Port

Tallinn is built right next to the Baltic Sea, so unsurprisingly the coast plays a vital role in the city’s life – with a huge range of maritime history and activities compressed into the few miles near the Old Town. Just outside the city walls, the ancient seaport still operates, today as a conduit for the millions of Scandinavians (mainly Finns) who arrive here every year. Take a walk past the regenerated industrial wasteland just off Mere pst, and you will find yourself face to face with the giant white ferries that make this crossing every day – spitting day-trippers out for weekend breaks and the cheap Estonian booze.

The port brings paradoxical flavours to Tallinn: formerly an area packed with factories, it is now home to some of the city’s trendiest restaurants and nightclubs, the Metropol Hotel, the London Casino and a string of popular bars. Right next to them sit a couple of dodgy hotels, a strip club and a line of shops selling cheap alcohol and catering mainly to the Finns. Estonians come to the port area for the good nightclubs (flavour of the month BonBon and student favourite, mega-club Terrarium), as well as the modish restaurants (such as the enigmatically named ‘Ö’) and live music (in bar Scotland Yard).

A mile or so along the shoreline you find yourself in altogether different surroundings – the summery district of Kadriorg, a residential suburb built by the Russians around an attractive, rolling park and an Italianate palace that has now become the celebrated Foreign Art Museum. Wood-boarded 19th-century houses give the district its special character, and on one side of the park you can watch the Baltic waves through the trees.

This is a perfect daytime get-away if the weather is fine – and increasingly the choice of habitat for Tallinn’s more affluent young professionals. If you’re staying here be aware that there’s not much in the way of nightlife, but you can start here at the chichi, minimalist Kadriorg Restaurant and then progress to the bar (or restaurant) of Bally’s Casino if you really can’t be bothered to make the 5-minute drive into town. For those wanting accommodation in this rus in urbis, there are a few boutique hotels – including Bally’s Casino itself and the Villa Stahl.

If you keep driving along the coast you will eventually find yourself in the seaside complex of Pirita: a string of spas, shops and restaurants that caters mainly to the summer and water-sports market, but is active all year around. You can stay at the unique, pristine Pirita Klooster guesthouse – run by an order of nuns – or at one of the gargantuan spa-hotels that cater mainly to Scandinavians visiting for residential beauty treatments, and offer large swimming pools, massage, saunas and excellent sports facilities. There is a marina in Pirita, a trendy beauty/health salon (Finissage), public tennis courts and also a couple of top restaurants to round off a day of virtue, including smart Charital and (further on the road out to Viimsi) the Noah’s Ark-shaped Paat. All worth a try.


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