Lyon, France

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Lyon is France's gastronomic capital — a UNESCO World Heritage city where Renaissance silk-merchant mansions line the Saône, traditional bouchon restaurants serve quenelles and andouillette, and the Beaujolais and Côtes du Rhône vineyards begin just north of the suburbs.

Gastronomy & Wine

Bouchon restaurants, Halles de Lyon–Paul Bocuse market, Michelin-starred dining, Beaujolais wine region (30 min north), Côtes du Rhône vineyards, chocolate and praline artisans, and France's highest restaurant density per capita.

Renaissance Heritage

UNESCO-listed Vieux Lyon, 40+ public traboules, Cathedral of Saint-Jean, Basilica of Fourvière, Roman amphitheatres on Fourvière hill, and the Croix-Rousse silk-weaving quarter with its Canut heritage.

Museums & Culture

Musée des Confluences (science and anthropology), Musée des Beaux-Arts (second in France after the Louvre), Institut Lumière (birthplace of cinema), Musée des Tissus (textiles and silk history), MAC Lyon (contemporary art).

City Breaks

TGV from Paris in 2 hours, from Marseille in 1h40. Compact walkable centre. Two rivers with quayside cycling and strolling. Excellent public transport (metro, tram, funicular). Gateway to the Alps (ski resorts 2–3 hours), Provence and the Ardèche gorge.

History

Founded as the Roman colony Lugdunum in 43 BC, Lyon served as the capital of Roman Gaul and a major hub at the crossroads of northern and southern Europe. The silk industry from the 15th century onward brought Renaissance wealth visible in Vieux Lyon's architecture. The Canuts (silk weavers) of Croix-Rousse staged some of the first labour uprisings in modern history (1831, 1834). The Lumière brothers invented cinema here in 1895. During WWII, Lyon was the capital of the French Resistance. Paul Bocuse established the city as France's gastronomic reference point from the 1960s onward.

Culture

Lyon is to French gastronomy what Florence is to Italian art — the undisputed capital. Bouchon culture is uniquely Lyonnaise: quenelles de brochet, tablier de sapeur, cervelle de canut, salade lyonnaise, saucisson brioché, tarte praline. The Halles de Lyon–Paul Bocuse is the city's temple of produce. Beaujolais vineyards begin 30 minutes north. The Fête des Lumières in December draws millions — book restaurants weeks ahead. Festivals: Fête des Lumières (December — spectacular light installations across the city), Nuits de Fourvière (June–July — music, theatre and dance in the Roman amphitheatre), Nuits Sonores (May — electronic music festival), Beaujolais Nouveau (third Thursday of November). Museums: Musée des Confluences, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Institut Lumière, Musée des Tissus et des Arts Décoratifs, MAC Lyon (contemporary art).

Practical Info

Safety: Lyon is safe. Standard precautions in the Part-Dieu area at night and on public transport. The riverbanks are lively and well-lit in the centre. Emergency: 112. Language: French. English spoken in tourist areas and by younger Lyonnais. A few words of French (Bonjour, Merci) go far outside the centre. Currency: EUR. Cards accepted virtually everywhere. Cash handy for market stalls and small bouchons.
Travel Overview

Lyon sits at the confluence of the Rhône and the Saône — a geographical gift that gave the city two rivers, a dramatic hillside old town, and a peninsula (Presqu'île) that serves as its civic and commercial heart. Vieux Lyon, at the foot of Fourvière hill, is one of Europe's largest intact Renaissance quarters: four centuries of silk-merchant wealth produced courtyards, towers and the famous traboules — covered passageways that cut through buildings from street to street, originally used to transport silk bolts sheltered from rain. Above it, the Basilica of Notre-Dame de Fourvière commands panoramic views over the city, the two rivers and the Alps on clear days. The Presqu'île anchors the city's daily life: Place Bellecour (one of Europe's largest public squares), the Hôtel de Ville, the Opéra, and shopping along Rue de la République. But Lyon's truest identity is gastronomic. Paul Bocuse built his empire here, the Halles de Lyon–Paul Bocuse serve as the city's gourmet market, and the bouchon — a uniquely Lyonnaise institution — serves dishes that define the city's soul: quenelles de brochet, tablier de sapeur, cervelle de canut, salade lyonnaise, and saucisson brioché. The city holds the highest density of restaurants per capita in France. Beyond food: the Musée des Confluences (science and anthropology in a deconstructivist building where the rivers meet), the Institut Lumière (where cinema was born), the Croix-Rousse hill (the former silk-weavers' quarter, now bohemian), and the Beaujolais vineyards a 30-minute drive north.

Discover Lyon

Vieux Lyon is divided into three quarters — Saint-Jean (the cathedral and main tourist strip), Saint-Paul (quieter, artisan workshops) and Saint-Georges (residential, tucked along the river). The ensemble of Renaissance and medieval buildings earned UNESCO status in 1998. The traboules are the highlight: over 40 are open to the public, threading through courtyards with spiral staircases, galleried loggias and centuries of patina. The Cathedral of Saint-Jean-Baptiste combines Romanesque and Gothic elements, with an astronomical clock dating to the 14th century. Take the funicular up to Fourvière for the basilica's over-the-top 19th-century interior (gold, mosaics, stained glass) and the view that stretches to Mont Blanc on clear winter mornings.

Diplomatic missions in Lyon

5 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.