Why Zurich needs a local guide
Zurich is not boring. This is the hill every Zurich local will die on. The Langstrasse was the red-light district and is now the best bar street in the city. Zurich West is a former industrial zone turned into restaurants and galleries in old Löwenbräu brewery buildings. The lake is swimmable in summer and locals do it daily — the Badi culture is sacred.
Zurich gets around 4 million visitors a year, and most of them walk Bahnhofstrasse, see the banks, maybe look at the lake, and leave thinking the city is expensive and cold. They are half right. It is expensive. But it is not cold — not in the way they mean. The Langstrasse after dark is one of the best bar streets in central Europe. The Badi culture in summer turns the lakefront into an open-air social club where bankers and bartenders share the same concrete slabs and jump into water that is genuinely clean. To become a tour guide in Zurich means dismantling the reputation this city does not deserve. Zurich West, the old industrial zone around the Löwenbräu brewery, is now a food and gallery corridor that rivals anything in Berlin. The Markthalle im Viadukt under the old railway arches has street food stalls where you can eat well for under CHF 20, which in Zurich is a minor miracle. To become a tour guide in Zurich is to know which Badi opens first in May, which Langstrasse bar makes the best gin and tonic, and where to get a Bratwurst that costs less than a mortgage payment. Become a tour guide in Zurich and you prove that the most expensive city in Europe is also one of the most livable — if you know where to go.