Uvamai Niche Tourism
Quebec City Self-Guided Audio Tour
Quebec City Self-Guided Audio Tour
Не удалось загрузить сведения о доступности самовывоза
Quebec City Self-Guided Audio Tour
Walk Canada's most European city at your own pace. 14 expert-narrated attractions — from the chateau-style Gare du Palais to the Saint-Roch Church beyond the walls — through 400 years of New France, French colonial heritage, and Old Quebec stories.
உவமை · A Parable · A Comparison · A StoryThe only walled city north of Mexico — yours to explore freely
Quebec City is a UNESCO World Heritage gem where 17th-century stone fortifications still stand, French is the rhythm of daily life, and every cobblestone in Vieux-Québec carries a story stretching back to Samuel de Champlain's founding of New France in 1608.
Most visitors miss the depth. They follow a guide's pace, hear a script written for crowds, and leave with surface impressions of the Château Frontenac and a quick photo on Terrasse Dufferin. Uvamai changes that. Two secure links — one for audio, one for the interactive map — let you walk the Petit-Champlain at sunrise, linger at Place Royale until the light turns honey, climb to the Plains of Abraham at your own breath, and hear the real stories: the British siege of 1759, the resilience of the Saint-Roch neighbourhood, and the centuries of faith preserved inside Notre-Dame de Québec.
This is travel as it was meant to be — slow, sovereign, and steeped in story.
Every cobblestone, every steeple, every story
Carefully selected stops connecting Quebec City's Lower Town, Upper Town, fortifications, Plains of Abraham, and Saint-Roch district. Each attraction includes professional narration covering history, culture, architecture, myths, and important visitor facts.
Gare du Palais
Begin at Quebec's grand chateau-style railway station, built in 1915 by the Canadian Pacific Railway in the same spirit as the Château Frontenac. Hear how this gateway between Europe and North America carried generations of French immigrants, troops, and travellers, and why a nine-year railway closure (1976–1985) almost erased it from the map.
Musée de la Civilisation
One of Canada's most thoughtful museums, set in the port district beside the Saint Lawrence River. The building integrates the historic Maison Estèbe, the former Bank of Quebec, and the vaulted cellars of the Pagé-Quercy house. Learn how it weaves together Quebec's First Nations origins, French colonial life, and modern civic identity.
Montmorency Park National Historic Site
A quiet green slope with one of Quebec's most loaded views. From here, hear how the British landed in 1759, how the city fell after the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, and why this park preserves both Bishop Saint-Vallier's seminary and the bones of New France's earliest political institutions.
Place Royale
The cradle of French civilisation in North America — the exact spot where Samuel de Champlain built his Habitation in 1608. Hear how this intimate cobblestone square became the commercial heart of New France, why every stone facade has been painstakingly restored to its 17th-century appearance, and what daily life truly looked like here 400 years ago.
Notre-Dame-des-Victoires Church
The oldest stone church in North America, built between 1687 and 1723 directly atop Champlain's former residence. Learn why it was renamed twice — first after the 1690 victory over Phips, then again after the storm that wrecked Admiral Walker's fleet in 1711 — and how it survived the British bombardment of 1759 to be fully restored in 1816.
Terrasse Dufferin
The wooden boardwalk perched 60 metres above the Saint Lawrence, hugging the Château Frontenac. Hear why Lord Dufferin saved Quebec's fortifications from demolition, how the terrace replaced the ruins of the Château Saint-Louis, and why archaeologists are still uncovering colonial-era artifacts directly beneath your feet.
Old Quebec (Vieux-Québec)
The only fortified colonial city north of Mexico — a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1985. Walk the narrow streets of the Petit-Champlain, climb the Breakneck Stairs, and hear how this living neighbourhood preserves not just buildings but a complete French-Canadian way of life that has resisted four centuries of pressure to disappear.
Notre-Dame de Québec Basilica-Cathedral
The mother church of French Canada, founded in 1647 and now a Minor Basilica. Hear the stories of its three reconstructions — after British shelling in 1759, after the great fire of 1922, and the sacred Holy Door, the only one outside Europe, opened only during designated Holy Years.
Fortifications of Québec National Historic Site
4.6 kilometres of intact stone walls, gates, and bastions encircling Old Quebec — the only complete fortified city walls remaining in North America. Hear how the French began them in the 1690s, how the British completed them after the conquest, and why generals on both sides considered this rock the key to controlling the entire continent.
Parliament Building (Hôtel du Parlement)
Quebec's seat of provincial government, built between 1877 and 1886 in Second Empire style. Hear how the 22 bronze statues on its facade tell the story of Quebec's nation-builders — explorers, missionaries, soldiers, and statesmen — and how this building became the symbolic stage of the Quiet Revolution that reshaped modern Quebec.
Plains of Abraham (Battlefields Park)
The 13-minute battle on 13 September 1759 that decided the fate of North America. Hear how General Wolfe's troops scaled the cliffs at night, how Montcalm met them on these very fields, and how both commanders fell within hours of each other — a battle whose echoes still shape Canadian identity today.
Musée National des Beaux-Arts du Québec
Set within the Plains of Abraham, this is Quebec's premier art museum, holding more than 40,000 works from the 17th century to today. Hear how its four pavilions — including a former prison — trace the entire artistic story of Quebec, from sacred religious painting to the radical Automatistes who launched modernist art in Canada.
Citadelle of Québec
The largest British-built fortress still in active use in North America — a star-shaped citadel completed in 1850 atop Cap Diamant. Hear how it was designed against an American invasion that never came, why it remains the official residence of the Governor General, and the meaning of the daily Changing of the Guard performed by the Royal 22e Régiment.
