Nice's grand central square — red-ochre arcades, checkerboard paving, fountain.
🛡️ Independent — no pay-to-rank🔎 Graded for who you are✓ Verified 2026-06-17How we grade →
The verdict
Who it's worth it for
Great for
Travellers on a budget
If you've only got a day
Families with kids
Couples
Solo travellers
Photographers
Depends
History & culture buffs
Not for
—
Worth it for travellers on a budget, if you've only got a day and families with kids.
Why we say this
Insider secrets & local vibes
After dark Plensa's seven illuminated kneeling figures cycle slowly through colours above the square — a genuinely strange, memorable piece of public art most visitors only catch by accident.
Not independently verified — estimated
By day it's a hard-surfaced, shadeless transit-and-tram interchange with no real reason to linger — cross it, photograph the red arcades, and move into the park or old town.
Not independently verified — estimated
What it feels like
Reading the room, traveller by traveller
As a couple
Skip the daytime crossing; come back after dinner to watch the colour-shifting figures glow over the square.
First-timers
Useful as the spot where tram, park and old town all meet — orient here, then keep walking rather than settling in.
Good to know
Before you go
Cost
Free
Time
20–30 min
Last verified
2026-06-17
Best time
After dark to catch the light sculptures glowing.
Getting there
On the tram line at the head of pedestrian Avenue Jean Médecin.
Jaume Plensa's 'Conversation à Nice' (2007) — seven illuminated seated figures on tall poles representing the seven continents — change colour after dark above the tram line. jaumeplensa.com ↗
The seven figures, inspired by ancient scripts of antiquity, have become a symbol of the square and the city. en.wikipedia.org ↗
🛡️ Independent — no pay-to-rank🔎 Graded for who you are✓ Verified 2026-06-17How we grade →