Vilnius
(vil-nyus), the baroque beauty of the Baltic, is a city of immense
allure. It easily tops the country’s best-attraction bill, drawing
tourists like moths to a flame with an easy, confident charm and a warm,
golden glow that makes you wish for long midsummer evenings every day
of the year.
The capital may be a long way north and east, but it’s quintessentially continental, with Europe’s largest baroque old town at its heart. Viewed from a hot air balloon, the skyline – pierced by countless Orthodox and Catholic church steeples – looks like a giant bed of nails. Adding to this heady mix is a combination of cobbled alleys, crumbling corners, majestic hilltop views, breakaway states and traditional artists’ workshops – all in a city so small you’d sometimes think it was a village.
The city is forging a new identity, combining the past with a present and future that involves world cuisine, a burgeoning nightlife and shiny new skyscrapers.
Bizarre, beautiful and bewitching, Lithuania's
capital seduces visitors with its astonishing Old Town charm. Its
chocolate-box baroque skyline littered with the spires of Orthodox and
Catholic churches are intoxicating, decadent and fragile - so much so
that Unesco has declared this, Europe's
largest baroque old town, a World Heritage site. But there's more to
this devilishly attractive capital than meets the eye. There is an
underlying oddness that creates its soul.The capital may be a long way north and east, but it’s quintessentially continental, with Europe’s largest baroque old town at its heart. Viewed from a hot air balloon, the skyline – pierced by countless Orthodox and Catholic church steeples – looks like a giant bed of nails. Adding to this heady mix is a combination of cobbled alleys, crumbling corners, majestic hilltop views, breakaway states and traditional artists’ workshops – all in a city so small you’d sometimes think it was a village.
The city is forging a new identity, combining the past with a present and future that involves world cuisine, a burgeoning nightlife and shiny new skyscrapers.
Where else could there be the world's only statue of psychedelic musician and composer Frank Zappa? Or a self-proclaimed, unofficial, independent republic inhabited by artists and dreaming bohemians?
Strange bars glow inside dark courtyards and medieval archways frame the life of the narrow, cobbled streets through which change has swept with panache. Using foreign cash and local vision, this stylish little city has big plans. But new business and infrastructure - even a skyscraper skyline - won't disguise the curious charm of eccentric, soulful Vilnius.
Show in Lonely Planet
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