Vigo

Camino Portugues

To end of camino
96.7
Altitude
100

Castrelos Park

3.80

Vigo

14.50

Redondela

Services
ATM
Yes
Bar
Yes
Bus
Yes
Bus Terminal
Yes
Correos
Yes
Grocery
Yes
Hospital
Yes
Medical Center
Yes
Pharmacy
Yes
Train
Yes

Vigo, from the diminutive Roman word for small village, is no longer deserving of the name. It is now the largest city in Galicia which is a remarkable feat given that it didn't start to see any real growth until the end of the 19th century. When it did begin to grow, it did so with reckless abandon and is now something of a disorganized city.

History

Unlike many of the port cities to the south, Vigo didn't garner much attention during the Age of Discovery; such are the currents. The Vikings took a liking to it though, and so too did both Francis Drake and the French Army. The city didn't see much peace until the middle of the 17th century when Philip IV built defensive walls to protect it; though even still the British managed to occupy it for a week.

Centuries later it would be the Age of Cod that would put Vigo on the map, followed still later by heavy industry.

The Road

Departing Vigo is a simple affair. From the Xunta albergue (or the port) follow the Ruá Areal to just beyond the train station. The camino follows the road uphill to the right, but only for a short distance as it turns left almost immediately onto Rúa Garcia Barbón. 2.5km later the camino turns right and crosses the large autopista. A short distance later it turns left and follows along the highway which is high up on the hill on your right-hand side; to your left is the estuary and you are high enough up now to have a wide view of it. When you eventually turn away from the water, you pass over the highway which tunnels beneath you. From here the camino stays inland, winding its way through the suburban hillside until it joins with the Central Way just before entering Redondela.

City Map

Comments

All Caminos App User (not verified)

I booked Hotel Del Mar because I was arriving to Vigo at 10:30pm on the train. Reception was open and easy - but I found bedbugs as soon as I got to the room (luckily for me they were on top of the blankets so I saw them). I turned around and went across the street to Hotel Ciudad de Vigo which luckily had a room for the night. The receptionist upgraded my room for free in sympathy. It’s in a good location and offers breakfast/has a cafe. Nice room.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

Went looking for Tapas based on the recommendation from May. Looks like they are renovating or closed for the season.

Grabbed Trió de Tacos next door at Plateros. They have burritos, bowls and Tex-mex. My lunch was 14 euros.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

If I leave from Vigo and walk to Santiago is it the requisite 100 km? It seems to be – but only barely and I’m concerned.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

Nice place right on the Camino in central Vigo. Lots of liveliness around and many restaurants. The sound of the city is there, but not disturbing.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

Smack in the old centre across from the Concatedral Santa Maria de Vigo and located above a small bar is this cute little hostal. Many stairs and small but quaint rooms. Room 304 is on the upper floors and has a small balcony that looks out onto the concatedral and the square. Vibrant, but two double glazed windows keep out the buzz from the plaza below. Private room with tiny adjacent bathroom for €45.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

I don’t usually make suggestions but pintxotera is an excellent tapas place in Vigo - best meal I had in Spain!

All Caminos App User (not verified)

Three of us got lucky and stayed at the Hotel Santa Baia on the way out of Vigo. Third floor small apartment ( 3 beds) with a magnificent view of the harbour for 85 Euros. We were able to watch children jumping off the lighthouse wall, fishermen going out fish, people sailing and skiing until nightfall then all the twinkling lights on the foreshore across the harbour - just lovely. There’s a small restaurant 30 metres away as well as a supermarket.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

If you are travelling by bicycle, or just want a direct traffic-free exit from cental Vigo head to the Estacion. There is a green way on a former tram line that goes right out to Chappel. It starts behind the station ..look for yellow cycle path or the giant bill board explaining the scheme. Looks pretty new , is hard to understand on Google maps and doesn't appear on the cycle app Kmoot.
Also appreciated the cycle path all the way in to cental Vigo. We didn't want to stay in Vigo so was a great route through.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

8 Euro pro Nacht ist schon ein tolles Angebot.
Alles modern und sauber.
Aaaber: welchen Sinn macht eine Küche mit Kühlschrank und Kochfeld, wenn es weder Töpfe, Teller, Tassen noch Essbestecke gibt? Das ist schon arm. Leider ist das aber nicht die erste Herberge mit diesen Mängeln.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Camino Da Mina is a great place to eat in Vigo!
The staff are so friendly, helpful and cater to vegetarians.
I had a 3 course meal plus a large beer and two wines for 23 euro, great value!
Highly recommend!