Upper Town (Haute-Ville)
Upper Town (Haute-Ville)
4.5
عرض كامل
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المنطقة
العنوان
الجوار: Downtown Quebec City
تواصَل مباشرة
أفضل الأماكن القريبة
المطاعم
849 على بُعد 5 كيلومترات
معالم الجذب
286 على بُعد 10 كيلومترات
4.5
1,087 تعليق
ممتاز
770
جيد جدًا
285
متوسط
28
سيئ
3
سيئ جدًا
1
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PBPG
يوركشاير, UK7,239 مساهمة
زوجان • سبتمبر 2024
A fabulous area to wander around in. Everywhere seems very clean and neat. The buildings appear to be all light colour, sort of uniform but not. Many shops and churches to see, not to mention cafes and bars
كُتب بتاريخ 11 سبتمبر 2024
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Helena-Francisco
كويبك, كندا20,583 مساهمة
زوجان • سبتمبر 2023
During Culture Days in September 2023, we decided to make our own trip independently and walk the streets of Upper Town. Walking in Old Quebec makes us discover part of its heritage and history.
We started with the beautiful steep street, Côte de la Montagne. As early as 1617 Samuel de Champlain realized that a trail was needed between Lower Town and Upper Town Quebec. It was then that he realized a steep path and closed the lower part too steep. This is why the layout of the Côte de la Montagne takes the form of an elbow opposite the Casse-Cou staircase. As we climb the hill, we see to our right a large brown cross that tells us where the Quebec pioneers were buried. It was from the 19th century that the artery became commercial. Today, we find mainly souvenir shops here. The brand of the popular restaurant Le Vendôme in the 50s and 60s has remained in its place, even if the restaurant no longer exists.
We then went to Mont-Carmel Street near Parc Cavalier-du-Moulin. It is on this street that Clara Symes, the future Marquise of Bassano, seen on May 28, 1845. She was orphaned in 1863. His father, Georges Burns Symes, was one of the most important businessmen in Quebec. Upon his death, he left a fortune valued at $500,000 to his only daughter Clara Symes. She became the richest heiress in the province. She was later a great philanthropist and helped the poorest, including orphans. His fate set him on the road the young Marquis of Bassano, a close relative of the French Emperor Napoleon III. Thus she became the Marquise of Bassano. She remained very attached to her hometown of Quebec, where she had a Victorian house built in 1888 on Graubünden Street. Today, it is converted into B&B "La Marquise de Bassano."
We continued our hike on Parloir Street and went to the Ursuline Chapel before heading to the City Inn Gardens to see the Halloween decorations. Starting from Garneau Street, we wandered through the Petit Séminaire de Québec quadrilateral and Rue des Remparts.
Christie Street: distinguished by the particularity of its narrow sidewalks
-Rue Saint-Flavien: the historian François-Xavier Garneau lived there his last years
-Rue Sainte-Famille: Collège François-de-Laval and the entrance to the old Latin Quarter
-Rue Couillard: the house of Guillaume Couillard, first settler of Quebec and the house Béthanie, former Mercy Hospital
-Rue Hébert: #22, rue Hébert, the home of Pierre Emond, master carpenter and sculptor
-Rue de la Ménagerie: recalls the chicken coops and stables located behind the houses at the time
-Rue Monseigneur-De Laval, favorite for the small house with a weather vane at the corner of rue Hébert and Monseigneur-De Laval
-Rue des Remparts: with its old guns and the view of the Bassin Louise
We continued our walk to the pretty Parc Montmorency where we can admire among others, the monument of Guillaume Couillard. Finally, we ended with the Charles Baillargé staircase. Charles Baillargé was the architect-engineer of Quebec City from 1866 to 1899. The staircase takes the Golden Dog Impasse located opposite the old post office. Landscaping of annual flowers is carried out every year during the summer period.
We started with the beautiful steep street, Côte de la Montagne. As early as 1617 Samuel de Champlain realized that a trail was needed between Lower Town and Upper Town Quebec. It was then that he realized a steep path and closed the lower part too steep. This is why the layout of the Côte de la Montagne takes the form of an elbow opposite the Casse-Cou staircase. As we climb the hill, we see to our right a large brown cross that tells us where the Quebec pioneers were buried. It was from the 19th century that the artery became commercial. Today, we find mainly souvenir shops here. The brand of the popular restaurant Le Vendôme in the 50s and 60s has remained in its place, even if the restaurant no longer exists.
