Why Lisbon needs a local guide
Lisbon is the city that nearly disappeared in 1755 — the earthquake flattened everything and the Marques de Pombal rebuilt it on a grid. That is why the downtown (Baixa) is geometrical while Alfama, which survived, is a medieval maze. The city is cheap by Western European standards, the light is extraordinary, and the fado still happens in actual living rooms in Alfama.
Lisbon nearly vanished in the 1755 earthquake, and the fact that Alfama survived while everything else was rebuilt on a Pombaline grid is the story that unlocks the entire city. To become a tour guide in Lisbon means walking people through that split — the medieval maze of Alfama where fado still happens in someone's front room, and the geometrical Baixa that rose from the rubble. Tram 28 rattles through both worlds in forty minutes, but a guide on foot does it better. The pastéis de nata at Belém come from a monastery recipe that has not changed since 1837, the bifana sandwiches at Cais do Sodré cost three euros and taste like pork and mustard and nothing else, and the ginjinha bars near Rossio pour sour cherry liqueur into plastic cups for a euro. Bairro Alto at night is a different city entirely — bars spilling onto the cobblestones, fado houses next to techno clubs. LX Factory in Alcântara fills a converted textile plant with bookshops and brunch spots every Sunday. If you want to become a tour guide in Lisbon, apply for the LYA guide position and bring your knowledge of the earthquake, the Discoveries, and which tascas in Mouraria the tourists have not found yet.