The Reformation Wall is a 100-meter-long monument in Geneva's Parc des Bastions featuring giant statues of Calvin, Farel, Beza, and Knox. Most visitors do either a short self-guided walk around the wall and park (free) or combine it with a 1-hour museum visit at the International Museum of the Reformation followed by a guided walking tour of the Old Town. Expect a solid history lesson on 16th-century Protestantism, the impact on Geneva, and how it shaped modern Switzerland. The guided tours are thorough but can feel quite academic; they're best if you already have some interest in religious history. The monument itself is impressive up close but takes only 10-15 minutes to see properly.
Best time is May through September when the park is green and tours run more frequently. Avoid November-February unless you don't mind cold weather and shorter daylight. Expect to pay around $30-70 per person depending on whether you do the museum + guided walk or just a longer 3-hour Reformation-focused tour. Private tours sit at the higher end.
Tip: Skip the full 3-hour tour if you're not genuinely into Reformation theology; the 90-minute version that includes the wall and a quick Old Town loop is usually enough. Pair it with a visit to the nearby Cathédrale Saint-Pierre for the best context. Bring good walking shoes; the Old Town cobblestones are unforgiving.
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