We haven't been able to take payment
You must update your payment details via My Account or by clicking update payment details to keep your subscription.
Act now to keep your subscription
We've tried to contact you several times as we haven't been able to take payment. You must update your payment details via My Account or by clicking update payment details to keep your subscription.
Your subscription is due to terminate
We've tried to contact you several times as we haven't been able to take payment. You must update your payment details via My Account, otherwise your subscription will terminate.

The City Page: Tallinn

This Baltic beauty loses the crowds and reveals its true nature in the bright midwinter, says Clare Thomson

Don’t make the same mistake: this city is altogether more romantic and exhilarating out of season. And its Hanseatic heritage, gem-like Old Town, low prices for food and drink and gregarious social scene are available whatever the weather.

Tallinn’s inhabitants have spent a millennium learning to love a cold climate, and they stave off the chill with roaring cellar fires, rib-sticking peasant stews and socks as thick as the city’s ramparts. The russet towers take on a deliciously menacing air, more Brothers Grimm than Uncle Walt, especially when splashed with snow. Adventurous types can try kiteboarding on ice, while cultural types can hear world-class concerts — a long-standing Estonian tradition — for just a fiver.

Throw in rock-bottom hotel rates and new no-frills flights, and you can have twice as much fun as the summer crowd, for half as much cash.

Spring in your step: you can spend hours lingering in the maze of Old Town streets, admiring pastel-washed merchants’ houses and stiletto-thin gothic spires, then thawing out in one of countless cosy cafes. Even though spring is just around the corner, your chances of snow are high: start your stroll with the classic Sleeping Beauty view from the Kohtu and Patkuli viewing platforms on lofty Toompea — towers wreathed in forest, sea stretching beyond. Get there via Pikk jalg, past the Wall of Hate that divided aristos from commoners, and stop at the cathedral, Toomkirik, for a peep at its thrillingly austere interior.

Hurry on past the overblown Orthodox Nevsky Cathedral to the Danish King’s Garden, then stumble down super-steep Luhike jalg towards Niguliste church, now a museum of medieval art. To the east lies St Catherine’s Passage, an impossibly pretty alley lined with handicraft workshops, and the Hellemann tower, starting point for a rampart ramble. Vene Street leads to the City Museum (00 372-644 6553; £1.10), probing Tallinn’s Hanseatic heyday and its merry interwar years as an independent republic.

Advertisement

Once night falls, the only place to be is Raekoja Plats, where the clean lines of the gothic town hall are softened by lamplight to magical effect.

Phantom menace: like any medieval city, Tallinn has its share of spectres, but its most chilling spooks are of the cloak-and-dagger variety. In its brief spell of independence, proximity to Russia made it eastern Europe’s espionage capital; later, Soviet occupation saw the KGB impose a reign of terror. And today? Well, I could tell you some tales, but then I’d have to kill you ...

The horrors that the Soviet and Nazi regimes brought to the Estonians remain only too evident. The Occupations Museum (Toompea 8; 668 0250; 50p) sets the tone in its entrance hall, where battered suitcases recall the flight, death and exile of thousands. A stroll along Pikk is equally sobering: St Canute’s Guildhouse (No 20) was a Soviet phone-tapping centre; while Oleviste’s spire was used as a radio transmitter. Most haunting is the Interior Ministry Building (59), used by the KGB for torture and executions; you can still see the bricked-up windows that stifled the victims’ screams.

Super tsar: among the woods of Kadriorg, Peter the Great erected a baroque summer palace, now home to the Foreign Art Museum (Weizenbergi 28; 606 6400; £2) and strong on Dutch and Flemish old masters and Russian portraiture. More compelling, though, is the palace itself, with its tiled stoves and ornate ceilings, and the surrounding parkland, its linden groves studded with ornate wooden houses and art-deco villas.

Thrills and chills: you’d think a frozen sea would obstruct windsurfing. You’d be wrong. In the late 1970s, an Estonian mechanic attached skis to his windsurfer, reaching speeds of 40mph, and ice and snow sailing was born. Today it’s a globally popular extreme sport, and the local base is Lake Harku, east of town, where enthusiasts will happily share tips and equipment; for more information, visit www.kite.ee.

Advertisement

There are gentler ways to enjoy the Estonian freeze. At Snelli Pond, in the shadow of the medieval ramparts, children — and uninhibited adults — can hurtle at alarming speed down giant ice sculptures (they’re not big on Health & Safety here). Or you can head for the Song Festival Grounds, in Kadriorg, and ponder the courage of the 300,000 who voiced their discontent at Soviet occupation in 1988 — then fling yourself down the slope on a flimsy bit of plastic (for winter sports, call 611 2102).

