Macau

Showing 31 attractions
9
4 reviews
Inside the Chinese-style Lou Lim Ieoc Garden, you'll find this Victorian-style pavilion featuring classical and Chinese architectural elements. — Lonely Planet
9
2 reviews
Situated in the heart of Macau, Senado Square has an attractive atmosphere, with its outdoor terraces, delightful fountain and pastel-coloured colonial architecture. — Michelin Guide
8
3 reviews
Built around 1869, the Mandarin’s House, with over 60 rooms, was the ancestral home of Zheng Guanying, an influential author-merchant whose readers included emperors, Dr Sun Yatsen and Chairman Mao. — Lonely Planet
8
2 reviews
Home to traditional Mediterranean-style houses painted in pastels, as well as the baroque-style Chapel of St. Francis Xavier and the Taoist Tam Kung Temple. — Fodor's
8
4 reviews
With jutting white slats and porthole windows, this handsome building... is a great place to spend an interesting hour brushing up on seafaring history. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
On the hill overlooking the ruins of São Paulo and affording great peninsular views, this renovated fort was built by the Jesuits in the early 17th century. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
It was one of those clear skies days in Macau when pollution and smog was low. If you go up to the circular top, you get stunning views of the West side of Macau as the sunsets. — Afar Magazine
8
4 reviews
They're worth visiting for museums contained in three of them. — Frommer's
8
2 reviews
Has revitalized into an area for bakkwa - a sweet meat in flat, sheet-like forms - among other boutique restaurants, shops, and cafes. — Afar Magazine
8
2 reviews
The narrow, winding streets are packed with restaurants, bakeries, shops, temples, and other buildings with traditional South Chinese and Portuguese design elements. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
The Macau Tower offers a variety of thrills, including the Tower Climb, which challenges the strong of heart and body with a two-hour ascent on steel rungs 100 meters (328 feet) up the tower's mast. — Fodor's
8
2 reviews
The most treasured icon in Macau, the towering facade and stairway are all that remain of this early-17th-century Jesuit church. — Lonely Planet
8
2 reviews
This fort, built between 1622 and 1638 on Macau's highest hill, was key to protecting the Portuguese from invaders. — Fodor's
8
2 reviews
This museum, located on the site where the official handover ceremony took place, is a treasure trove of decorative arts, most of them rich in symbolism. — Frommer's
8
3 reviews
This preserved pawnshop opened in 1917 as the Tak Seng On Pawnshop, an auspicious name that translates as "The Virtue and Success Pawnshop. — Frommer's
8
2 reviews
In the same building as the Grand Prix Museum, this spot has more than 1,100 wines on display; some are almost 200 years old. — Fodor's
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