From Porto’s City Hall to Vila Nova de Gaia: Portugal’s Hidden Stories
  
  
 Uncover Porto's hidden past on a thrilling storytelling walk through Kings, Queens and Pastries
Porto’s picturesque streets are home to grand medieval buildings, revolutionary history, and cute cafés filled with culinary delights. On this walking tour, you’ll hear the stories of kings who dressed their dead wives as queens, princes who launched the Age of Discovery, and ordinary citizens who shaped Portugal’s destiny.
Starting in front of the impressive Porto City Hall, you’ll wander through cobbled streets where Roman settlers once traded, medieval merchants crafted sword scabbards, and Portuguese rebels proclaimed the first republic. Strolling through the city’s atmospheric streets, from the grand Avenida dos Aliados (Avenue of the Allies) to the ancient Jewish quarter’s narrow alleyways, you’ll hear the history hidden beneath its famous blue tiles and granite facades.
As you make your way to Vila Nova de Gaia, Porto’s neighbouring city where the tour ends, you’ll head up steps to spectacular viewpoints. From Miradouro da Vitória and Miradouro da Rua das Aldas, you’ll enjoy sweeping vistas over the Douro River. You’ll cross the iconic Dom Luís I Bridge, designed by a former partner of Gustave Eiffel, while learning about the tragic bridge collapse that claimed thousands of lives during Napoleon’s invasion.
On this 90-minute tour, you’ll have a chance to:
• Marvel at São Bento Station’s 20,000 hand-painted tiles depicting Portugal’s most pivotal historical moments, from medieval battles to royal weddings
• Stand outside Livraria Lello, often called the world’s most beautiful bookshop, and learn why literary pilgrims queue for hours to enter
• Climb Torre dos Clérigos, once Portugal’s tallest building and a navigation beacon for ships, while hearing ghost stories of lovelorn monks
• Sample Castro Atelier de Pastéis de Nata famous custard tarts
• Explore Igreja do Carmo’s spectacular tiled facade featuring 40,000 ceramic pieces
• Pass by Porto’s tiny Puppet Museum, which preserves centuries-old Portuguese marionette traditions
• Find out how Gaia, the quieter riverside city, became the heart of the port wine trade
By the end of this tour, you’ll have an experience of Porto not just as a tourist destination, but as a living chronicle of Portuguese creativity.
Please note: this walking tour covers about two miles with some uphill sections.













