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Guided tours of Rabat’s World Heritage sites during the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations


On the occasion of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, Rabat celebrates its World Heritage through a series of free guided tours open to all.

As part of UNESCO’s World Heritage Volunteer Initiative, young student volunteers, passionate and trained in cultural mediation, will accompany you in discovering the emblematic sites inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. With them, history, architecture, and contemporary life intertwine to reveal the spirit of Rabat, a modern capital and historic city.

During CAN 2025, let yourself be guided through an experience of discovery and dialogue, carried by the enthusiasm of engaged youth and the cultural richness of the city.

An invitation to rediscover Rabat through curiosity, emotion, and the pride of its living heritage.


The archaeological site of Chellah

The Chellah, situated on the left bank of the Bouregreg, unfolds across the slopes of two hills over nearly seven hectares overlooking the alluvial plain of the Oulja and the river estuary. Its strategic geomorphology, fertile soils, perennial water sources, forested surroundings, and direct openness to both river and ocean, created, since antiquity, conditions of exceptional favourability for human occupation.
*The guided tour is free; access to this site is subject to a fee.

Archéologique Paysage
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Hassan Mosque and the Mausoleum of Mohammed V

The Hassan Mosque, commissioned in 1184 by the Almohad Caliph Yaacoub El Mansour upon his accession, embodies the monumental ambition of the Almohad polity. Conceived as what would have been the largest mosque of the western Mediterranean, the complex remained unfinished following the cessation of works. More than eight centuries later, in 1961, the historic platform of the Hassan Mosque was reinvested with new symbolic meaning through the construction of the Mausoleum of Mohammed V, creating a singular ensemble where Almohad heritage and modern national commemorative architecture intersect.

Histoire Architecture Lieu de mémoire
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The Qasba of the Oudaïa and the Almohad ramparts and gates

The Qasba of the Oudaïa, positioned on a rocky promontory at the northeastern edge of Rabat, commands sweeping views over the medinas of Rabat and Salé, the Atlantic shoreline, and the mouth of the Bouregreg. As an early fortified nucleus, it played a determining role in structuring the historical urban landscape and anchoring human settlement around the estuary.

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Archéologique Paysage Architecture
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The Botanical Garden

At the dawn of the 20th century, Rabat became a laboratory for emerging international currents in urban planning, notably the movement of garden cities. The modern city of Rabat emerged as a pioneering and exemplary model, shaped by architects, planners and landscape designers whose interventions established the distinctive urban character that underpins its Outstanding Universal Value today.

Paysage Architecture Urbanisme
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The Medina of Rabat
The medina of Rabat, developed adjacent to the Qasbah of the Oudaïa, is framed by the Laâlou cemetery and the Atlantic Ocean to the north, the Andalusian Wall to the south, the Bouregreg River to the east, and the Almohad rampart to the west. Extending over 90 hectares, it is structured around three principal north–south axes, Derb El Gza, Derb Sidi Fatah, and Rue des Consuls, and an east–west commercial spine, Rue Souiqa, linking Bab El Had to Bab Al Bahr. This urban fabric illustrates the coherence, continuity, and adaptive capacity of a historic medina in dialogue with its landscape setting.
Histoire Architecture Urbanisme
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The 20th-century New Town
In 1912, Rabat, often described as a “sleeping beauty”, was designated the capital of Morocco. Its geographical position, mediating between Fez and Casablanca, informed the elaboration of the first master plan for the modern city. This plan gave rise to a green and rationally ordered urban ensemble, reflecting the principles of early 20th-century planning and contributing significantly to the city’s inscription on the World Heritage List.
Histoire Paysage Architecture Urbanisme
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The Habous District of Diour Jamaâ
The Habous district of Diour Jamaâ, located a few hundred metres from Bab El Had along Avenue Hassan II, was initiated in 1918 and completed only in the early 1940s. Its development addressed the need for additional housing. As a planned extension inspired by neo-traditional 
Architecture Urbanisme
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