Old Town

For many visitors, Tallinn is the Old Town – and tourists coming for the history and the culture have little reason to wander beyond the city walls. With its perfectly preserved Hanseatic buildings and medieval Town Hall Square, old Tallinn looks almost too convincing to be true – as if it’s really a theme park. With thousands of Finns and Swedes flooding through each week, tourists wander the streets at all times of day and night. In addition, every year the town attracts ever greater volumes of visitors from further afield, and although at the moment it remains largely unspoilt, this may not last. Despite the restaurants, shops, cafés and bars, and thriving modern service industry, the medieval architecture of old Tallinn is still perfectly preserved. There’s something for everyone here – whether you are a romantic couple or a carousing stag group. And some excellent museums provide all the culture you could possibly want.

One of the great advantages of Old Tallinn is that it is small enough to walk around in a single day – and a lot can be fitted into one afternoon. Take in a gallery, spend an hour sipping hot chocolate in a cosy cellar, visit an artisan’s workshop and walk around the living museum of the ancient buildings before you settle in for a cocktail and then dinner. Dancing is never that hard to come by in the Old Town, either, with its selection of up-market and cheesier bars, disco pubs and popular nightclubs.

Old Tallinn has not been ruined by tourism. Although much of what goes on is geared towards tourists there are real Estonians making their lives here, and this is reflected in the range of excellent establishments – from faux medieval to trendy and cutting-edge. Hotels in the Old Town tend to make the most of their medieval setting – the best and most expensive are to be found in renovated merchant’s houses, with one or two slicker, more modern exceptions. Prices can be steep in high season as available accommodation gets quickly booked up and good-quality, cheaper rooms in the Old Town can be hard to come by. However, if you have the budget, this is the place to come.

The range of restaurants in the centre is superb, with everything from medieval tourist-orientated places (some of them excellent) to smart Italian and Japanese restaurants playing club-style lounge music and staffed by Prada model lookalikes. Avoid the tourist cellar restaurants on Viru; these are targeted at day-trippers from Helsinki.

Cafés come into their own in both seasons. In winter there is no lack of warm bolt-holes where you can escape the weather and enjoy well-prepared coffee and delicious hot chocolates, as well as fresh herbal teas. In summer the terrace culture emerges – and the Town Hall Square is the place to be, sitting in the sun with a cappuccino. The quality of the hot drinks is generally very good; we also recommend you try an afternoon liqueur.


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