Tallinn

  
  - darkometer rating:  3 -
  
The capital and largest city of Estonia is the smallest but most touristy of the three Baltic capitals (the others being Riga in Latvia and Vilnius in Lithuania). Mainstream tourism is centred on the exceptionally picturesque Old Town, but for dark tourists there are quite a few things to discover both in and outside the centre as well.   
  
  
What there is to see:  Being primarily a mainstream tourist attraction, Tallinn reveals its darker sides a little more reluctantly compared to other Baltic cities. But even in the centre there are a few points of interest to the dark tourist; others are bit further out. Some of these should (or have to) be visited as part of a guided tour. 
  
  
    
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
In addition to these places, one of the more visible monuments to a tragic chapter in modern history is the “Broken Line” memorial that commemorates the 852 lives lost in one of the worst ferry disasters ever, when the “MS Estonia” RoRo car-and-passenger ferry en route from Tallinn to Stockholm capsized and sank in 1994 under somewhat dubious circumstances. The main part of the memorial consists of two steel beams emerging from the ground at low angles and not quite meeting in the middle (hence 'broken line'). Plaques either side of the memorial explain its significance in Estonian and English. And the names of the dead are listed on a low slab near the base of the northern half of the broken-half beams. 
  
The monument is located right outside the Old Town walls in front of the so-called Fat Margaret tower. The latter is also home to the regular maritime museum (the more modern extension is at the Seaplane Harbour). It is mostly of the ship-models-and-maritime-paraphernalia type but allegedly also has a small section on the "Estonia" disaster. 
  
An insignificant-looking little statue of a female on top of the hillock on the southern bastion of Toompea near the Nevsky cathedral apparently was a meeting point for dissidents and protesters against Soviet rule. 
  
Somewhat hidden is also the plaque honouring Russia's first post-Soviet president Boris Yeltsin for his role in allowing Estonia (and the other Baltic states) to restore their independence in 1991. Find the plaque, complete with a relief of boozy Bozza in bronze attached to the southern wall at the bottom of Toompea on Nunne street, where it leads out of the Old Town. 
  
Also easily overlooked is the memorial acknowledging the role that Poland's Solidarnosc movement played in paving the way to the overthrow of communism. Find it on a grassy patch near St John's church just off Freedom Square (Vabaduse väjak).
 
Dominating the square, however, is the Freedom Monument made from Czech glass and officially unveiled in 2009 to some controversy (primarily over the steep costs at a time when the country was in financial doldrums). 
  
Some dark tourists may also find the tours of the bastion tunnels under old Tallinn (under Toompea to be precise) to their liking. I found that the advertising for this new attraction looked a bit too medieval-y, ghost-hunting-like, children's adventure-oriented for my taste, so I didn't go. So I can't say what these tours really are like. Meanwhile I have found out that they may have been of historical interest as well, in so far as the tunnels were also used as air-raid shelters during WWII when the Soviets bombed the city, and that the Soviets themselves later elaborated the tunnel system. However, little of any original installations remain, apparently, and pictures I've seen suggest a rather sanitized experience of white-washed walls, dummies in period clothes (including with gas masks on), light effects, videos and even a little train to ride in the tunnel. Tours are operated by the city museum and start at the Kiek in de Kök bastion tower (5.80 EUR, Tue-Sun 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. November to March). 
  
  
Location: on the north coast of Estonia, just 50 miles (80 km) south of Helsinki, Finland, 200 miles (30 km) north of Riga, Latvia, and a little more than that from St Petersburg, Russia, to the east. 
 
Google maps locator: [59.4374,24.7452]
  
  
Access and costs: quite easy to get to; relatively more expensive than the other Baltic capitals.  
  
Details: Tallinn can quite easily be reached by air, sea and land. Budget airline flights from Great Britain opened up the city as a prime city break (and stag party) destination for Britons, but there are fairly good connections to other parts of Europe too (airport code: TLL).  
  
The city's location on the Baltic coast makes it a prime destination for cruise ships, but also for ferries to/from Helsinki, which lies just 50 miles (80 km) across the Gulf of Finland, as well as to ports in Sweden (mainly Stockholm) and at times also to Germany and Russia (St Petersburg). 
  
From within the Baltics, bus travel is the main means of getting around and there are many good and competitively priced connections e.g. to Tartu, Riga, Vilnius and beyond from/to the international bus station (bussijaam.ee), which is a little bit out of the centre at Lastekodu 46 on the corner of Odra. 
  
Train travel in comparison is only of secondary importance, although recent improvements (a new fast train to Tartu, for instance) give hope for the future. Tallinn's main train station (Balti Jaam) couldn't be more conveniently located, just steps from the Old Town on the Toompuiestee road that forms part of the western ring road around the centre. 
  
Getting around: within the city, much can be covered on foot. For longer distances (e.g. to Maarjamäe) there are buses, trams and trolleybuses. Tallinn residents ride for free, but visitors still have to pay. Single tickets can be purchased on board (at the time of writing 1.60 EUR per ride). For those intending to use public transport a lot there are pre-paid smart cards that offer better value deals – but few tourists who stay only for a few days and focus on the centre will need these. During my five days in Estonia I used buses only twice.  
  
Accommodation options cover a wide range with plenty of excellent choices in almost all price levels. Overall, prices tend to be a little higher than in the other Baltic cities (due to the city's popularity with foreign visitors, presumably), but still not as high as in many other European capitals. 
 
