Amiens
France · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
From the station, walk south on Rue de Bapaume for 8 minutes — you'll pass the wedding-cake silhouette of the Cirque Jules Verne, the working circus Verne funded as a city councilman, before turning into Rue Charles Dubois. Verne lived in this red-brick 'Maison à la Tour' from 1882 until his death in 1905, writing thirty novels in the cylindrical corner turret. Start here because the morning sun lights the eastern facade dead-on and the balloon-shaped weathervane silhouettes cleanly against blue sky.
Tip: Frame the shot from the corner of Rue Charles Dubois and Rue Jeanne d'Arc — the turret, the gable, and the balloon weathervane line up perfectly, and the street stays empty until 10:00 so you'll get the facade clean of parked cars. The museum interior is fine but skippable on a one-day visit; the photo is the prize.
Open in Google Maps →Walk north on Rue de Noyon for 15 minutes — the spire reveals itself between rooftops, then the full 145-meter west facade ambushes you on Place Notre-Dame at point-blank range. This is the largest Gothic cathedral in France (UNESCO), twice the interior volume of Notre-Dame de Paris, with three deep portals carved into a 'stone Bible' of 600 figures. Doors open at 8:30 and tour buses don't arrive until after 10:30 — for the next 45 minutes the nave is essentially yours.
Tip: Walk to the center of the nave and look down — the black-and-cream marble labyrinth set into the floor is one of only three medieval examples surviving in France. Then circle to the north ambulatory for the Ange Pleureur (Weeping Angel), the 17th-century cherub WWI soldiers sent home on postcards. If you're here June through September, return at 22:45 for the free 'Chroma' light show, which projects the cathedral's original 13th-century polychromy back onto the west facade for 45 minutes.
Open in Google Maps →Exit the cathedral by the north transept and walk five minutes downhill across Place Saint-Michel — the half-timbered houses of Saint-Leu lean over the Somme as you arrive at Rue des Bondes. La Soupe à Cailloux is a tiny canalside bistro with a wooden deck over the water and a chalkboard menu in marker; order the ficelle picarde (€11), a thin crepe rolled around ham, button mushrooms, and béchamel then gratinéed until the top blisters. Pair it with farm cider (€4) and grab a dozen macaron d'Amiens (€12) from Jean Trogneux on nearby Rue Delambre, where the same family has pressed the almond-and-honey discs since 1872.
Tip: Arrive at 12:00 sharp — they don't take lunch reservations and the deck is full by 12:30. Save the Trogneux macarons for your hortillonnages walk later; they keep for days at room temperature and actually taste better than freshly baked. The 'soupe' in the name is just the address (Rue des Trois Cailloux runs nearby) — skip the actual soup of the day and double down on the ficelle picarde.
Open in Google Maps →Cross the Pont de la Dodane and walk along Quai Bélu — the heart of Saint-Leu is a working medieval grid of weavers' and tanners' houses on stilts above the Somme, painted ochre, mustard, and kingfisher blue, with footbridges where streets should be. The light shifts southwest after 14:00 and rakes the facades directly; this is the hour the canal photographs best. Cross to Place du Don and Quai Bélu for the postcard view down the quay — this is Amiens' single most-photographed frame.
Tip: The exact postcard frame is from the Pont de la Dodane footbridge looking northeast — the row of pastel facades on Quai Bélu reflects perfectly in the canal when the water is still around 14:00. The local-only move: walk one block back from the canal to Rue des Majots, where the half-timbered houses are still residential, laundry hangs from the upper windows, and there isn't a tourist in sight — this is the real Amiens.
Open in Google Maps →Walk east 700 meters along Rue Motte and cross the Pont des Cygnes — Parc Saint-Pierre opens onto a kilometer-long basin where the Chemin de Halage towpath begins. The hortillonnages are 300 hectares of medieval market gardens cut by 65 kilometers of narrow canals, still farmed for artichokes, leeks, and rhubarb since the 5th century. Walk the towpath loop (~6 km, 2 hours) counter-clockwise from La Maison des Hortillonnages — you'll pass private willow-shaded islands accessible only by flat-bottomed cornets, with gardeners loading crates of vegetables straight onto the boats.
Tip: Walk the towpath instead of paying €8 for the standard boat tour — the boat keeps you on the Somme's main channel where you see the canals from outside, while the towpath weaves between the actual market-garden islands where gardeners are working their plots. Go counter-clockwise from La Maison des Hortillonnages (54 Bd de Beauvillé) and bring water — there's no café until you loop back. Late August is artichoke harvest, when you'll see boats stacked with crates heading back to the docks.
Open in Google Maps →Loop back west into Saint-Leu as golden hour catches the canal — Le Quai (13 Quai Bélu) is the address locals book when in-laws visit, a timber-beamed room with a deck cantilevered over the Somme. Order the canard à la picarde — duck breast in cider-apple jus (€26) — and the regional cheese trio of Maroilles, Rollot, and Bergues (€12); pair with a glass of Page 24 amber, the local Picard craft beer (€6). End with coffee on the deck as Saint-Leu's facades light up across the water and the canal turns black.
Tip: Reserve the morning of by phone — Saint-Leu canalside restaurants hold deck tables for callers, not for online bookings. Arrive by 19:30 to claim the deck before locals roll in at 20:00; kitchen closes at 21:30. **Saint-Leu pitfall:** ignore the photogenic crêperies on Place du Don charging €15 for a cheese galette that's €6 in any real Breton place — Amiens' strength is sit-down Picard cooking like canard à la picarde and ficelle picarde, not Brittany imports; on Place du Don the postcard view is paying the rent, not the cooking.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Amiens?
Most travelers enjoy Amiens in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Amiens?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Amiens?
A practical starting point is about €95 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Amiens?
A good first shortlist for Amiens includes Maison de Jules Verne (Exterior).