Step out and discover Macau
Footsteps into the Historical Centre walk explore Macau's rich history
Macau has seized global attention for its huge integrated resorts in the reclaimed Cotai area, but it is also known for its history as a Portuguese enclave in China from 1557 to 1999, a period that has left behind graceful architecture and cobblestone lanes. Whether you are a first-time visitor or a regular, one route that never gets old is exploring the Historic Centre of Macau.
A great place to start is the city’s most famous site: Largo Senado. This square, flanked by pastel neoclassical buildings and paved with cobblestones, was the urban centre of Macau centuries ago, and its most famous building is the Leal Senado Building. First built at the end of the 16th century, it became the city’s first municipal chamber, a function it has maintained to this day. It has also served as a post office, health centre and judicial facility, and today you will find a museum and a gracefully preserved library styled on the one at Mafra Convent in Portugal. Find stone inscriptions and wall carvings documenting stories of its past and a Portuguese courtyard garden in the back.
Next to the square is the General Post Office Building, built in 1929 and once the home of local charity Tung Sin Tong, which was established to offer free medical and social services to the disenfranchised. To learn more about its good work that continues today, find Tung Sin Tong Historical Archive Exhibition Hall at the intersection of Rua de Camilo Pessanha. Shops that once produced opium pipes here offer handicrafts nowadays.
If you walk away from the main road and head further up Largo Senado find St Dominic's Church, the first church in China by the Dominican Order from Spain, built in 1587. Originally a wooden structure, the beautiful terracotta-coloured building was a work of the 17th century. The three-storey bell tower on the right side houses the Treasure of Sacred Art, a collection of around 300 relics and artefacts. The Procession of Our Lady of Fátima uses this holy landmark as the starting point each year on May 13, and wraps up with an outdoor mass at Penha Chapel on a hill to the south overlooking Sai Van Lake.
Walk back down towards Avenida de Almeida Ribeiro and you will find a market and Sam Kai Vui Kun, better known as Kuan Tai Temple, which is a place to worship the Chinese Saint of War and Righteousness. Scholars believe this holy house was built during Emperor Qianlong’s rule (1735–1796) in the Qing dynasty. The temple used to be where Chinese merchants would gather. Now it is purely a shrine. On the eighth day of the fourth month in the Chinese calendar, you may want to visit here for the Feast of the Drunken Dragon, watch traditional drunken dance performances and taste “lucky rice”.