Miradouros, narrow lanes, and Tram 28 — Lisbon's authentic working neighbourhood.
Graça sits on Lisbon's highest hill, north-east of Alfama and Mouraria. The neighbourhood takes its name from the Convento da Nossa Senhora da Graça (1305), and its character from a daily-life rhythm dominated by long-time residents rather than tourism. The hilltop position keeps the cruise-ship crowds off most of the streets, and the Miradouro da Graça and Miradouro da Senhora do Monte (a chapel-and-viewpoint site since 1147, rebuilt in 1796 after the earthquake) draw the visitors that do come up. Coworking presence is small and boutique, suiting writers, illustrators, researchers, and remote workers who want to skip the downtown commute.
The district stayed unusually intact through the post-2010 tourism wave thanks to its hilltop position (which limits cruise foot-traffic), narrow streets (which limit hotel construction), and a strong residential tradition. Coworking here is rare and quiet — most operators run small spaces in former family apartments, and the membership tends to be solo professionals or 2–3 person teams who live nearby and walk to work.
Light. Most members are freelancers, writers, researchers, or small creative teams. Lunch and after-work cluster around Largo da Graça's terraces and the Mercado da Graça's daily produce.
Tram 28: The famous yellow tram runs through Graça. Slow but iconic — most members use it for short hops rather than commutes.
Bus: Multiple Carris lines climb to Graça from the centre.
Walking: Mouraria 8 minutes south (downhill); Anjos 10 minutes north; Baixa 20 minutes south. The climb back up is significant.
Best for members living in Graça itself or neighbouring Mouraria/Anjos. The hill climb is significant, and Tram 28 is slow and tourist-heavy — most regular commuters walk down for work and take the bus or tram up.
The Miradouro da Senhora do Monte, on the highest point of Lisbon's central hill. There's been a chapel-and-hermitage on the site since 1147, and the present Baroque chapel was rebuilt in 1796 after the 1755 earthquake collapsed the original.
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Miradouro da Graça — one of Lisbon's most popular panoramic viewpoints, on the spot of the 13th-century Augustinian convent that gave the district its name.
Miradouro da Senhora do Monte — the highest viewpoint in central Lisbon, with a chapel since 1147 (the present Baroque chapel was rebuilt in 1796 after the 1755 earthquake collapsed the original).
Igreja e Convento da Graça — the convent itself, founded 1305 from an earlier Augustinian community.
Mercado da Graça — the small neighbourhood produce market.
Limited — typically one or two boutique operators at a time. Members who need broader options usually pair Graça with monthly access to a downtown coworking partner.