The best way to get to know the city better is by walking routes around Salou. You can also plan a walk by bicycle. There are many boulevards in the city, buried in flowers and green trees. Special attention should be paid to the medieval Torre Vella tower, which often hosts various exhibitions, the Maza Catalana estate, a typical medieval peasant house, as well as the Santa Maria del Mar church, consecrated in 1766.
In Salou, hikers will enjoy the magical flowers and exotic plants, romantic pavilions and openwork bridges of Parc Sama, where peacocks roam freely.
Often tourist walking routes of Salou are laid past the villa Casa Bonet, built in 1918 by a pupil of the great Antoni Gaudi. Tourists are not allowed inside the villa, but it is possible to admire the beautiful late Art Nouveau building and take photos against its backdrop through the wrought iron bars.
Many walking routes in Salou begin or end at the seafront. The most beautiful route in Salou is a walk along the palm-fringed King Jaime I Boulevard, which runs along the city's central beach. In the evenings there is an unforgettable show of the Font Lluminosa luminous fountain and the Fuente Cibernética light-music-laser show of the singing fountain.