Bordeaux, France
Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.
Overview
Wine Tourism
Architecture & History
Atlantic Coast
Food & Markets
History
Culture
Practical Info
Bordeaux's reinvention over the past two decades has been extraordinary. The city centre — an 18th-century neoclassical ensemble of honey-coloured limestone along the Garonne river — was cleaned, pedestrianised and granted UNESCO World Heritage status in 2007. The Miroir d'Eau on the Place de la Bourse is the world's largest reflecting pool and Bordeaux's most photographed landmark. The Cité du Vin, a swooping glass-and-aluminium building on the riverbank, opened in 2016 as an interactive wine museum and tasting centre — the best introduction to Bordeaux wine for newcomers. The TGV connection to Paris (2h04) completed in 2017 has made Bordeaux a genuine alternative to the capital for weekends and business. But the wine is still the main draw. Saint-Émilion — a UNESCO-listed medieval village surrounded by vineyards 40 km east — is the most accessible and atmospheric wine destination. The Médoc peninsula north of the city houses the legendary Left Bank estates (Margaux, Pauillac, Saint-Julien, Saint-Estèphe). Graves and Pessac-Léognan sit just south of the suburbs. The Right Bank villages of Pomerol and Fronsac complete the picture. Beyond wine: the Atlantic coast is 45 minutes west — the Arcachon Basin with its oyster villages, the Dune of Pilat (the tallest sand dune in Europe), and the surf beaches of Cap Ferret and Lacanau. Bordeaux's food scene matches its wines: the Marché des Capucins is the city's gourmet belly, and the riverside Quais des Chartrons district has evolved into a strip of wine bars, restaurants and antique dealers.
Discover Bordeaux
6 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.