The ultimate guide to one of Switzerland’s prettiest regions
16 July 2023
Beyond the starched apron of the terrace at the grand Hotel Splendide Royal, while sipping a chinotto – the addictive and bittersweet myrtle-flavoured pop of northern Italy – I delight in the spectacle of Lugano residents enjoying the traditional pre-dinner stroll of la passeggiata in the late afternoon sun. There’s the parade of mothers jogging behind their prams and the group of prosperous pensioners in Borsalino hats. The tourists are licking ice-cream cones, the cyclists are Lycra-clad, and everyone is busy meeting, greeting, and communing in this most Italianate and civilised of Swiss cities.
Lugano’s vivid mountain backdrop – the round-topped summits of Monte Brè, Monte San Salvatore, and Monte Generoso, benign and graphic as a child’s drawing – can be reached by funicular, in a vertigo-inducing 10-minute ascent. Moreover, there is the famous lakeside promenade, with improbable lollipop-shaped trees and jade-coloured glacial waters lapping against an extraordinary variety of ornamental palms, chestnuts, and pollarded lime and ilex trees, cloud-pruned into the pompoms of a prize poodle.
Lugano was the catwalk of the beau monde in the 1800s, when the notion of leisure time was born for a privileged few. The 19th-century habit of promenading bred a new stereotype of the flâneur, busy eyeing up the social landscape, intent on being seen. Today’s dandy equivalents are the thong-clad paddleboarders, performing headstands or playing volleyball on their SUPs, and the high-divers at the lidos, clamouring for an audience. Lido life is an integral part of summer, when the 30-odd pools in the canton of Ticino open to the public. Everyone gets their patch of sun, from the peaceful, no-frills sunbathing platforms of the Lido San Domenico to the buzzier Caslano Lido, with its guest DJs, or the multi-generational, slightly retro Lugano Lido.
At the latter, launched in 1928, the chalet-style changing rooms remain intact, and there are striped deckchairs on the lawns, plus a beach occupied by canoodling couples and snoozing grandparents with squawking babies. A hairless professional swimmer counts lengths up and down the Olympic size pool, and crowds gather at an outdoor cinema and around the trampolines. It’s a sporty, wholesome, democratic scene: a microcosm of Switzerland.
In German, people refer to Ticino as “Sonnenstube”, which means “sun porch”. The canton is the gateway to the south, with expectations of sunny days and balmy nights. The mountains that gaze down at their reflections in the great mirrored lakes of Lugano and Maggiore are more Mediterranean than Alpine in spirit, with human life revolving, in animated Italian, over bowls of pasta and gelato. Olives, citrus, and the merlot grape are cultivated here, as well as the classic Alpine produce of polenta and chestnuts.
Tracing the lake’s edge to the picturesque former fishing village of Gandria on the Italian border, on a four-and-a-half-mile stroll along the Olive Trail, I discover the heady, acrid scent of capers springing out of rocky crannies, as well as wafts of wild marjoram redolent of pizza parlours and the Mezzogiorno. I pass by Villa Favorita, an imposing Baroque estate being revamped by the architects Herzog & de Meuron. Heini Thyssen, the art-collecting Swiss industrialist who bought the villa in the 1930s from Prince Leopold of Prussia, was among many to seek refuge in this political safe haven with its blessed climate. He angled the views of his villa across Lake Lugano, where brazen modern-day foghorns announce the arrival of the ferry boats that skim over the glassy surface like giant bugs.
These waters may look still, divine, and burnished by the sun, but in some places, the lake is 945 feet deep, with unseen currents that have been known to take down small boats. The ferries are the connecting thread of Lake Lugano, not only looping together the outlying villages but also giving passage to the grotti (caves) on the far shores and the alfresco taverns serving simple produce that would otherwise be unreachable. Grotto Descanso, near the Swiss Customs Museum and smugglers’ post on the Italian border, is a 12-minute boat trip across from Gandria. I sit in the lee of a beech tree at a gingham-clad table, with a cool carafe of red from the owner’s cavern cellar to accompany salamis, a cheeseboard, and rib-sticking polenta and sausage – a peculiarly Ticinese pleasure, made more vivid for only being available for four or five months of the year.
On an electric bike, I follow a grotto trail up into Val Bavona to eat foraged-mushroom risotto and chestnut cake beside the mighty Foroglio waterfall at La Froda osteria’s great stone tables over the river. There are old 16th-century village houses, or rustici, made of stone and slate, and splüì shelters built into and around collapsed boulders, which serve as sturdy roofs. They are no longer lived in by traditional smallholders and local cowmen – transhumance is no longer the raison d’être of these valleys – but back then, villagers would winter with their livestock in the valley and follow them up to higher pastures at the start of the summer. The centuries-old tradition died out in the 1950s, but the remaining residents voted against the electricity grid: La Froda is still powered by a generator and lit by candles.
The Ticinese know how to exploit the short window of summer, indulging in back-to-back outdoor events and festivals. There’s a famous film festival in Locarno, on Lake Maggiore, every August. In Lugano, the days inevitably include an open-air jazz recital in the Parco Ciani, early-morning yoga at Lugano Lido, or impromptu dance-offs for young and old in the Piazza della Riforma.
