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VAUD

Is the Swiss canton of Vaud one of the ‘best places on earth’?

The French-speaking canton located in south-west of Switzerland has just launched a campaign to attract more people to its shores. But what's it got to brag about?

Is the Swiss canton of Vaud one of the 'best places on earth'?
Lausanne cathedral looks over the Old Town. Image by Christiane M. from Pixabay

“Vaud is one of the best places on earth to travel, live well, eat well, work well, have fun, cultivate yourself, play sports, take care of yourself, train and be amazed in an exceptional setting,” the canton’s promotional arm, aptly named Vaud Promotion, said in a press release
The campaign’s goal is to make the qualities known in Switzerland and abroad, so that more people will want to partake of its charms.

What is so special about Vaud?

The canton offers numerous advantages, which attract many international residents to its towns and villages: in fact, more than 30 percent of the canton’s residents are foreigners.

These are some of them:

Geography

Vaud offers both mountains (called les Alpes vaudoises), as well as the famous Lake Geneva, locally called Lac Léman.

Among the most frequented ski resorts, Les Diablerets, is best known.

As for Lake Geneva / Lac Léman (which Switzerland shares with France), it is great for both boating and swimming.

Small, picturesque towns and villages that line its shore —Vevey and Montreux are among the most famous ones — are also very popular places to visit and live in.

Vineyards

Vaud has several wine-growing regions, where the Chasselas grape variety reigns.

The best-known vineyards wrap around Lake Geneva, with grapes often growing on sloping, terraced vineyards that descent toward the lake.

The one towards the west is called La Côte, and the eastward one is Le Lavaux, with the latter being designated as UNESCO’s World-Heritage site.

Lavaux vineyards sloping towards Lake Geneva. Photo by Razvan Sassu on Unsplash
 

Lausanne

The Vaud’s capital city is a definite advantage.

It is very charming and picturesque, with its Old Town overlooking Lake Geneva and the French municipality of Evian on the other shore.

But don’t just take our word for it: one of the world’s best-known US media outlets, The New York Times, ranked Lausanne among 52 most beautiful destinations in the world.

It praised the city for its “spectacular views of Lake Geneva and an explosive architectural and artistic scene”.

READ ALSO: Why the Swiss city of Lausanne is so popular among foreigners

Commuter towns

Lausanne and Geneva are just 60 kilometres apart.

Between the two cities lie several towns and villages from where people commute to work in one city or another.

It is an easy commute by train or by car on the A9 motorway, both of which stretch along the lakeshore (which is to say that both rides are very scenic).

The most beautiful among these communities nestled between Lausanne and Geneva are Morges, Aubonne, and Nyon.

The train between Lausanne and Geneva travels through the beautiful Vaud countryside. Photo: Pixabay

How is it really to live in Vaud?

As with everything else, opinions will differ.

Some people will love it and the others less so.

On the positive side, apart from the beauty of the region (as mentioned above), the canton also boasts excellent infrastructure.

For instance, the cantonal university hospital (CHUV) in Lausanne ranks among the world’s top-10 hospitals, which means canton’s residents have access to world-class healthcare. 

Also, one of the country’s top educational and research institutions, EPFL, is located in Lausanne, providing vast opportunities for teachers and students alike.

On the negative side, Vaud’s taxes are among the highest in the country (in the third place, behind Geneva and Basel-Country), which is obviously not to everyone’s liking.

However, the canton’s benefits must largely outweigh its downsides, as a number of famous people, who could have lived anywhere in the world, chose Vaud as their home base.

Among them was Charlie Chaplin (who lived the last two decades of his life in the Vevey area), and Audrey Hepburn, who settled in a village of Tolochenaz near Lausanne.
 
 
 

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LIVING IN SWITZERLAND

FACT OR FICTION: Does Switzerland really exist?

You may think, 'of course it does, I am sitting here right now'. But trying to convince doubters on social media that Switzerland is real may be a challenge.

FACT OR FICTION: Does Switzerland really exist?

We have already had the “Switzerland versus Sweden debate” and have proven that they are, in fact, two different countries.

We don’t know whether the same thing is happening over in Sweden, but here we have an online “community of people dedicated to proving that Switzerland does not exist”. 

And it is not just a handful of rogue individuals who have nothing better to do than bash the tiny (non-existent) nation.

Thousands of people have taken time to post “proof” on Reddit’s “Switzerland is Fake” thread that the Alpine country is just too good to be true; instead, the picturesque mountains, lakes, and castles have been “photoshopped” in what could be the largest conspiracy since the moon landing.

“They are putting AI generated fake cities in front of their fake mountains,” one person said, backing his claim by a photo.

Among other “fake” images of Switzerland is one showing a man “caught” spreading artificial snow on a miniature version of the Alps. 

And then, when an (allegedly) Swiss person tried to prove his existence, online doubters “unmasked” him as an impostor.

What certainly doesn’t help to dissuade this community, is a very real Swiss Miniature Park in Lugano, where the whole of Switzerland is displayed in a tiny version.

Is it all a scam? Photo: Swissminiatur media

It only feeds into the disbelivers’ arguments that everything about the country is fake.

‘Abolish Switzerland’

While the Reddit community’s insistence that Switzerland doesn’t exist is (hopefully) tongue-in-cheek, real attempts to “erase” the country from the world’s map have actually been made – some more successfully than others.

In 2009, the former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi submitted a proposal to the United Nations to abolish Switzerland and divide it up along linguistic lines, giving parts of the country to Germany, France and Italy.

The motion was thrown out – officially because it violates the UN Charter, which states that no member country can threaten the existence of another – and unofficially, because the idea was, well, crazy.

But wait – there is more

In much more recent times, in March 2024, shortly before his trip to Europe, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken published a map that put Sweden where Switzerland should be – and Switzerland was nowhere to be found.

The error was quickly noticed and the relevant post deleted from social media – but not before users saw how the US had rendered Switzerland non-existent.

So does Switzerland really exist?

Unless and until proven otherwise by scientists (or Sweden), Switzerland is a real country – just take our word for it.

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