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Why go to Tallinn?

by Angela Moore

It's so quaint, clean and well-restored that it sometimes seems sanitised to within an inch of Disneyfication. However, there is life here

The Three Sisters Hotel

"Intriguing details abound in these beautiful 14th-century townhouses, now converted into a gorgeous boutique hotel."

From USD 169 Read review

Merchant's House Hotel

"A hip fusion of medieval charm and cutting-edge design attracts a young, trendy crowd for this chic boutique hotel in Tallinn."

From EUR 135.00 Read review

Hotel Schlossle

"Our top choice in Tallinn, a central, intimate and atmospheric luxury hotel that dates back to the 15th-century."

From EUR 350.00 Read review

It's difficult to separate Tallinn from its medieval Old Town. It's also hard describe the Old Town without using the word 'fairytale': russet roofs, candy-coloured merchant's houses, cobbled streets with alleyways ducking off them. It's so quaint, clean and well-restored that it sometimes seems sanitised to within an inch of Disneyfication. However, there is life here: increasingly sophisticated drinking and dining and a growing arts scene. This is a city forging a personality, growing out of its dour Soviet past and its long history of subjugation.

Tallinn distilled

  • The romantic view from Toompea Hill, over the medieval heart of the Lower Town and out to the Baltic Coast
  • The multi-onion-domed, fantastical Russian Orthodox Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, a Soviet legacy (and the locals' complex, uneasy relationship with it)
  • Also Soviet, the Hotel Viru, a brutal monolithic block, complete with KGB bugs
  • Winter, when the streets are snowy and silent, doors shut against the cold, and it's more Brothers Grimm than Walt Disney
  • Laboratorium, Kooli and Gumnaasiumi Streets: quiet, huddling beneath the medieval bastions of the city wall
  • Do as the locals do and head to Pirita, Tallinn's coastal stretch, for boating and bathing

    Watch out for
  • Estonia, though an EU member, does not yet trade in Euros. They are widely accepted but the official currency remains the Kroon
  • Rowdy stag parties and resulting friction with annoyed locals. Tallinn sometimes seems to be taking over from Prague as the cheap-drunk-loud party destination of choice

    Variation on
    Stay a step ahead of the Finns that flood over here every Friday of the summer - take the ferry to Helsinki for the weekend.


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