After dark: pre-war Tallinn was a city that never slept, and today’s Tallinners seem hell-bent on regaining that reputation. Can you think of another city where the official tourist pass includes admission to a nightclub? The Tallinn Card (available from the tourist office, see below) takes you to the cheesy Hollywood (Vana-Posti 8; 627 4770), full of cheerful enthusiasm and irresistibly pompous Stalinist architecture. If you prefer Brazilian drum’n’bass to Blondie hits, head for Club Privé (Harju 6; £7), or BonBon (Mere puiestee 6e, from £4).

For romantics, Gloria wine bar (Muurivahe 2) is a labyrinth of secret corners carved out of the city walls. And the hole-in-the-wall Levist Valjas (Olevimagi 12) draws an artsy but unpretentious crowd and stays open as long as they can still stand.

The land of Arvo Pärt and the Singing Revolution is alive with music, and with top-price tickets costing £5, you must get to a concert during your stay. The opera house (Estonia puiestee 4; 614 7760, www.concert.ee) hosts the gala shows; Niguliste and Toomkirik have the mightiest organs; while the Gate Tower (Luhike jalg 9; 644 0719) is home to Hortus Musicus, whose conductor, Andrus Mustonen, is the Robert Plant of medieval plainsong.

Getting there: as of May 10, Estonian Air (c/o Maersk Air on 020 7333 0196, www.estonian-air.ee) inaugurates new nonstop flights from Manchester to Tallinn, from £96. It already flies from Gatwick (from £74) and Dublin (from €163). EasyJet (0905 821 0905, 65p/min, www.easyjet.com) flies from Stansted from £41. A taxi from the airport to the Old Town costs £5.

Advertisement

Tour operators: Regent (0117 921 1711, www.regent-holidays.co.uk) has three nights’ B&B at the five-star Three Sisters from £399pp — see below — or at the three-star Hotel Taanilinna from £270pp, with flights from Gatwick or Manchester. Or try Baltic Holidays (0870 757 9233, www.balticholidays.com) or Kirker (0870 112 3333, www.kirkerholidays.com).

Tourist information: the main office is at Kullassepa 4/Niguliste 2 (00 372 645 7777, www.tourism.tallinn.ee). It sells the Tallinn Card: £12.50 for 48hr.

Clare Thomson is the author of Tallinn (Footprint £7.99)

Page 2: Where to sleep, where to eat, what to do

()

Advertisement

Where to sleep, where to eat, what to do

ON THE CHEAP

Old House (Uus 22; 00 372 641 1464, www.oldhouse.ee) has the cheapest doubles inside the city walls (from £29, B&B). More romantic is Poska Villa (Poska 15; 601 3601; doubles from £34, B&B), a cute wooden chalet on Kadriorg’s leafy streets.

Stuffed pancakes are a local speciality, and the cafe-bar at the avant-garde Von Krahli theatre (Rataskaevu 10; 626 9090) dishes up humungous half-portions for £1.50. For Estonian food at its earthiest — spiced sprats, sauerkraut — try Eesti Maja (Lauteri 1; 645 5252; mains £3.50).

The coast road northeast offers unforgettable views of the Old Town. Take bus 1a to Viimsi, £1.40.

Advertisement

MIDDLE OF THE ROAD

Imperial (Nunne 14; 00 372 627 4800, www.imperial.ee; doubles from £60, B&B) is an atmospheric boutique hotel, hard against the city wall (a slice of it runs through one room), with airy rooms and picturesque Old Town views.

Like many of the city’s cellar restaurants, Maikrahv (Raekoja plats 8, 631 4227; mains from £7) has waiters in medieval costume, but the cooking is serious. Or try Sisalik (Pikk 30; 646 6542; mains £5-£12), a vaulted place with marvellous Med-inspired cuisine.

Hire the 26th-floor sauna at the Reval Olumpia Hotel (631 5585, www.olympia.ee; from £13.50 an hour) and chill out with a peerless view of the city.

NO EXPENSE SPARED

For five-star service in a medieval merchant’s house, it’s a straight choice: old-world opulence at the Schlössle (Puhavaimu 13-15; 00 372-699 7700, www.schlossle-hotels.com; doubles from £133); or modern-meets-old-world cool at The Three Sisters (Pikk 71; 630 6300, www.threesistershotel.com; doubles from £107).

The intimate nooks of Egoist (Vene 33; 646 4052; menus from £22) are perfect for a dinner à deux.

Have your own private recital from Hortus Musicus; a high-octane hour in their intimate, haunted tower costs £700 (00 372 644 0719, hortus@concert.ee) — and you get to choose your own programme.