Vieux Lyon Traboules Walk
The traboules are secret passageways threading through Renaissance courtyards and staircases, connecting parallel streets across Vieux Lyon.
About Vieux Lyon Traboules Walk
The traboules are secret passageways threading through Renaissance courtyards and staircases, connecting parallel streets across Vieux Lyon. Silk workers originally used these shortcuts to transport fabric without getting soaked, and today over 40 remain open to the public during daylight hours. You'll walk through actual 15th and 16th century merchant houses, climbing worn stone staircases and crossing intimate courtyards that most tourists never see because they don't realize the doors open.
Start at 54 Rue Saint-Jean where a small brass plaque marks your entry point. Push the heavy door, step into a Renaissance courtyard, climb the stone staircase, and emerge on the parallel street feeling like you've discovered a secret. The experience repeats as you follow plaques north along Rue du Boeuf and Rue de la Juiverie, each traboule revealing different architectural details: spiral staircases, carved galleries, and intimate courtyards where residents hang laundry and park bicycles.
Most guides make this sound more mysterious than it is, but that's actually the charm. These aren't museum pieces but working residential buildings where real people live, so keep quiet as you pass through. The tourist office at Place du Change sells detailed maps for EUR 1, though following the brass door plaques works perfectly well. The Maison du Chamarier at 37 Rue Saint-Jean has the most spectacular Renaissance loggia, but honestly, the magic is in the simple act of pushing unmarked doors and finding yourself somewhere unexpected.
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