Norrmalm

Norrmalm can be thought of as the city's business and shopping centre. Vasastan (or Vasastaden to use its full name) is a more residential area located to its north and west side. The boundary between the two of them is a blurry one, but taken together they include plenty of great stores, bars and restaurants.

Here you'll find the city's most exclusive department store, NK, as well as its more affordable competitor Åhléns. There's also the Opera House (right), which includes several places to eat and drink, and Hötorget, the outdoor market beside Konserthuset, which sells flowers and vegetables Monday to Saturday and then hosts a (not particularly good) flea market on Sundays. Drottninggatan is Stockholm's equivalent of Oxford Street: always bustling, usually depressing and best avoided.

When, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, Stockholm was seized with a madness for modernizing, Norrmalm was one of the areas that suffered the most. Things could have been worse, of course. One plan called for Gamla Stan to be been flattened in order to provide convenient parking for the rest of the city. Thankfully this was avoided but many old buildings were lost. Some made way for Kulturhuset (below), a vast cultural centre that is loved and loathed in equal measure.
You'll arrive in this part of town if you take the Arlanda Express from the airport to the city. Close to the Central Station is the Nordic Light hotel, one of the most quintessentially Scandinavian hotels in town.

From Norrmalm/Vasastan there are several bridges over to Kungsholmen, another of the main islands that make up the city. Until relatively recently, if tourists went to Kungsholmen at all it was just to visit Stadshuset (City Hall). Having toured the building and seen the room in which the Nobel banquet takes place, they would have crossed back to the Norrmalm/Vasastan. Now, though, Kungsholmen is worth exploring for its own sake. Although still largely residential, it has several attractive restaurants and a new found sense of confidence. If you can't decide what you'd like to eat, go to Scheelegatan, one of the best restaurant rows in the city. Here you can bounce from bar to bar until you decide which of the many restaurants you want to visit. Also on Scheelegatan is the First Hotel Amaranten, which is fairly priced and ideally located for easy access to the Central Station.

In the summer, Rålambshovsparken is the perfect place for a picnic (you could pick up some food at the nearby Muffin Bakery) and there are also plenty of places to go for a swim. Considering how close Kungsholmen is to the city centre, it would be a shame to visit the city and not to cross over to one of its most up-and-coming areas.


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