The main quarter of the town is located on the right bank of the Lot River and is linked to the quarter on the left bank by a bridge from the 13th century, the principal arch of which, constructed during the reign of
Louis XIII in place of two older arches, has a span of and a height of . On the left bank, portions of the 13th century ramparts, altered and surmounted by
machicolations of the 15th century, remain, and high square towers rise above the gates to the north-east and southwest, known respectively as the Porte de Paris and Porte de Pujols. On the right bank, boulevards have for the most part taken the place of the ramparts. Arcades of the 13th century surround the Place La Fayette, and monumental houses of the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries are to be seen in various parts of the town. The church of St Etienne is late
Gothic style. On the left bank of the Lot, 3 km S.S.W. of Villeneuve, are the 13th-century walls of
Pujols located. The buildings of the formet abbey of Eysses, about 2 km to the N.E., are mainly from the 17th century and serve as a departmental prison and penitentiary settlement. The principal hospital, the hospice St Cyr, is a pretty building standing in beautiful gardens. The Pont De La Liberation, which spans the Lot river, is a arch bridge built between 1910 and 1919. When it was completed it was the largest single span concrete arch in the world. It was designed by
Eugène Freyssinet, one of the pioneers in using reinforced concrete. ==Representations in popular culture==