New Town

For the tourist, the Old Town offers everything you really need from a visit to Estonia: history, nightlife, pretty buildings, men in tights. But for dedicated shoppers, business travellers or anyone looking for a bit of real-life action, you will need to stray a few hundred yards outside the city walls to the modern City Centre to understand what it is really all about. Just follow the (small) skyscrapers south-east of the Old Town to find yourself in the heart of bustling modern Tallinn, full of offices, hotels and shops. Within a square kilometre you will come across Tallinn’s two largest department stores (Kaubamaja and Stockmann), the massive SAS Radisson hotel, and the rather more Soviet-looking (but equally monolithic) Reval Olümpia. Around them you can sample the growing handful of cafés and bars crammed with office workers, students and real Estonians going about their business.

Great nightlife is here in abundance, if you can be bothered to go the extra mile – although it’s less compressed than in the Old Town. Try the touristy, lively bars and nightclubs of the big hotels or check out the Hotel Olümpia’s funky all-night café, a pick-up joint in its own right. Closer to town on Parnu mnt near the evocatively named Vabaduse Square (‘Freedom Square’, now a car park), VS Café draws in locals and trendy ex-pats with its combination of Indian food and dance music. For a real local favourite navigate your way to Hiireloks (‘the mousetrap’), a seedy but warm (and hilarious) Russian karaoke bar hidden in the backstreets.

If you’ve had enough of drinking, Deli 24 provides all-night hot food and drink, excellent coffee and a perfect spot for people-watching. For afternoon snacks, newly opened City Gourmet heralds great things to come in the City Centre, with its luxury deli-café atmosphere, imported Italian food and stylish interior. Or go to Energia café opposite Kaubamaja for the buzz of shoppers and workers, and a slightly kitschy, Soviet-era flavour.

There is little choice in the restaurant department, although what there is, is excellent: from trendy Moskva with its air-hostess waitresses in Vabaduse Square, and Rusthaveli, a top-notch Georgian restaurant on the second floor of a block opposite the Radisson, to Eesti Maja, a characterful Estonian restaurant Tardis-like and hidden away below street level, there is little danger of starvation here.

If you want to meet real Estonians at work and play, this is the place to be.


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