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Skala de la Ville, Morocco
Skala de la Ville

Marrakech-Safi

Skala de la Ville

Essaouira's crenelated sea rampart lined with Portuguese brass cannons: free to walk, and at its best at sunset when the sun drops straight into the Atlantic.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Essaouira, Morocco

Opening hours

Open access during daylight, generally free to walk in the daytime and around sunset; access can be restricted after dark. Hours are not formally fixed โ€” confirm current hours and prices on the official site or locally on the day.

Tickets

Free โ€” no ticket needed to walk the rampart and see the cannons. You spend nothing unless you buy from the craft and woodwork stalls tucked into the bastion below, or stop for a drink nearby.

Time needed

20โ€“30 minutes to walk the wall and take in the cannons and the view, ideally timed for the hour before sunset.

In short

Visiting Skala de la Ville

The Skala de la Ville is Essaouira's crenelated sea rampart, lined with a row of old Portuguese-style brass cannons facing the Atlantic. It is free to walk, and best at sunset, when the sun drops straight into the ocean and the medina walls turn orange. Quick to see, photogenic, and an easy add-on to a wander round the old town and harbour.

A wall built against the sea

The Skala de la Ville is Essaouiraโ€™s great sea rampart โ€” a long, crenelated stone wall along the northern edge of the medina, lined with a row of weathered brass cannons of Portuguese and European style pointing out across the Atlantic. It is a working piece of the old fortifications rather than a museum, and it is free to walk. The wall takes the full force of the Atlantic wind and spray, which is part of its character: this is a salty, blustery, slightly wild spot, not a manicured one.

Below the bastion, set into the thick walls, are the thuya-wood workshops Essaouira is famous for โ€” craftsmen turning out boxes and carvings in the fragrant local timber. You owe them nothing unless you want to buy, but it is a pleasant browse on the way up.

Time it for sunset

The single best reason to come is the sunset. Because the rampart faces the open ocean to the west, the sun drops straight into the Atlantic while the honey-coloured medina walls behind you turn deep orange. Arrive for the hour beforehand, find a gap between the cannons, and brace for the wind โ€” it is reliably breezy, which is why Essaouira is such a windsurfing town. Film fans may recognise the ramparts and the nearby fortifications from screen use, including Game of Thrones.

Keep your expectations sensibly scaled: this is a 20โ€“30 minute stop, not a half-day attraction. Its job is to give you Essaouiraโ€™s fortified, sea-battered character in one quick, photogenic hit. Roll it into a longer wander through the medina and down to the blue-boat fishing harbour, and you have the essence of the town. Access can be limited after dark, so aim to be up on the wall while there is still light.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Essaouira city guide.

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Skala de la Ville FAQs

Is the Skala de la Ville free to visit?
Yes. Walking the sea rampart and seeing the row of brass cannons is free, with no ticket required. You only spend money if you buy from the thuya-wood craft workshops set into the bastion below the wall, which Essaouira is well known for.
When is the best time to go?
The hour before sunset. The wall faces the open Atlantic, so the sun drops straight into the sea and the medina ramparts glow orange โ€” easily the most atmospheric time. It is also pleasant earlier in the day, but sunset is when the spot earns its reputation. Expect wind off the ocean.
Is it worth visiting?
For 20โ€“30 minutes, yes โ€” it is photogenic and free, and it captures Essaouira's salty, fortified character. Don't treat it as a major sight in itself; fold it into a stroll round the medina and the fishing harbour for a complete picture of the old town.