Dancing is treasured in Ticino. In the plateaus and mountains surrounding Lugano, from the islands of Brissago to the waterfalls and rock pools of the Maggia Valley, groups of strangers sign up for the Innerwalk Project: therapeutic and ecstatic silent dancing with headphones in the great outdoors. It’s a throwback to the utopian nature-seeking commune that existed at Monte Verità near Ascona in 1900, when a group of free-thinkers, vegans, bohemians, and artists from around the globe – hippies avant la lettre – set up in a vineyard and took to dancing barefoot and sometimes naked. The locals referred to them as “the balabiott” – the nude dancers. Other non-conformists have been drawn to Ticino: Carl Jung, Hermann Hesse, and the dance diva Isadora Duncan all craved its dramatic landscape (and its political neutrality, especially once Europe became stoked by nationalism and threats of world war).
While Ticino today is not about counterculture – these hedonistic utopian communities have given way to a different kind of haven: secure repositories for the money of the super-rich – the mysticism and back-to-nature impulse have never quite lost favour. Now, visitors can stay at Monte Verità in a Bauhaus-inspired hotel with a Japanese tea house and cultural commune, just a short journey from Lugano on Switzerland’s faultless railway network.
Ascona – its core still traditional and car-free – has a couple of Switzerland’s most innovative hotels in the stately Hotel Eden Roc and outlying Castello del Sole. But less than an hour away, up the Verzasca Valley, is a different version of living at the newly restored Albergo Diffuso in Corippo. There’s a handful of monastic bedrooms, each with just a bed, a pole to hang clothes on, and a square felt curtain. They are scattered around 16th-century rustici in Ticino’s smallest village, with roughly 10 residents. Ancient herding pathways connect to edelweiss-speckled summits, and mystical beech forests are spongy with moss. Rock pools of emerald clarity attract another kind of migration, of summer hikers, electric bikers, and wild swimmers. It’s a reimagined idea of holidaying in a raw and uncut natural world that finds perfect expression in Ticino.
Where to stay
The prettiest hotels in the region, from historic hideouts to the grandest villas.
Lugano
Hotel Splendide Royal
The marbled, gilded belle époque grandeur of the Hotel Splendide Royal, overlooking the lake in Lugano’s cultural heart, never palls. The 94 bedrooms are vast, and the top-rated spa has a chandeliered indoor pool.
Address: Hotel Splendide Royal Lugano, Riva Antonio Caccia 7, 6900 Lugano
Villa Principe Leopoldo
Outside the city on the Collina d’Oro, this former princely residence has 37 suites and a freeform swimming pool in a lemon grove with sublime views.
Address: Villa Principe Leopoldo, Via Montalbano 5, 6900 Lugano
Grand Hotel Villa Castagnola
This 19th-century Russian mansion became a hotel in 1885 and has been in the same family for 40 years. It has 72 bedrooms set in subtropical gardens, a seafood-heavy restaurant gallery, a sensational lakeside terrace and a private beach, all just over a mile from the Olive Trail.
Address: Grand Hotel Villa Castagnola, Viale Castagnola 31, 6900 Lugano
Ascona
Castello del Sole Beach Resort & Spa
This Michelin-starred Relais & Châteaux country manor is set in 346 acres of park and farmland on the shores of Lake Maggiore. It belongs to the same group as the Terreni alla Maggia farm and has a beach, marina, bird sanctuary, immaculate stables, and powerboats, plus a rustico retreat further up the mountain. The property is working on becoming plastic-free and has built shelters for about 500 migrating house martins.
Address: Castello del Sole Beach Resort & Spa, Via Muraccio 142, 6612 Ascona
Hotel Eden Roc
This exuberant beach resort on Lake Maggiore is part of the legendary Tschuggen Collection. The 95 balconied bedrooms are spread across the jaunty, nautical-style Eden Roc marina, a contemporary art–filled main building, and a more sober wing. There are three pools and four top-notch restaurants, which do bewitching things with vegetables.
Address: Hotel Eden Roc, Via Albarelle 16, 6612 Ascona
Locarno
Villa Orselina
After travelling up to see the view over Locarno and Lake Maggiore, and the 15th-century Madonna del Sasso, on a cable car designed by brutalist architect Mario Botta, the cherry on the cake is a stay at this honeymooners’ favourite.
Address: Villa Orselina, Locarno, Lago Maggiore, Via Santuario 10, 6644 Orselina
Corippo Albergo Diffuso
This plain but magical 10-room hotel in the deepest nook of the valley is open all year. It’s part of a movement to revitalise historic settlements, with no bar music, chlorinated pools, or minibars, and minimal plastic.
Address: Corippo Albergo Diffuso, Bassa Corippo, 6631 Corippo
Where to eat
Locanda Gandriese
Overlooking the lake in Gandria, this unpretentious restaurant with rooms is known for chef Davide Crobe’s Sardinian specialities and legendary pizzas.
Address: Locanda Gandriese, Piazza Nisciör 3, 6978 Lugano
Grotto dei Pescatori
A top choice for excellent fish and meat prepared on an open grill by the water in Caprino.
Address: Grotto dei Pescatori, 6823 Lugano
Grotto Descanso
Next to the Swiss Customs Museum, this summer eatery is accessible only by boat and dishes up the region’s cheeses, charcuterie, and seasonal produce in a lakeside setting.
Address: Grotto Descanso, Cantine di Gandria, 6978 Lugano
La Froda
Winning plates at this Foroglio osteria include boar stew, foraged-mushroom risotto, and chestnut cake.
Address: La Froda, Foroglio 6690, 6690 Cevio
Agua
This lively Lugano restaurant offers great fish, local wine, and abundant opportunities for people-watching on the terrace.
Address: Agua, Piazza Riforma 1, 6900 Lugano