Discover the best top things to do in Valle d'Aosta, Italy including Parco Nazionale Gran Paradiso, Skyway Monte Bianco, Plateau Rosa, Sentieri della Valnontey, Cervino Breuil-Cervinia Ski Area, La Thuile, Forte di Bard, Castello di Fenis, Lillaz Waterfalls, Torgnon.
Restaurants in Valle d'Aosta
5.0 based on 651 reviews
amazing place for relaxing holidays all year round for adults and children. Tasty food, good wine, amazing view
5.0 based on 4,389 reviews
Skyway Monte Bianco is much more than a cableway to reach 3,466 meters. It’s an idea: drawing man closer to the mountain and sky, broadening our horizons, overcoming boundaries. Beautiful landscapes to explore and the sky to meet.
During a very hot summer 2018 when everyday temperatures reached almost 35 degrees Celsius we were searching for some refreshment so we decided to make a trip into mountains with a cable car “Skyway Monte Bianco”. With one ticket costing almost 50 Euros (both ways) it was not a cheap attraction, but it was definitely worth this money. We were lucky with the weather what allowed us to enjoy splendid mountain panoramas. Most of the time the top of the Mont Blanc was hidden in the clouds but there were many other beautiful views we could admire from the open panorama deck or from the restaurant in the covered gallery one level below. The terrain around the upper station was covered with snow and the outside temperature at that height was below 0 Centigrade what together made right conditions for getting some refreshment during that hot summer. Of course we were equipped with warm jackets but we were happy to have a cup of coffee sitting inside the upper station and watching the mountains around through glass windows. At the lower mid-station it was much warmer therefore we spent much time walking outside.
5.0 based on 152 reviews
Spectacular views over both Italy and Switzerland. Great skiing the day after a storm. Highly recommend getting the international lift ticket to let you cross the border and ski down the other side
4.5 based on 2,012 reviews
An infinite snowy area that begins at 1,524 metres, in Valtournenche, embraces Breuil-Cervinia, rises up to 3,480 metres of Plateau Rosà, touches the 4,000 m peak of Piccolo Cervino, climbes up to 4,478 m to the top of the Cervino. An area where the infinite snow continues on the Swiss side to Zermatt. An area where the snow is the setting of sport, holidays and fun. The tourism vocation of Breuil-Cervinia Valtournenche had it’s beginning more than two hundred years ago. Excursionists and academics were the pioneers of a tourism that united sport, scientific study and intellectual exchange. In 1936, a new Breuil-Cervinia was created. The construction of the first cable car was a cutting-edge work of engineering excellence. The Hotel Gran Baita situated at the foot of the slopes, with the cable car departure station annexed to it, anticipates by over half a century the concept of an integral complex for skiing. Breuil-Cervinia became the Queen of the snow. From sport to cinema, politics and commerce, those who count meet here. Innovation, in Breuil-Cervinia Valtournenche, is the key word. New ways to practice sport, new ways to enjoy a holiday, new services to allow more free time. The technology is not limited to the rapid lift systems, but also to the territorial fibre optic network that allows the information to be transmitted in real time. Time and space dimensions have changed thanks to the e-skipass, to the keycard and to the hotel reservation system via the internet. 350 thousands web navigators every month visiting the site to check out the webcams, weather reports, lift status and snow conditions. In Breuil-Cervinia Valtournenche, collaboration between the operators in the area guarantees guests quality and state of the art solutions.
Great snow sure ski area, based on the Italian side of the Matterhorn and is linked within an area pass with Zermatt, Switzerland. New links are currently either planned or in progress to ensure easy movement around the mountain. I particularly recommend this area for intermediate level skiers, but equally it will appeal to all levels. Apres Ski is more subdued than Austria etc but there are plenty of very good quality bars, restaurants, shops and ski service facilities.
4.5 based on 252 reviews
We stayed in Planibel Apartments. It was a 6 bed apartment (for 4 people) but it meant that we had a spacious apartment with 2 bedrooms, 1 double bed and a bunk bed. The lounge/ kitchen also had 2 beds (sofa beds). It had a shower room and a bathroom, 2 bedrooms, the lounge kitchen had sofa, basic hob, fridge and microwave and we had a space to hang wet ski clothes and store bags. It was basic what you paid for but for us 2 adults and 8 year old and 3 year old it was brilliant. We loved it. It had a lift to the room. Then she the lift to the bottom to get to the lockers where you could store all your ski boots etc. Was great to be able to get changed walk 50 meters be on magic carpet or 100 meters and be on the gondola and up the top of the mountain. We used the Crystal childcare and can highly recommend for our 3 year old. We just used in morning and picked her up for lunch and skiing in afternoon but was available all day. We also used the butchers, supermarket, cafe with fab hot chocolate and ice cream and the pizza place nearly every day and all was perfect. Short walk into town with lots of lovely shops. Can highly recommend. Will be back.
4.5 based on 2,656 reviews
Fortress of Bard complex is the protagonist of a wide project aimed at the creation of a cultural pole in the Western Alps of Italy. From impregnable defence for the valley the Fortress has been transformed into a gateway to the Alps’ culture and traditions, with a museum centre in the forefront of the international scenery dedicated to the mountain. Nowadays the Fortress offers only a part of the several activities planned by the project, whose purpose is to bring together innovative cultural spaces, services and accommodation in one single structure. To complete the project, in addition to the Museum of the Alps, The Children’s Alps, and the space for temporary exhibitions, Fortress of Bard will host two other museums (Frontiers Museum; Fortress Museum), an info-point to promote the cultural artistic heritage of Valle d’Aosta Region (already working); a school area provided with a lecture room for lessons, meetings and film projections; two conference rooms; a media centre; historical and thematic paths; a small refined hotel, a restaurant and a café (already working).
I visited this Forte and was an incredible history and view from there. I absolutely recommend visiting it.
4.5 based on 1,715 reviews
Among the most famous of the castles in the Aosta Valley, Fenis strikes visitors with its triumph of towers and crenellated walls. The castle sits on flat ground, which is unusual; Aimone de Challant improved it by building an impressive defensive system, which also features double curtain walls. However, more than being a fortress, the Fenis castle was a prestigious and refined residence: the courtyard and the rooms inside are rich in frescoes - the result of a decorating campaign started by Aimone’s son, Bonifacio in all likelihood. Not to miss is the famous St. George slaying the dragon by Jacquerio and his school, on the stone semicircular courtyard staircase. Many of the furnishings present, which are not original to the castle, were purchased by Alfredo d’Andrade, then Superintendent of Fine Arts, who supervised the restoration work at the end of the nineteenth century thus restoring the castle to its former glory.
We were delighted to finally see this beautiful castle after passing by the turnoff often on the motorway through the Aosta Valley. This is a fairytale castle of beautiful proportions, and the guided tour takes you though some lovely rooms, some of which have great frescoes of the 15C, important and intelligently restored. It is only sad that the majority of tourists coming though will be Italians and therefore there is no photographic guide available in French or English languages. The whole area is charming with delightful old houses and churches on the route going there. This, together with Issogne, is the most important and worth visiting of the many castles along the Aosta Valley. Highly recommended.
4.5 based on 1,342 reviews
We went to the waterfalls on a damp Sunday morning, we followed a path to the waterfalls and ended up climbing up the mountainside to get a better view from the bridge which is above the main waterfall. We continued on the marked path which luckily took us to a nearby lane which we followed back down to the village, personally I didn’t fancy trying to navigate our way back down the rocks we had climbed up especially as they were damp. You definitely need suitable footwear if you intend trying to see the best of the waterfalls and the stunning views over the valley from above them.
4.5 based on 264 reviews
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