

 

Sweden’s third-largest city has a progressive  contemporary feel. Home to Scandinavia's tallest building, beautiful parks, edgy  contemporary museums and some seriously good cuisine, the opening of the Öresund  bridge in 2000 has also been undeniably positive, connecting the city to bigger,  cooler Copenhagen and creating a dynamic new urban conglomeration.
 
Such a cosmopolitan outcome seems only natural for what  is Sweden’s most multicultural metropolis – 150 nationalities make up Malmö’s  head count. Here, exotic Middle Eastern street stalls, urbane Italian coffee  culture and hipster skateboard parks counter the town’s intrinsic Nordic  reserve.
Even the city’s lively historic core echoes its  multicultural past. The showpiece square of 
Stortorget evokes Hamburg more than it does Stockholm, while nearby Lilla Torg is a  chattering mass of alfresco supping and half-timbered houses that give away the  Danish connection.
Gamla Staden (Old Town) is Malmö’s heart, encircled by  a canal. There are three principal squares here: Stortorget, Lilla Torg and  Gustav Adolfs Torg. The castle, Malmöhus Slott, in its leafy park setting,  guards the western end of Gamla Staden. Across the canal on the northern side is  the snazzy redeveloped harbour precinct, home to some excellent cafes and  restaurants.
 
 
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