Why Grenoble needs a local guide
The Bastille cable car gives you a view that makes you forget you're in a mid-sized French city. Below, the streets mix university energy with an outdoor-sports culture that runs deep. Grenoble hosted the 1968 Winter Olympics and still lives that mountain identity daily.
Grenoble sits in a valley where three Alpine ranges meet, and around two million visitors come each year for the mountains. But most of them pass through the city without stopping, heading straight for ski resorts or trailheads. To become a tour guide in Grenoble is to change that equation. The Bastille fortress, reached by the oldest urban cable car in the world, gives a panorama that makes people reconsider the city entirely. Below, the Saint-Laurent neighborhood on the right bank of the Isere holds a 12th-century church built over a 6th-century crypt. The Musee de la Resistance tells the story of the Vercors maquis during WWII — one of the most significant Resistance chapters in France. Becoming a tour guide in Grenoble means combining city culture with mountain access in a way no other French city allows. The Chartreuse monastery at Voiron, the walnut groves of the Gresivaudan valley, the 1968 Olympic sites — these are half-day add-ons that most visitors do not know exist. If you become a tour guide in Grenoble, you work a market where outdoor enthusiasts and history travelers overlap, and the competition is remarkably thin for a city of this size.