Ottawa Citizen

LAKE GENEVA IS SWITZERLAN­D’S RIVIERA

Sparkling with romance, this mellow destinatio­n is the ideal vacation spot

- RICK STEVES Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

Arching around Switzerlan­d’s most southwest corner, Lake Geneva laps against the French border with a serene beauty. A collage of castles, museums, resort towns and vineyards, this region merits a few days of exploratio­n, though you can enjoy a swift overview of its highlights even in just one day.

Last summer I took time to relax and enjoy the tranquil and elegant city of Lausanne (the area’s best home base). With a characteri­stic old town, towering cathedral, and delightful lakeside promenade, it has the energy and cultural sophistica­tion of a larger city, but is home to only about 140,000 people.

The Romans founded Lausanne on the lakefront, but with the fall of Rome and the rise of the barbarians, the first Lausanners fled for the hills, establishi­ng today’s tangled old town a safe distance uphill from the lake. The steep city feels like a life-size game of Chutes and Ladders. Two-dimensiona­l maps don’t do justice to the city’s bridges, underpasse­s, stairways, hills and valleys. Even the Metro trains and platforms are on an incline.

Wandering the pedestrian­ized Rue de Bourg in the old town, I could see the multi-ethnic makeup of today’s Switzerlan­d on parade. Though the region’s official language is French, the language situation is potluck, with German and Italian also prevalent. (Be careful to pronounce Lausanne correctly — “loh-zahn” — and don’t confuse it with Luzern.)

One of Lausanne’s highlights, the Collection de l’Art Brut, is like nothing else you’ll see in Europe: a museum filled with art produced by untaught artists, many of them imprisoned or legally insane, and all of them as free-spirited as artists could possibly be.

Down by the lake is another tourist district, Ouchy (pronounced “oo-shee”). It’s the happy domain of commoners, office workers, and roller skaters strutting their stuff, a fun zone with fountains, parks, promenades and restaurant­s. The Ouchy lakefront is also where you’ll find the top-notch Olympic Museum, set in a beautiful lakeside park where the Olympic flame flickers between Games. This is your chance to see Jesse Owens’ spiked jumping shoes, Katarina Witt’s red skating dress, a basketball signed by the 1992 American “Dream Team,” and Cathy Freeman’s running shoes.

The most picturesqu­e way to see Lake Geneva is by a twohour boat cruise from Lausanne to the region’s best sight: the island-castle of Chateau de Chillon. Elegant French-style villas with pastel colours, frilly balconies, and mansard roofs grace the lakeshore and instil an air of gentility. On my last visit, I sailed past the dreamy terraced banks of Lavaux vineyards and on toward Montreux, a relaxed resort famous for its jazz festival each July.

Though not heavy on sights, Montreux offers sublime views of misty Lake Geneva and the cutglass peaks in the distance. For an easy side-trip from Montreux, hop on the Chocolate Train. It stops at a chocolate factory and at the foot of Gruyeres, the ultra-touristy town that’s famous for its cheese, which you can see being made in a production house.

The French-speaking Swiss countrysid­e to the north is worth exploring, especially if you’re driving. Along with tasty chocolates and fragrant cheese, it’s sprinkled with crystal-clear lakes and sleepy cows.

My favourite destinatio­n in the area, Chateau de Chillon, is set wistfully at the edge of Lake Geneva, about 30 kilometres southeast of Lausanne. Because it’s built on a rocky island, this medieval castle has a higgledypi­ggledy shape that combines a stout fortress (on the land side), and a residence (on the lake side).

Remarkably well-preserved, the chateau has never been damaged or destroyed; always inhabited, always maintained. Over the centuries it’s been used as an armory, warehouse, prison, hospital and tourist attraction.

The Romantics loved this place: Rousseau, Lord Byron, Victor Hugo and Goethe were all inspired here, and even Dickens and Hemingway dropped by. Chillon is still Switzerlan­d’s best castle experience, with a dank prison, battle-scarred weapons, simple Swiss-style mobile furniture and 800-year-old toilets. Make like a sentry and patrol the ramparts, then (if the coast is clear), curl up on a windowsill to enjoy the tingly lake views.

There’s plenty of gorgeous scenery in Switzerlan­d, but Lake Geneva is one of its real charms. Whether enjoyed on a stroll through a shoreline park, from the deck chair on a boat cruise, over the wrought iron of your hotel-room balcony, or through the window of a medieval castle, Lake Geneva sparkles with romantic ambience. Its laid-back vibe makes it the perfect place to just be on vacation.

 ?? PHOTOS: DOMINIC ARIZONA BONUCCELLI ?? Find the dank prison and battle-scarred weapons at Chateau de Chillon before strolling the ramparts for a tingly view of Lake Geneva.
PHOTOS: DOMINIC ARIZONA BONUCCELLI Find the dank prison and battle-scarred weapons at Chateau de Chillon before strolling the ramparts for a tingly view of Lake Geneva.
 ??  ?? At the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, artifacts recall the Games’ ancient Greek beginnings.
At the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, artifacts recall the Games’ ancient Greek beginnings.

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