Lisbon
Lisbon/Culture

16 Cultural Landmarks in Lisbon

16 landmarks with verified facts and stories

Alfama District
~40 min

Alfama District

Alfama, Lisboa

historylocal-lifemoorish

Alfama is the neighborhood that refused to die.

Bairro Alto
~45 min

Bairro Alto

Bairro Alto, Lisboa

nightlifelocal-lifefood

By day, Bairro Alto is a sleepy grid of narrow streets where elderly residents hang laundry from wrought-iron balconies and cats doze in doorways.

Chiado
~30 min

Chiado

Chiado, Lisboa

shoppingliteraryhistory

Chiado is where Lisbon goes to feel sophisticated.

Elevador da Bica
~10 min

Elevador da Bica

234 Rua de São Paulo, Misericórdia, Lisboa, 1200-430, Portugal

iconicengineeringlocal-life

The Elevador da Bica is arguably the most photographed street in Lisbon, and it isn't even really an elevator — it's a funicular, a cable-pulled tram that hauls itself up one of the steepest streets in the city.

Feira da Ladra
~30 min

Feira da Ladra

Campo de Santa Clara, São Vicente, Lisboa, 1100-472, Portugal

marketlocal-lifehidden-gem

The name translates roughly as "Thief's Market," which either refers to the fact that you might find your stolen goods on sale here, or that the vendors will steal from you with their prices — interpretations vary by century.

LX Factory
~40 min

LX Factory

103 Rua Rodrigues Faria, Alcântara, Lisboa, 1300-501, Portugal

foodshoppingstreet-art

Underneath the Ponte 25 de Abril, in the shadow of a bridge that looks like it was stolen from San Francisco, sits a former industrial compound that has become Lisbon's answer to the creative reuse movement.

MAAT
~40 min

MAAT

Avenida de Brasília, Alcântara, Lisboa, 1300-598, Portugal

museumcontemporary-artarchitecture

MAAT looks like a stingray made of ceramic tiles that decided to beach itself on the banks of the Tagus.

Miradouro da Graça
~15 min

Miradouro da Graça

São Vicente, Lisboa, Portugal

viewpointfreelocal-life

The Miradouro da Graça sits in front of the Igreja da Graça, a church that the Augustinian monks built in 1271 and that has been rebuilt so many times after earthquakes, fires, and general Portuguese drama that almost nothing original remains.

Museu Calouste Gulbenkian
~60 min

Museu Calouste Gulbenkian

45A Avenida de Berna, Avenidas Novas, Lisboa, 1600-001, Portugal

museumartpark

The story of how Lisbon ended up with one of the finest private art collections in the world involves oil, revolution, war, and a very stubborn Armenian-British billionaire.

Museu do Fado
~30 min

Museu do Fado

Largo do Chafariz de Dentro, Santa Maria Maior, Lisboa, 1100-288, Portugal

museummusichistory

Fado is Portugal's answer to the blues — a music of longing, loss, and that untranslatable Portuguese word "saudade," which roughly means the bittersweet ache of missing something you once had, or might never have had at all.

Museu Nacional do Azulejo
~45 min

Museu Nacional do Azulejo

4 Rua da Madre de Deus, Penha de França, Lisboa, 1900-312, Portugal

museumarthistory

Portugal's love affair with tiles is so deep that an entire museum barely scratches the surface.

Pastéis de Belém
~20 min

Pastéis de Belém

84 Rua de Belém, Belém, Lisboa, 1300-085, Portugal

foodiconichistory

The recipe has not changed since 1837, and only three people alive know the full thing.

Praça do Comércio
~20 min

Praça do Comércio

Praça do Comércio, Santa Maria Maior, Lisboa, 1100-148, Portugal

architecturehistoryiconic

Before it became one of Europe's grandest plazas, this was a crime scene.

Rossio Square
~15 min

Rossio Square

Praça D Pedro IV, Santa Maria Maior, Lisboa, 1150-320, Portugal

historyiconiclocal-life

The official name is Praça Dom Pedro IV, but nobody in Lisbon has called it that in centuries.

Time Out Market
~45 min

Time Out Market

Av. 24 de Julho 49, 1200-479 Lisboa

foodlocal-lifemarket

The idea was simple and slightly insane: take a beloved but struggling food market, hand editorial control to a magazine, and let the critics decide who gets to cook.

Tram 28
~60 min

Tram 28

Various stops across Lisbon

iconiclocal-lifehistory

Tram 28 is simultaneously the best and worst way to see Lisbon.

Explore culture in Lisbon

GPS-guided narration at every landmark. Tap a spot on the map, hear the story. Every fact verified.