Lonely Planet Pocket Bordeaux
137 pages
English

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137 pages
English

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Description

Lonely Planet: The world's number one travel guide publisher* Lonely Planet's Pocket Bordeaux is your passport to the most relevant, up-to-date advice on what to see and skip, and what hidden discoveries await you. Explore the complex world of wine at La Cite du Vin, reflect at the Miroir d'Eau and gorge on fine food, art and architecture - all with your trusted travel companion. Get to the heart of Bordeaux and begin your journey now! Inside Lonely Planet's Pocket Bordeaux: Full-colour maps and images throughout Highlights and itineraries help you tailor your trip to your personal needs and interests Insider tips to save time and money and get around like a local, avoiding crowds and trouble spots Essential info at your fingertips - hours of operation, phone numbers, websites, transit tips, prices Honest reviews for all budgets - eating, sleeping, sightseeing, going out, shopping, hidden gems that most guidebooks miss Free, convenient pull-out map (included in print version), plus over 15 colour neighbourhood maps User-friendly layout with helpful icons, and organised by neighbourhood to help you pick the best spots to spend your time Covers Saint-Pierre, Saint-Paul & the Triangle d'Or, Saint-Seurin & Fondaudege, Saint-Michel & Capucins-Victoire, Chartrons, Bassin a Flot & Bacalan, La Bastide, St-Emilion, and more The Perfect Choice: Lonely Planet's Pocket Bordeaux is our colourful, easy to use and handy guide that literally fits in your pocket, providing on-the-go assistance for those seeking the best sights and experiences on a short visit or weekend away. Looking for more extensive coverage? Check out Lonely Planet's France guide for an in-depth look at all the country has to offer. About Lonely Planet: Lonely Planet is a leading travel media company and the world's number one travel guidebook brand, providing both inspiring and trustworthy information for every kind of traveller since 1973. Over the past four decades, we've printed over 145 million guidebooks and grown a dedicated, passionate global community of travellers. You'll also find our content online, and in mobile apps, video, 14 languages, nine international magazines, armchair and lifestyle books, ebooks, and more. 'Lonely Planet guides are, quite simply, like no other.' - New York Times 'Lonely Planet. It's on everyone's bookshelves, it's in every traveller's hands. It's on mobile phones. It's on the Internet. It's everywhere, and it's telling entire generations of people how to travel the world.' - Fairfax Media (Australia) *Source: Nielsen BookScan: Australia, UK, USA, 5/2016-4/2017eBook Features: (Best viewed on tablet devices and smartphones) Downloadable PDF and offline maps prevent roaming and data charges Effortlessly navigate and jump between maps and reviews Add notes to personalise your guidebook experience Seamlessly flip between pages Bookmarks and speedy search capabilities get you to key pages in a flash Embedded links to recommendations' websites Zoom-in maps and images Inbuilt dictionary for quick referencing Important Notice: The digital edition of this book may not contain all of the images found in the physical edition.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 avril 2019
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781788685511
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 27 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0400€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Contents

Plan Your Trip

Welcome to Bordeaux
Top Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Shopping
Entertainment
Wine Tasting
Festivals & Events
Art
Architecture
Activities
For Kids
LGBT+
Markets
Four Perfect Days
Need to Know
Bordeaux Neighbourhoods

Explore Bordeaux

Saint-Pierre, Saint-Paul & the Triangle d’Or
Saint-Michel & Capucins-Victoire
Saint-Seurin & Fondaudège
Chartrons, Bassins à Flot & Bacalan

Worth a Trip

Exploring La Bastide
St-Émilion
The Médoc
Bassin d’Arcachon

Survival Guide

Survival Guide
Before You Go
Arriving in Bordeaux
Getting Around
Essential Information
Language
Behind the Scenes
Our Writer
Welcome to Bordeaux

An intoxicating cocktail of 18th-century savoir-faire, futuristic architecture and urban street life, France’s sixth largest city is among Europe’s most exciting and gutsy players. Bordeaux’s elegant old town cradles the world’s largest urban Unesco World Heritage Site; its riverside buzzes; and green, sun-drenched vineyards hem in a weekend destination that sits right at the heart of French wine culture.


