Grande Corniche |
Roquebrune |
As the corniche descends towards Cap Martin, it passes the eleventh-century castle of ROQUEBRUNE, its village nestling round the base of the rock. The castle (daily: FebMay 10am12.30pm & 26.30pm; JuneSept 10am12.30pm & 37.30pm; OctJan 10am12.30pm & 25pm; €3.50) has been kitted out enthusiastically in medieval fashion, while the tiny vaulted passages and stairways of the village are almost too good to be true. One thing that hasn't been restored is the vast millennial olive tree that lies just to the east of the village on the chemin de Menton. To get to the vieux village from the gare SNCF, turn east and then right up avenue de la Côte d'Azur, then first left up escalier Corinthille, across the Grande Corniche and up escalier Chanoine-J.-B.-Grana. The best hotel in the old village is Les Deux Frères, place des Deux-Frères (tel 04.93.28.99.00, www.lesdeuxfreres.com; €5570), which is worth booking in advance to try to get one of the rooms with the awesome view (rooms #1 or #2).
Southeast of the old town and the station is the peninsula of Cap Martin, with a coastal path, giving you access to a wonderful shoreline of white rocks and wind-bent pines. The path is named after Le Corbusier, who spent several summers in Roquebrune and died by drowning off Cap Martin in 1965. His grave designed by himself is in the cemetery (square J near the flagpole), high above the old village on promenade 1er-DFL.
A gourmet treat here is the panoramic restaurant Le Vistaero, on the Grande Corniche (tel 04.92.10.40.20; closed Sun & mid-Jan to Feb), with a brilliant lunchtime menu for €30.
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