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Red Tower (Kizil Kule) & Tersane shipyard, Turkey
Red Tower (Kizil Kule) & Tersane shipyard

Turkish Riviera

Red Tower (Kizil Kule) & Tersane shipyard

Alanya's octagonal 1226 harbour tower and the only surviving Seljuk shipyard in Turkey, on one combined ticket — pair them with a harbour-front lunch.

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

Where

Alanya, Turkey

Opening hours

Both sites generally open daily through the day, with longer hours in the summer season and shorter ones in winter. The shipyard is reached by a short walk along the seafront from the tower. Hours shift seasonally, so confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

A combined ticket for the Red Tower and the Tersane shipyard costs from about €5 (roughly £4), paid in lira at the current rate; single-site entry may also be offered. Prices are adjusted with the season, so confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Time needed

About an hour for the pair: 20–30 minutes for the tower and its climb, the rest for the shipyard and the seafront walk between them.

In short

Visiting Red Tower (Kizil Kule) & Tersane shipyard

The octagonal Red Tower (Kızıl Kule), built in 1226 to guard the harbour, and the adjacent Tersane — the only surviving Seljuk shipyard in Turkey — sit a short walk apart at sea level below the castle. A combined ticket covers both, from about €5 (roughly £4), so see them together rather than as separate trips. Climb the tower for the harbour view, walk the dockyard's stone arches, then pair them with a harbour-front lunch. Allow an hour or so for the pair.

Two sights, one ticket

Down at sea level below the castle, the Red Tower (Kızıl Kule) and the Tersane shipyard sit a short walk apart and share a single combined ticket from about €5 (roughly £4), paid in lira at the counter. Buying the two together is the obvious move — they’re neighbours, not separate excursions.

The tower is the unmistakable symbol of Alanya: a stout, octagonal 1226 structure in red brick and stone, raised to guard the harbour, with a climb up to the top for a view back over the marina and the headland. A few minutes’ walk along the seafront brings you to the Tersane, a row of stone-arched bays cut into the rock — the only surviving Seljuk dockyard in Turkey, where galleys were once built and repaired. It’s modest in scale, but the rarity is the point: there’s nothing else quite like it in the country.

Making it worthwhile

This is a quick stop rather than a headline, so set expectations accordingly: budget about an hour for the pair, with the tower climb taking the most time. The shipyard rewards a slow look more than a rush — the arches and the lap of the water against the stone are the atmosphere you’re paying for.

The smart way to do it is to fold both into a harbour visit rather than make a special trip. Walk the seafront, climb the tower, see the dockyard, then sit down for lunch among the boats on the harbour front — that turns a 15-minute tick-box into a pleasant half-morning. Combine it with the cable car up to Alanya Castle on the same day and you’ve covered the town’s two essential sights, one at the summit and one at the water’s edge. Carry cash in lira, and check the current opening hours on the official site before you go, as they shorten noticeably out of season.

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

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Red Tower (Kizil Kule) & Tersane shipyard FAQs

Does one ticket cover both the Red Tower and the shipyard?
Yes — a combined ticket covers the Red Tower (Kızıl Kule) and the adjacent Tersane shipyard, from about €5, which is better value than buying separately. Pay in lira at the counter and check the current price on the official site, as fares change with the season.
Is the Red Tower worth visiting?
It's a quick, rewarding stop rather than a half-day sight. The 1226 octagonal tower is the symbol of Alanya, the climb gives a good harbour view, and the Tersane is a genuine rarity as Turkey's only surviving Seljuk dockyard. Together they make an easy hour at sea level, ideally paired with a harbour lunch.
How do I get from the tower to the shipyard?
Walk. The Tersane sits a short distance along the seafront from the Red Tower, following the harbour wall round the headland. It's an easy, flat stroll of a few minutes, and the combined ticket means there's no need to make it a separate trip.

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