its branches. Everything that makes Strasbourg worth visiting is here or immediately adjacent. The cathedral anchors the island: the Gothic spire (142 metres, the tallest medieval spire in Christendom) is visible from every point on the island, and the astronomical clock in the south transept draws a crowd every day at 12:30 PM. The Palais Rohan (EUR 6.50-13) sits beside the cathedral and contains three separate museums in one of the finest French Baroque buildings east of Paris. Place Kléber is the main city square, the starting point for tram lines, and the location of the giant Christmas tree every December. Place Gutenberg is where Strasbourg's printing heritage is commemorated: the statue of Gutenberg and the former city hall face each other across a square that also marks the start of the pedestrian shopping streets. The winstubs (traditional Alsatian wine pubs) are concentrated on and around the Grande Ile: Chez Yvonne, Zum Strissel, Au Coin des Pucelles are within a five-minute walk of each other. This is where you stay if you want to walk everywhere and have everything at the door.
Top experiences in Grande Ile & Cathedral
Restaurants and cafes in Grande Ile & Cathedral
Bars and nightlife in Grande Ile & Cathedral
Entirely walkable. The Grande Ile is compact: 15 minutes to walk from one end to the other. All the main sites are within 10 minutes of the cathedral.
Climb the spire at 9:30 AM when it opens to beat the queue (EUR 8, 332 steps to the viewing platform at 66 metres). For the astronomical clock (12:30 PM performance): arrive by 11:45 AM to get a spot in the south transept. The EUR 3 clock ticket is sold inside the cathedral, not at the main entrance. The facade is best photographed in late afternoon light.
Order the tarte flambee first (it arrives fast, you eat it while it's hot), then the choucroute garnie (EUR 17-22, it takes longer). A carafe of Riesling (EUR 4-7 a glass) is the correct wine for both. Chez Yvonne requires a reservation; Zum Strissel and Au Coin des Pucelles are easier to walk into at lunch.
EUR 13 for all three museums (Musee Archeologique, Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Musee des Beaux-Arts). The Musee des Arts Decoratifs (the royal apartments) is the highlight: the Chambre du Roi is the most impressive single room in Strasbourg. Closed Tuesday. Budget 2 hours if you do all three.
Continue exploring

The medieval tanners' quarter at the western tip of the Grande Ile: the most photographed houses in Strasbourg hanging over still canals, the Ponts Couverts towers, and the Barrage Vauban with its free rooftop panorama.

The institutional quarter northeast of the Grande Ile: the European Parliament with its free visitor gallery, the Council of Europe, the Court of Human Rights, and the Parc de l'Orangerie where storks nest every spring.

The student and bohemian quarter southeast of the Grande Ile: cheaper food, the best bar scene in Strasbourg, MAMAC modern art (EUR 7), and the free botanical garden of the University of Strasbourg.
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