Why Lille needs a local guide
Flemish architecture, cobblestones, and a food culture that runs on cheese and hops. Vieux Lille is gorgeous in a Northern European way — nothing like the South of France. The Palais des Beaux-Arts is the second biggest art museum in France and most people outside the North have no idea.
Lille sits at the crossroads of three countries and receives around four million visitors a year, a figure that keeps growing since the Eurostar put London ninety minutes away and the TGV put Paris at sixty. Most visitors stick to the Grand Place and the Vieux Lille shopping streets without understanding that Wazemmes market on Sunday morning is a bigger cultural experience than any museum. To become a tour guide in Lille is to work a city where Flemish and French identities overlap in every brick facade and every plate of carbonnade flamande. The Palais des Beaux-Arts holds a collection that rivals anything outside Paris, and the Braderie de Lille every September pulls in two million people for the biggest flea market in Europe. Becoming a tour guide in Lille means tapping a market fed by three countries — Belgium, the UK, and the Netherlands — each bringing visitors who arrive knowing almost nothing about the city. The Citadelle de Vauban, the Art Deco swimming pool in nearby Roubaix, the estaminets where you drink beer and play traditional board games — these are the experiences visitors want. If you become a tour guide in Lille, you are working a city that is still a genuine surprise to almost everyone who arrives.