Grand Théâtre on place de la Comédie | ROSTISLAV AGEEV/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 La Cité du Vin
World-class wine museum

JERÓNIMO ALBA/AGE FOTOSTOCK ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 Cathédrale St-André
Centuries of worship and rooftop views

ALVARO GERMAN VILELA/SHUTTERSTOCK ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 Place de la Bourse
Bordeaux’s most elegant square

JUSTIN FOULKES/LONELY PLANET ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 Musée d’Aquitaine
Bordelais history museum extraordinaire

HEMIS/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 Basilique St-Seurin
Medieval pilgrimage site

JOHN SILVER/SHUTTERSTOCK ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 Basilique St-Michel
A Flamboyant Gothic gem

TRABANTOS/SHUTTERSTOCK ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 Musée des Beaux Arts
Discover Bordeaux artists

SERGEY KELIN/SHUTTERSTOCK ©

 
Bordeaux Top Sights

1 La Base Sous-Marine
WWII bunker to urban art space

MYLAR BRUNO/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Eating

Gourmet Bordeaux cooks up excellent dining, often paired with exceptional wine lists featuring plenty of wines from surrounding vineyards. Timeless dining icons mingle with new openings in Saint-Pierre and Saint-Paul’s tasty tangle of pedestrian streets. Riverfront restaurants lace quai des Chartrons – it’s particularly enchanting at sunset.

La Tupina | MAISANT LUDOVIC/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO ©

Bistros & Neobistros
Eating out in foodie Bordeaux embraces the whole gambit of places to eat – cafes, restaurants, bars etc. But for regional cuisine à la Bordelaise, cooked up using traditional family recipes or with a revisited twist by a Michelin-starred chef, it is the city’s bistros and brasseries that shine. Bordelaise bistros are typically small, casual restaurants with a short, enticing menu of homemade fare, including timeless classics such as lamproie à la bordelaise (eel stew) and entrecôte à la Bordelaise (beef steak in red-wine sauce). Neobistros inject a trendy dose of contemporary design and creativity into the traditional bistro formula, both in interior design and in the kitchen.

Brasseries
Brasseries, a faithful stalwart of every French city, resemble large cafes: they open all day, serve coffee and drinks as well as full meals, and usually have a vast pavement terrace. Fare tends to be traditional, although since the much-celebrated 2015 arrival of British chef Gordon Ramsay at Brasserie Le Bordeaux , located inside the city’s most historic hotel, new life has been breathed into the local brasserie scene.

Best Traditional French
La Tupina Outstanding Bordelais cuisine, with many dishes cooked over an open fire.
Au Bistrot Locavore, seasonal and hardcore-traditional dining near Capucins market.
Le Bouchon Bordelais Snail stew is a regional treat at this traditional bistro.
Le Petit Commerce Classic fish and seafood.
La Boîte à Huîtres Oyster heaven.
Best Modern French
Mets Mots Creative, seasonal neobistro cuisine by talented chef Léo Forget in Saint-Seurin.
Garopapilles Michelin-starred restaurant with courtyard garden.
Belle Campagne Tasting plates to share and full-blown neobistro dining on local produce in Saint-Pierre.
Le Davoli Gourmet dining with chef David Grangier in Saint-Pierre.
Miles A firm modern-French favourite that has lost none of its flavour.
Best Weekend Brunch
Au Couvent Backstreet address in Chartrons, oozing vintage charm and creativity.
Le Monologue The urban-cool brunch address in fashionable Saint-Seurin.
Magasin Général The original brunch spot on the edgy Rive Droite.
La Grande Poste Sensational Sunday brunch in a former art deco post office.
Horace Unbeatable brunch-and-craft coffee combo.

Lifestyle Blogs
Camille in Bordeaux ( www.camilleinbordeaux.fr ) Where to eat and drink by a 20-something city-trotteuse (city trotter).
Bordeaux Replay ( https://bordeaux-replay.fr ) Dining trends and nightlife in Bordeaux.
 

Drinking & Nightlife

Bordeaux places great importance on drinking – be it tasting excellent vintages in a bar à vin (wine bar), guzzling cacolac (chocolate milk made in Bordeaux since 1954) in a cafe or glugging local Darwin beer in an industrial hangar. Medieval Saint-Pierre teems with atmospheric cafe terraces, as do Chartron’s riverside quays.

L’Apollo | ALVARO GERMAN VILELA/SHUTTERSTOCK ©

Aperitifs
No French drinking tradition is as fine or as sacrosanct as the aperitif – the ritual of savouring at leisure a pre-meal drink (lunch or dinner) in good company. Bordeaux’s bonanza of sun-drenched pavement terraces were clearly designed with aperitif-quaffing in mind and sipping a flute of sparkling Crémant de Bordeaux or glass of Lillet rosé (a local, pink aromatised wine) is a quintessential Bordeaux experience – to be repeated.

