This is one of the few places on earth where you can park your car, step out, and walk straight onto the cooled remains of a live lava flow that cut the island in half less than 20 years ago. In April 2007, Piton de la Fournaise erupted with enough force to send molten rock racing down the Grand Brûlé and across the N2 coastal road. The lava didn’t just block the road — it buried it.
You’re not coming here for a guided exhibit or interpretive trail. There are no signs telling you what to think. You’re standing on it. It’s cracked and uneven and black as tar, sometimes still warm after rain. Ferns grow through the fissures. In the heat, the surface almost shimmers. It’s alive in a slow way.
What to look for:
The buried stretch of Route des Laves — the old road just disappears
Lava mounds and ‘ropey’ formations that show how it cooled mid-flow
Low-lying steam if it rained recently — the rock holds heat for days
New forest creeping in from the edges — tiny trees pushing out of rock
On a clear day, look inland — you’ll see the line the lava carved down from the caldera
You’ll find a parking spot on the side of the road where others have stopped. From there, you walk — 5 minutes or 30, your choice. The terrain is easy enough but uneven, and your shoes will take a beating. Bring water and a hat. It’s hot, especially midday.
👉 Local tip: If you want lunch with a view afterward, head 15 min east to Saint-Philippe and eat at Le Cap Méchant. The cliffs are dramatic, and the smoked chicken is done properly.