Walking Through Le Plan-de-la-Tour

Le Plan-de-la-Tour keeps a very readable rural scale, between squares, fountains, bell tower, vineyards and paths leading towards the hills.

View of Le Plan-de-la-Tour

Le Plan-de-la-Tour does not seek effect. That is precisely why the walk is interesting. The village is organised around a few squares, short streets and simple landmarks, then quickly opens towards farmland and walking routes.

A centre that is still easy to read

The discovery loop highlights the structure of the village very well. Place Foch, Quatre-Chemins, the Saint-Martin fountain, the former school turned town hall and the church of Saint-Pierre-Saint-Martin form a simple but coherent thread.

The weight of vineyards and countryside

Around the centre, wine growers, paths and hamlets immediately recall the rural function of the territory. The landscape does not stop at the built core and continues into open land, edges and tracks.

How to explore it

The clearest approach is to begin with the heritage loop starting from Foch car park. It provides the main bearings and then allows you to widen the visit towards hiking paths or vineyard sectors if you want to continue.