We then went to Mont-Carmel Street near Parc Cavalier-du-Moulin. It is on this street that Clara Symes, the future Marquise of Bassano, seen on May 28, 1845. She was orphaned in 1863. His father, Georges Burns Symes, was one of the most important businessmen in Quebec. Upon his death, he left a fortune valued at $500,000 to his only daughter Clara Symes. She became the richest heiress in the province. She was later a great philanthropist and helped the poorest, including orphans. His fate set him on the road the young Marquis of Bassano, a close relative of the French Emperor Napoleon III. Thus she became the Marquise of Bassano. She remained very attached to her hometown of Quebec, where she had a Victorian house built in 1888 on Graubünden Street. Today, it is converted into B&B "La Marquise de Bassano."
We continued our hike on Parloir Street and went to the Ursuline Chapel before heading to the City Inn Gardens to see the Halloween decorations. Starting from Garneau Street, we wandered through the Petit Séminaire de Québec quadrilateral and Rue des Remparts.
Christie Street: distinguished by the particularity of its narrow sidewalks
-Rue Saint-Flavien: the historian François-Xavier Garneau lived there his last years
-Rue Sainte-Famille: Collège François-de-Laval and the entrance to the old Latin Quarter
-Rue Couillard: the house of Guillaume Couillard, first settler of Quebec and the house Béthanie, former Mercy Hospital
-Rue Hébert: #22, rue Hébert, the home of Pierre Emond, master carpenter and sculptor
-Rue de la Ménagerie: recalls the chicken coops and stables located behind the houses at the time
-Rue Monseigneur-De Laval, favorite for the small house with a weather vane at the corner of rue Hébert and Monseigneur-De Laval
-Rue des Remparts: with its old guns and the view of the Bassin Louise
We continued our walk to the pretty Parc Montmorency where we can admire among others, the monument of Guillaume Couillard. Finally, we ended with the Charles Baillargé staircase. Charles Baillargé was the architect-engineer of Quebec City from 1866 to 1899. The staircase takes the Golden Dog Impasse located opposite the old post office. Landscaping of annual flowers is carried out every year during the summer period.
كُتب بتاريخ 2 سبتمبر 2024
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eagleLazio
روما, إيطاليا2,181 مساهمة
زوجان • أغسطس 2023
Getting lost in the streets full of shops and various activities immerses you in a town clearly of French style, on the other hand visa the domination could not be otherwise.
كُتب بتاريخ 20 يوليو 2024
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trophywest
Redding, كاليفورنيا816 مساهمة
زوجان • يوليو 2024
While visiting Fairmont Le Chateau Fronternac, Upper Town or Haute-Ville is right there. Lots of quaint shops and restaurants. The locals are friendly and a couple different people approached us to help with directions. Well worth the time to tour the area.
كُتب بتاريخ 4 يوليو 2024
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Helena-Francisco
كويبك, كندا20,583 مساهمة
زوجان • سبتمبر 2023
During the Culture Days in September 2023, we decided to make our own journey independently and walk the streets of the Upper Town. Walking in Old Quebec each time allows us to discover part of its heritage and its history.
We started with the beautiful steep street, Côte de la Montagne. As early as 1617, Samuel de Champlain realized that a path was needed between Lower Town and Upper Town of Quebec. It was then that he made a steep path and closed the lower part which was too steep. This is the reason why the route of the Côte de la Montagne takes the form of an elbow opposite the Casse-Cou staircase. When we go up the hill, we see on our right a large brown cross which indicates to us the place of the cemetery where the pioneers of Quebec were buried. It was from the 19th century that the artery became commercial. Today, we mainly find souvenir shops there. The sign of the popular Le Vendôme restaurant in the 1950s and 1960s has remained in its place, even though the restaurant no longer exists.
Afterwards, we went to rue Mont-Carmel near Parc Cavalier-du-Moulin. It was on this street that Clara Symes, the future Marquise de Bassano, was born on May 28, 1845. She became an orphan in 1863. Her father, George Burns Symes, was one of the most important businessmen in Quebec. When he died, he left a fortune estimated at $500,000 to his only daughter Clara Symes. She became the richest heiress in the province. She subsequently became a great philanthropist and helped the most deprived, including orphans. His destiny brought him on the road the young Marquis de Bassano, close to the family of the French Emperor Napoleon III. This is how she will become the Marquise of Bassano. She remained very attached to her hometown, Quebec, where she had a Victorian house built in 1888 on rue des Grisons. Today, it has been converted into the B&B “La Marquise de Bassano.”
