Most walking tours in Nice's Old Town point at pretty buildings. This one teaches you to read them.
In a group of no more than 14, your guide walks you through two thousand years of architectural history packed into one of the Mediterranean's most intact historic quarters. You won't just see Baroque churches and medieval alleys. You'll understand why they look the way they do, who commissioned them, and what political messages are embedded in their facades.
Your route through Vieux Nice includes the Cathédrale Sainte-Réparate and its gilded Baroque interior in Place Rossetti, the ornate 1885 Opéra de Nice, the Palais de Justice, the Palais Préfectoral, and the Palais Lascaris, a former aristocratic residence whose facade still speaks to the wealth of Nice's Italian-era elite. Along the way, you'll pass through Cours Saleya, the market square that has been the social heart of the Old Town for centuries.
The narrative thread connecting these sites is the tension between Nice's Italian past and its French present. Shaped by Greeks, Romans, and centuries of Savoyard rule, the Old Town has a distinctly Italian character: ochre plasterwork, Genoese shutters, chapels tucked into narrow passages. Nice only joined France permanently in 1860, and that storey is still visible in the architecture around every corner.
The medieval street grid itself becomes part of the tour: narrow passages designed to provide shade in summer and block the sea wind in winter, lined today with bakeries, family-run shops, and sacred spaces that rival churches twice their size.
Two hours. Fourteen people maximum. One Old Town you'll navigate differently from now on.