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Castle Hill: Gardens and Viewpoint

Castle Hill: Gardens and Viewpoint

You arrive at the base of the Colline du Château from the Vieux Nice side, where stone stairs worn smooth by centurie...

You arrive at the base of the Colline du Château from the Vieux Nice side, where stone stairs worn smooth by centuries of footsteps open between faded colourful facades. To your left, the free lift beside the Tour Bellanda offers a comfortable alternative, but choosing the stairs means choosing the full experience: the scent of Mediterranean pine growing stronger with each flight, the murmur of a 19th-century artificial waterfall appearing through the vegetation like a mirage, and fragments of view that widen as you gain height.

The **Colline du Château** is far more than a viewpoint. This is where Nice was born — the Greek acropolis of Nikaia was established here in the 4th century BC, and during the Middle Ages a fortress rose that dominated the entire coast. In 1706, Louis XIV ordered its destruction after the siege of Nice, and of that imposing castle only wall fragments and memory carved in stone remain. What grew afterwards is a garden both wild and civilised: **Aleppo pines** that twist toward the light, **cypresses** pointing skyward like green sentinels, bougainvillea exploding in purple against the Mediterranean blue, and paths winding between ivy-covered ruins.

At the summit the **Nietzsche terrace** awaits, named because the German philosopher, during his stays in Nice between 1883 and 1888, climbed here every morning to contemplate the sea while writing passages of *Thus Spoke Zarathustra*. The view spans 360 degrees: to the south, the **Baie des Anges** curves in a perfect arc from the airport to Cap de Nice; westward, the Promenade des Anglais stretches like a white ribbon bordered by palms; northward, the old-town rooftops form a mosaic of Roman tiles in ochre and terracotta; and eastward, Nice's harbour with its yachts and fishing boats.

There is an ideal moment for this visit: **early morning**. At 08:30, when access opens, the hill belongs to local joggers and dog walkers. The low-angle sunrise light casts long shadows between the trees and tints the sea an almost unreal blue. If you come later — midday or afternoon — the experience is still magnificent, but you will share the viewpoints with organised groups.

Don't miss the **Jewish cemetery** on the eastern slope, one of the oldest in France with headstones dating from the 16th century. Nor should you pass the **Tour Bellanda**, a circular tower rebuilt in the 19th century housing a small free naval museum with ship models and documents on Nice's maritime history.

**Local tip**: bring water and a small picnic. There are benches strategically placed in the shade of pine trees where you can sit and eat with the entire bay at your feet — a luxury that doesn't cost a single cent.

Gratis

About this activity

Castle Hill is Nice's green lung. Though the castle was destroyed by Louis XIV in 1706, the hill retains its walls, a 19th-century waterfall, and Mediterranean gardens. The Nietzsche terrace at the top offers a 360° view from the airport to Cap Ferrat. At dawn, the hill is nearly empty with only joggers and dog walkers.

Practical information

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Address
Colline du Château, 06300 Nice, Francia
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Opening hours
Abr-Sep: 08:30-20:00, Oct-Mar: 08:30-18:00
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Price
Gratis

Part of these experiences

Slow Nice: Gardens, Beaches and the Calm of the French Riviera

Slow Nice: Gardens, Beaches and the Calm of the French Riviera

There's a Nice that doesn't appear in the quick guides. A Nice that breathes between centuries-old gardens, that sways with the gentle waves of hidden beaches, and invites you to sit on a stone bench with no plan other than watching the Mediterranean light bathe everything in gold. This experience is an invitation to let go of the pace, to let the French Riviera wrap you in its unhurried rhythm, far from the crowded terraces and filtered selfies. There's no rush here. Just beauty, silence, and the privilege of discovering a city that has mastered the art of going slow. ### The route Your day begins at the **Colline du Château**, Nice's green heart. You climb paths lined with pines and bougainvillea until you reach the Nietzsche terrace, where the philosopher spent hours contemplating the infinite blue of the sea. From above, the Baie des Anges unfolds like an impressionist painting: ochre rooftops of the Vieux Nice, the sweeping curve of the Promenade, and in the background, the Maritime Alps etched against the sky. It's the kind of view that forces you to breathe deeply. After descending, you let your feet carry you to the **Promenade des Anglais** as the afternoon begins to turn golden. You haven't come to walk all seven kilometres — you've come to sit in one of the iconic blue chairs and do absolutely nothing. Watch the cyclists, the couples strolling hand in hand, the children running barefoot. The Niçois sunset is a collective ritual, a silent celebration of the light bidding farewell as it paints the bay in pink and orange. The calm continues at the **Monastery of Cimiez**, a Franciscan haven founded in the 9th century atop Roman ruins. You find yourself wandering among 800-year-old olive trees, breathing in the scent of roses, and discovering that Matisse chose this place as his final resting place. The views from the gardens embrace the entire city, but the real gift is the silence — a dense, ancient silence that seems to float between the cloister stones. At midday, you slip away to **Castel Beach**, the old town's best-kept secret. While the pebble beaches along the Promenade swarm with tourists, this small sandy cove at the foot of Castle Hill maintains an intimate, almost clandestine atmosphere. The water is crystal clear, the rocks shelter you from the wind, and all you need is a towel and the sound of waves to feel that time has stopped. The final stop takes you to the **Nice Botanical Garden**, perched on Mont Gros hill. Here, among more than 3,500 plant species from five continents, you find benches shaded by palm trees where you can sit with a book or simply listen to birdsong. The terraces descend toward the Paillon valley offering panoramic views that rival any tourist viewpoint, but without a single tour bus in sight. Nice without hurry is not an experience you conquer — it's an experience that conquers you. All you need to do is surrender to the rhythm of a city that has spent centuries perfecting the art of living slowly.

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