We continued our hike on rue du Parloir and went to the Chapelle des Ursulines before going to the Jardins de l'Hôtel-de-Ville to see the Halloween decorations. From rue Garneau, we strolled through the quadrilateral of the Petit Séminaire de Québec and rue des Remparts.
-Rue Christie: stands out for the particularity of its narrow sidewalks
-Rue Saint-Flavien: the historian François-Xavier Garneau lived his last years there
-Rue Sainte-Famille: Collège François-de-Laval and the entrance to the old Latin quarter
-Rue Couillard: the house of Guillaume Couillard, 1st settler of Quebec and the Béthanie house, former Miséricorde hospital
-Rue Hébert: #22, rue Hébert, the house of Pierre Emond, master carpenter and sculptor
-Rue de la Ménagerie: reminiscent of the henhouses and stables located behind the houses at the time
-Rue Monseigneur-De Laval, favorite for the little house with a weather vane on the corner of rue Hébert and Rue Monseigneur-De Laval
-Rue des Remparts: with its old cannons and the view of the Bassin Louise
We continued our walk to the pretty Parc Montmorency where we can admire, among other things, the monument of Guillaume Couillard. Finally, we finished with the Charles-Baillargé staircase. Charles Baillargé was the architect-engineer of the city of Quebec from 1866 to 1899. The staircase is taken via the Impasse du Chien d'Or located opposite the old post office. Landscaping with annual flowers is carried out each year during the summer period.
We started with the beautiful steep street, Côte de la Montagne. As early as 1617, Samuel de Champlain realized that a path was needed between Lower Town and Upper Town of Quebec. It was then that he made a steep path and closed the lower part which was too steep. This is the reason why the route of the Côte de la Montagne takes the form of an elbow opposite the Casse-Cou staircase. When we go up the hill, we see on our right a large brown cross which indicates to us the place of the cemetery where the pioneers of Quebec were buried. It was from the 19th century that the artery became commercial. Today, we mainly find souvenir shops there. The sign of the popular Le Vendôme restaurant in the 1950s and 1960s has remained in its place, even though the restaurant no longer exists.
Afterwards, we went to rue Mont-Carmel near Parc Cavalier-du-Moulin. It was on this street that Clara Symes, the future Marquise de Bassano, was born on May 28, 1845. She became an orphan in 1863. Her father, George Burns Symes, was one of the most important businessmen in Quebec. When he died, he left a fortune estimated at $500,000 to his only daughter Clara Symes. She became the richest heiress in the province. She subsequently became a great philanthropist and helped the most deprived, including orphans. His destiny brought him on the road the young Marquis de Bassano, close to the family of the French Emperor Napoleon III. This is how she will become the Marquise of Bassano. She remained very attached to her hometown, Quebec, where she had a Victorian house built in 1888 on rue des Grisons. Today, it has been converted into the B&B “La Marquise de Bassano.”
We continued our hike on rue du Parloir and went to the Chapelle des Ursulines before going to the Jardins de l'Hôtel-de-Ville to see the Halloween decorations. From rue Garneau, we strolled through the quadrilateral of the Petit Séminaire de Québec and rue des Remparts.
-Rue Christie: stands out for the particularity of its narrow sidewalks
-Rue Saint-Flavien: the historian François-Xavier Garneau lived his last years there
-Rue Sainte-Famille: Collège François-de-Laval and the entrance to the old Latin quarter
-Rue Couillard: the house of Guillaume Couillard, 1st settler of Quebec and the Béthanie house, former Miséricorde hospital
-Rue Hébert: #22, rue Hébert, the house of Pierre Emond, master carpenter and sculptor
-Rue de la Ménagerie: reminiscent of the henhouses and stables located behind the houses at the time
-Rue Monseigneur-De Laval, favorite for the little house with a weather vane on the corner of rue Hébert and Rue Monseigneur-De Laval
-Rue des Remparts: with its old cannons and the view of the Bassin Louise
We continued our walk to the pretty Parc Montmorency where we can admire, among other things, the monument of Guillaume Couillard. Finally, we finished with the Charles-Baillargé staircase. Charles Baillargé was the architect-engineer of the city of Quebec from 1866 to 1899. The staircase is taken via the Impasse du Chien d'Or located opposite the old post office. Landscaping with annual flowers is carried out each year during the summer period.
كُتب بتاريخ 29 ديسمبر 2023
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KangKang
تاينان, تايوان17,333 مساهمة
العائلة • يوليو 2023
Old Quebec has an upper town and a lower town. As the name suggests, the upper town is located at a high place. Due to its strategic position, there are many fortifications and historical buildings that are still well preserved. The most representative building is the Chateau Frontenac, and the view is the best. The vast area is Cape Diamond, overlooking the entire city and the St. Lawrence River. The city government and other government units are also in Shangcheng District, and there are many shopping streets around it, which are good for shopping, shopping and fun.