For food & drink, the situation is similar, i.e. there's a very wide range of options, price levels are a bit higher than in the neighbouring countries, but good deals can still be had. Apart from Estonian cuisine and the usual international range (some in very good quality), a local speciality trend seems to be medieval-themed restaurants. Of these some are more authentic than others. The star in this league is called Olde Hansa ... the candle-lit dining halls are decked out in medieval style but thankfully the medieval theatrical song-and-dance is otherwise kept to a minimum, while the focus is on realistic period food and drink (but not cheap). Ethnic cuisines from near and far away are also represented (Georgian, JapaneseIndian, etc.). 
  
Imported drinks are predictably expensive, especially in the standard range. However, the craft beer revolution has gained a solid foothold in Tallinn. At least six or seven specialist bars run the craft beer theme offering good selections of local and foreign (esp. Scandinavian) quality microbrews often at fairly good-value prices (compared to especially Denmark or Norway); the internationally best-known Estonian craft brewers,Põhjala, now have their own taproom at the brewery to the west of the city centre. My personal favourite craft beer watering hole in Tallinn, however, was "Põrgu", located right in the Old Town.   
 
  
Time required: To cover everything listed here alone you will need substantial amounts of time. I allowed four days in Tallinn on my first Baltic trip (April/May 2014) and found that it wasn't quite enough. So when I went back to Tallinn in the summer of 2021, I gave it a full five extra days and was thus able to cover all tht I had missed the first time around as well as things that have opened up since. To do it all in one trip now, you'd need at least a week.   
 
Combinations with other dark destinations: To the west of Tallinn there used to be a closed military town in Soviet times, . Since the departure of the military and the nuclear submarine base (!), population dwindled dramatically and the place became a partial ghost town – cf. Karosta in ! Now it is being “cleaned up”, the relics from these old times as well as the character are diminishing and will eventually disappear. Unfortunately I did not have the opportunity to go on such a tour when I was in Tallinn ion 2014 (too little time and too early in the season – end of April/early May), but if I get a chance next time I'm in the region I will give it a go. UPDATE 2021: there now seems to be very little left at Paldiski, and the tours that were once run there appear to have been discontinued as well. So it looks like I've missed my chances. 
 
Yet further afield, a trip (by train or bus) that can most definitely be recommended is one to the university town of Tartu, especially for the Tartu KGB cells museum
 
Riga in neighbouring Latvia is also just a ca. five-hour bus ride away and thus makes for a very worthwhile combination too. 
  
  
Combinations with non-dark destinations: Tallinn as such is a prime mainstream tourism destination, mostly thanks to its Old Town .... or rather: its TWO old towns. The upper old town on Toompea Hill has been the seat of power in Estonia (though mostly in the form of foreign rule) since Tallinn's inception as a fortress in the 13th  century. Parts of Toompea are still government buildings, but other, more accessible  sights include the grand orthodox Alexander Nevsky cathedral. The most sought-after places up here, however, are those from where you get a good view over the lower old town. 
 
This lower part of the Old Town, the larger half of the historical centre, used to be the place that from the late 13th century was a member of the Hanseatic League and as such was a separate entity from Estonia politically and economically until Tsarist Russian times. The architectural legacy of the Hanse can be seen everywhere. 
 
Old Tallinn (until 1918 named Reval – a name still sometimes used to refer to the place, especially in German) is certainly a picture-book jewel of a historic town, with old merchants houses, churches, a pretty 14th century town hall, cobbled alleyways and squares and everything that oozes “olde worlde” by the bucketload. For details on the individual features consult the inyourpocket.com pages about Tallinn or any standard guidebook – and for a visual impression see the photo gallery below.
 
In a nutshell: old Tallinn is very, very picturesque – but unfortunately so much so that it attracts huge crowds and all the other downsides of mass tourism (e.g. literally hundreds of uniform, standardized souvenir shops). Especially when one or more of those horrible cruise ships are in town, old Tallinn gets flooded with tour groups, hectically being herded through all the usual corners of the Old Town so that it can get impossible to make your way through the throngs. Only when they are gone, does the atmosphere in the Old Town become genuinely pleasant. Interestingly, as one counter-measure the authorities have banned those stupid selfie-sticks from the Old Town. A thumbs-up from me for that!
 
Another downside of Tallinn's popularity is loud groups of drunks. These could be British stag party louts or they could be Finns on a booze run. Apparently about one third of all alcohol sold in Estonia goes into Finnish hands (and throats) – who take advantage of the infinitely cheaper booze prices here compared to back at home. The fact that Helsinki is only a two-hour ferry ride away and that Estonia imposes hardly any limits on how much you can take out must be too tempting an incentive. And to make absolutely sure they get the most out of it many try to take as much as possible with them inside them too ... 
 
Outside the Old Town, Tallinn changes character markedly. To the south and east of the Old Town is another layer of more commercial city-center-ness (they love shopping centres here!), but beyond that it quickly becomes suburban and even, quite frankly, rather drab. 
 
The out-of-centre attractions are a bit further away, especially in the seaside prettiness of Viimsi to the north-east, the Estonian Open Air Museum park (and shopping centre) at Rocca al Mare, and the Lahemaa National Park to the east of Tallinn.