Bars & Clubs
The line between drinking and clubbing is often nonexistent – a cafe that’s quiet mid-afternoon might have DJ sets in the evening and dancing later on. One thing is certain though: from traditional neighbourhood cafe-bar to cutting-edge cocktail bar or specialist coffee shop, drinking options abound in student-packed Bordeaux. Bars typically open from 7pm to 1am, clubs from around 10pm to 3am or 4am Thursday to Saturday.

Best Cocktails
Symbiose Exceptional signature cocktails paired with exquisite food.
Le Point Rouge Pre-club cocktails in a hidden speakeasy on quai du Paladate.
Cancan Achingly cool speakeasy by Parisian duo Romain and Clément; fashionable retro vibe and outstanding music.
L’Alchimiste Craft cocktails and Italian small plates in a 1920s-styled lounge bar.
Le Taquin Waterfront cocktails, albeit with a busy road separating the river-facing terrace from the water.
Best Specialist Coffee
Café Piha Beans are roasted on-site at this colonial-style coffee shop in Saint-Paul.
Café Gusco Specialist coffee and lunch by the city’s only female roaster and barista.
Le Monologue Caffeine hits in fashionable Saint-Seurin.
Koeben Scandinavian drink-dine-shop hybrid: coffee shop, upmarket grocery and design-cool boutique.
La Pelle Café Where to find decent coffee in the Chartrons district.
Banana Café The perfect coffee stop pre- or post-Musée d’Aquitaine.
Best Alfresco Terraces
Night Beach Summertime hipster hobnobbing on the rooftop of Grand Hôtel de Bordeaux.
L’Apollo Vintage-cool pavement seating on a people-watching square in medieval Bordeaux.
Utopia One of Saint-Pierre’s finest cafe terraces, in a former church.
Café Laiton The market-side hot spot for decent espressos with a prime view of place des Capucins.
Café Gusco Bordeaux’s only female roaster offers serious coffee on a village-like square beneath trees.
Ibaïa Café Seasonal, design-chic drinking on the water’s edge.

Party Hotspots
Mainstream nightclubs congregate on quai du Paladate near the train station. Or join locals afloat at I.Boat , hot spot for DJ sets, live concerts and club nights on a barge in industrial Bacalan.
 

Shopping

Be it shopping at the weekly market; in exquisite concept stores selling beautiful gifts for him, her and the home; or in tiny boutiques specialising in spices, wine or ingenious umbrella stands invented in situ for Bordeaux’s zillions of bicycles, shopping in this city is seriously fun and varied.

Marché des Capucins | GABRIEL12/SHUTTERSTOCK ©

Where to Shop
Europe’s longest pedestrian shopping street, rue Ste-Catherine, links place de la Victoire and place de la Comédie; 19th-century shopping arcade Galerie Bordelaise (rue de la Porte Dijeaux & rue Ste-Catherine; h hours vary) is nearby. Luxury fashion boutiques lace the Triangle d’Or (‘Golden Triangle’) formed by cours Georges Clemenceau, cours de l’Intendance and Allées de Tourny. Trendy independent boutiques and design shops are concentrated on rue St-James in the Saint-Pierre quarter and rue Notre-Dame in Chartrons.

Souvenirs
Few cities are as generous in riches to take home as Bordeaux. While not everyone will be able to take home copious amounts of wine – every self-respecting wine shop does ship abroad – there are ample other ‘Made in Bordeaux’ treats to buy as a souvenir. Food stuffs are an obvious gift, while the city’s many boutique-styled concept stores brim with beautifully crafted, locally designed homewares. Accessories by Bordeaux designers – tote bags by Cocrico, jewellery by Camille – are a fashionista favourite.

Best Fashion
Les Sisterettes Fashionable clothes and acessories for women, many by Bordelais or French designers.
Freep’Show Vintage Vintage fashion with a clear retro tech theme going on.
Blue Madone Vintage designer fashion for men and women; workshops too.
Galeries Lafayette Bordeaux’s central department store, with history to boot.
Quai des Marques Big-brand fashion and accessories at discounted, outlet prices.
Best Food & Drink
Marché des Capucins H

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