Elevador de Santa Justa
This wrought-iron elevator shoots you 45 meters straight up from downtown Baixa to the Carmo ruins, offering some of Lisbon's best panoramic views.
About Elevador de Santa Justa
This wrought-iron elevator shoots you 45 meters straight up from downtown Baixa to the Carmo ruins, offering some of Lisbon's best panoramic views. Built in 1902 by a student of Gustave Eiffel, it's essentially a vertical street that saves your legs from a steep climb. The real prize is the circular viewing platform at the top, where you'll see the entire city sprawl from the Tagus River to São Jorge Castle, with the red rooftops of Alfama cascading down the hillside.
The elevator itself feels like stepping into a beautiful old birdcage - all decorative ironwork and worn wooden floors. The ride takes about 30 seconds, but you'll spend most of your time on the open-air platform at the top, which gets packed quickly after 10am. The views are legitimately spectacular, especially looking south over the river and east toward the castle perched on its hill.
Here's what most guides won't tell you: paying €5.15 to ride up from the bottom is tourist trap territory. Walk up from Chiado via Rua do Carmo (takes 3 minutes), access the platform for free from Largo do Carmo, and skip the queues entirely. The elevator ride itself isn't the point - the views are. Go early morning or late afternoon when the light hits the city just right.
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