كُتب بتاريخ 24 نوفمبر 2023
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George J
مساهمة
الأصدقاء • أكتوبر 2023
I love Quebec City! Short flight to experience French cuisine, cobble stone stone streets in one of the oldest cities in North America. And, these French speakers are actually Friendly! Let me not forget to mention the great exchange rate for our dollar.
كُتب بتاريخ 9 نوفمبر 2023
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TERRAvelista
لندن, UK18,505 مساهمات
العائلة • سبتمبر 2023
The upper town is equally beautiful and not as 'tight' as the lower town with it's small houses and cobbled streets you can reach via the funicular.
Here everything is bigger and the traffic is more intense. This is where you find all the museums of interests, free to access Notre Dame cathedral etc
Equally expensive as Lower town, yet there are good deals to be found.
Here everything is bigger and the traffic is more intense. This is where you find all the museums of interests, free to access Notre Dame cathedral etc
Equally expensive as Lower town, yet there are good deals to be found.
كُتب بتاريخ 29 أكتوبر 2023
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Dimitris L
سيدني, أستراليا50,924 مساهمة
زوجان • أغسطس 2023
Upper Town or Haute-Ville is a beautiful part of Quebec. There are plenty of restaurants and bars as well as tourist and other shops to keep visitors happy. It is a very clean city and one can never get tired of walking around and visiting various sites.
كُتب بتاريخ 18 أكتوبر 2023
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Foodange
مانشستر, UK4,097 مساهمة
زوجان • أغسطس 2023
We wandered around here each day, always finding something new.
Every street seems to lead to somewhere or something interesting, including restaurants and bars galore, each offering a different experience.
There are a few tourist shops, no high rise and a massive incongruous (to us) Disney-style hotel, which looks ridiculously out of place and really jars with everything around it.
The cruise passengers loved it of course, saves them going to see a real château in the Loire.
Every street seems to lead to somewhere or something interesting, including restaurants and bars galore, each offering a different experience.
There are a few tourist shops, no high rise and a massive incongruous (to us) Disney-style hotel, which looks ridiculously out of place and really jars with everything around it.
The cruise passengers loved it of course, saves them going to see a real château in the Loire.
كُتب بتاريخ 10 أكتوبر 2023
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I am sorry that I posted my question and clicked on "Answer" by mistake. We are seniors and I use a rollator. We want to stay in Upper Quebec (and "commute" to Lower), but other than the Breakneck Steps and Funicular (that would be costly to spend $20 USD a day to go down to Lower and back up, or is there a bus in the Upper to go to Lower, and if so, is it easy to find and does it run often?
Many thanks!
كُتب بتاريخ 16 أبريل 2024
Looking for a Bed and Breakfast (not Airbnb)......any suggestions?
كُتب بتاريخ 13 مايو 2021
Is the funicular handicap friendly? ie wheelchair
كُتب بتاريخ 23 أبريل 2019
Yes, there is a small elevator at the top ( hold the button all the way down and an exit via a small pathway to avoid some steps at the bottom.
كُتب بتاريخ 24 أبريل 2019
Experience381116
تورانس, كاليفورنيا
we are arriving on 12/24/18, wonder if restaurants are open for x'ams?
كُتب بتاريخ 8 ديسمبر 2018
Can someone explain the distinction between lower town, upper town and old Quebec? Trip Advisor has these 3 listed as separate attractions.
كُتب بتاريخ 18 فبراير 2017
Old Town is the entire historic district, both Haute (upper) town and lower. Lower is along the river, and is the original, older part of town nice restaurants, hotels, the Musee de la Civilisation, etc. You can walk up steep streets or steps to the Upper town (larger, more restaurants/hotels, Chateau de Frontenac, Plains of Abraham, connected to the rest of Quebec) or take the Funicular. They're just different parts of the same smallish area, like midtown Manhattan and the theatre district.
كُتب بتاريخ 18 فبراير 2017
Don't know if there is more than one, but do you recommend a particular hop on hop off bus tour?
كُتب بتاريخ 5 سبتمبر 2015
We walked around the upper and lower town but took a city tour with a tour company to see where we wanted to spend more time. You can call in the visitor centre and get plenty of information that will help you.
كُتب بتاريخ 7 سبتمبر 2015
عرض نتائج 1-6 من أصل 6
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