Saint-Roch Church (Église Saint-Roch)
Beyond the walls, in Quebec's revitalised Saint-Roch neighbourhood, stands one of the city's largest and most beloved parish churches. Learn about its role in preserving French-Canadian working-class traditions, its connection to Quebec's industrial heritage, and how the surrounding district reinvented itself from manufacturing decline into Quebec's coolest creative quarter — authentic insights into Quebec's living culture beyond the fortified walls.
10 reasons travellers choose Uvamai over the rest
From purchase to your first cobblestone in 4 simple steps
Choose & Purchase
Select your travel date and language. Complete secure checkout. Instant order confirmation by email.
Receive 2 Links
On your travel date, before your start time, you receive two secure web links via email or WhatsApp — one audio, one map.
Walk & Listen
Open the map. Tap any attraction pin. The audio guide for that stop plays. Wander Vieux-Québec at your own pace.
6 Days Access
Split the tour across multiple days. Revisit favourite stops. Quebec City is yours for a full week.
Full transparency, no surprises
Insider notes from travellers who walked before you
Plan smart, walk smarter
- Best time of day: Start at Place Royale around 8–9 AM before tour buses arrive. Save Terrasse Dufferin and the Château Frontenac for golden hour — magical light over the Saint Lawrence.
- Wear layers: Quebec weather changes fast, even in summer. Comfortable walking shoes are essential — cobblestones, hills, and the Breakneck Stairs are not forgiving.
- Funicular tip: The Old Quebec funicular ($5 CAD one-way) connects Upper Town and Lower Town in 60 seconds — a back-saver after a full day of walking.
- Free Wi-Fi: Most cafés in Vieux-Québec offer free Wi-Fi. Many travellers download our audio links as offline backups before heading out.
- Eat local: Try poutine at Chez Ashton, tourtière at Aux Anciens Canadiens, and a buttery croissant from Paillard. Skip the touristy crêperies on Rue Saint-Louis.
- Currency & tipping: Canadian dollars; tipping 15–20% is standard at sit-down restaurants. Most places accept tap-to-pay.
- Language: French is the heart of Quebec City. A simple "Bonjour" goes a long way; almost everyone in tourism also speaks English.
- Winter visits: If you visit December–March, dress for real cold (-15°C / 5°F is common). The city looks fairy-tale beautiful but the wind off the Saint Lawrence is fierce.
- Saint-Roch is worth it: Don't skip stop 14. Saint-Roch's mix of brewpubs, indie shops, and quiet church is where modern Quebec actually lives.
Real Quebec City stories from real explorers
"We did this tour over three afternoons and it completely transformed our trip. The Place Royale narration alone — knowing we were standing exactly where Champlain built his first wooden Habitation in 1608 — gave us goosebumps. Worth every cent."
"As a Canadian who thought I knew Quebec City, this tour humbled me. I learned more about my own country in one walk through the fortifications than in 20 years of school. The Plains of Abraham segment is genuinely moving."
"Travelling solo and on a budget, I almost booked a $75 group tour. So glad I didn't. Six dollars, complete freedom, and audio that's better than half the human guides I've heard. The Saint-Roch stop was a real surprise — best part of the day."
"We are a family of four, two kids aged 8 and 11. Our youngest got tired so we paused at Café-Boulangerie Paillard, then picked up exactly where we left off. You cannot do that on a group tour. The kids loved being able to skip ahead."
"Notre-Dame-des-Victoires Church is now my favourite spot in all of Canada thanks to this guide. The story of being renamed twice — once after the 1690 siege, then after Walker's fleet sank — that detail is missing from every travel book I bought."
"Honest review: not for people who need someone to hold their hand. But if you actually want to understand Quebec — French Canada, the conquest, the Quiet Revolution — this is the most respectful audio tour I've ever taken. Researched, calm, no nonsense."
"Took my mother on her 70th birthday trip. We did Upper Town one day and Lower Town the next, with a long lunch on Rue du Petit-Champlain in between. The flexibility this tour gave us was worth more than money. She still talks about it."
"I was sceptical about the price — $6 felt too good to be true. It isn't. The audio is professional, the map works perfectly, and the Citadelle narration about the Royal 22e Régiment was deeply respectful. Recommended without reservation."
Our refund & cancellation policy
All sales are final · No refunds · No exchanges
Uvamai is a digital product delivered as two secure web links (audio + map). Once your order is placed, content is prepared, allocated, and delivered for your selected travel date. We cannot offer refunds, partial refunds, exchanges, or date changes after purchase — including for unused tours, missed start times, weather, illness, travel cancellation, language selection errors, or change of plans.
Before you click buy, please confirm: your travel date is correct · your language selection is correct (it cannot be changed later) · you have a smartphone, headphones, and internet access · you understand this is a self-guided audio tour, not a live guided experience · you have read this product description in full.
If you have any pre-purchase questions, our team replies within hours via email or WhatsApp. We would much rather answer ten questions before checkout than disappoint anyone after. Once you're confident this is the right tour for your Quebec City trip, you're protected by 13+ years of careful niche-tourism craft.
Real human support, before & during your tour
Questions? Worries? Pre-purchase clarifications? Our team — small, kind, and genuinely invested in your trip — is one message away.
Your Quebec City story begins the moment you click
14 attractions. Six full days. Twelve languages. Two secure links. Complete freedom. No app to download, no group to follow, no schedule to obey.
Share

Why Uvamai?
Trusted by 13,996+ explorers since 2012. Ethical, story-driven travel built for independent travellers who want depth over checklists.