Bratislava City Guide
Bratislava City Guide
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Spectacular Slovakia
Bratislava city guide
Bratislava city guide
top attractions in Bratislava
pull-out map of city centre
a 7-day city visit plan
www.visitbratislava.com
EN
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/CONVERSIONS
Distances
1 km = 0.62 mile (km = mile / 0.62137)
1 mile = 1.61 km (mile = km x 0.62137)
Temperature
0°C = 32°F (°C = (°F -32)/1.8)
32°F = 0°C (°F = °C x 1.8+32)
Weight
1 kg = 2.2 lb (kg = lb/2.2046)
1 lb = 0.45 kg (lb = kg x 2.2046)
KEy TO maIN SymbOlS
address
Å phone
walking distance from the Main Square
(Hlavné námestie)
driving from the city centre (Hodžovo nám.)
a open
U religious service
admission charge for adults
¯ live music
é wheelchair access
ä restaurant
å café, bar
e gift shop
G museum
gallery
® theatre
u public transport stop
v public transport: numbers or times
N page references for sites described
in greater detail elsewhere in the guide
information
church, chapel, synagogue
monument, statue, memorial
hospital, polyclinic, pharmacy
post office
police
parking, paid parking, garage
tennis
sport field
cinema
hotel
fountain
bus station
train station
airport
port
cemetery
pedestrian zone
gas station
castle
ruins
stairs
supermaket, market place
railway
highway
1st-class road
2nd-class road
3rd-class road
border crossing
P road number
one-way road
dead end
W a must-see sight
© 2016 The Rock, s.r.o. All rights reserved. Any reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited by the law. The authors
of the articles published in this issue, represented by the publisher, reserve the right to give their approval for reproducing and public
transmission of articles marked © The Slovak Spectator/ Spectacular Slovakia as well as for the public circulation of reproductions of these
articles in compliance with the 33rd article and 1st paragraph of the Copyright Law. Media Monitoring is provided by Newton, IT, SMA and
Slovakia Online with the approval of the publisher. Advertising material contained herein is the responsibility of the advertiser and is not
written or implied sponsorship, endorsement or investigation of such commercial enterprises or ventures by The Slovak Spectator or The Rock,
s.r.o., Address: The Rock, s.r.o. Lazaretská 12, 811 08 Bratislava.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Language
Slovak is one branch in the Slavic language tree, and Slovaks will insist (we agree) that their language is the cleanest of them all. Re-
gardless,it’satoughlanguage,lacedwithconjugationsandmyriadendings,dependingonthecasebeingused.Takeheart-moreand
moreSlovaksspeakEnglish,Germanorboth.We’veincludedasmallguideforthosebravesoulswhowanttowrestlewiththelanguage
Vowels
Vowels can be either short (a, ä, e, i, o, u, y) or long (á, é, í, ó, ú, ý). Long vowels are simply empasized versions of their short coun-
terparts.
a short -a- asin“ah”yousaytoyourdentist,e.g.mapa (ma-pa) map
á long -a- asinprolonged“ah”todentist,e.g.dáma (daaa-ma) lady
ä -e- asinbed,e.g.mäso (me-so) meat
e short -e- asinbet,e.g.teraz (te-raz) now
é long -e- asinthere,e.g.prvé (pr-vee) first
i short -i- asingraffiti,e.g.pivo (pi-vo) beer
í long -i- asinneed,e.g.víno (veee-no) wine
o -o- asinlog,e.g.okno (ok-no) window
ó long -o-,likethe-a-intalk,e.g.móda (moh-da) fashion
ô -uo-,like“whoa!”toahorse,e.g.môžem (mwhoa-zhem) Ican
u short -u- asinshoot,e.g.ruka (ru-ka) hand
ú long -oo- asinschool,e.g.údolie(ooo-doh-lye) valley
y, ý thesameasfori, í
The most useful Slovak phrases
Select Glossary
Numbers
0 nula 6 šesť 12 dvanásť
1 jeden 7 sedem 20 dvadsať
2 dva 8 osem 30 tridsať
3 tri 9 deväť 100 sto
4 štyri 10 desať 1,000 tisíc
5 päť 11 jedenásť 2,000 dvetisíc
199issaidasonehundredninety-nine,stodeväťdesiatdeväť,butwithout“and”.
Theyear2011istwothousandeleven,dvetisícjedenásť.
Basic phrases
please
thankyou
goodmorning
goodday/hello
goodnight
hi
goodbye
prosím
ďakujem
dobré ráno
dobrý deň
dobrú noc
ahoj, čau (fam)
dovidenia, čau
cheers!
yes/no
excuseme/sorry
bonappetit!
you’rewelcome
notatall!
welcome!
na zdravie!
áno/nie
prepáčte!
dobrú chuť!
prosím
niet za čo!
vitajte!
dAysoFTHEWEEK
Monday-pondelok
Tuesday-utorok
Wednesday-streda
Thursday-štvrtok
Friday-piatok
Saturday-sobota
Sunday-nedeľa
Weekend–víkend
Consonants
The consonants b, d, f, g, l, m, n, s, v, and z are pronounced approximately as in English. Meanwhile, k, p, and t are like in English,
but without aspiration. The “v” over some consonants softens them. Example: čo, pronounced choh, which means what. To compli-
cate things, d, n, and t are usually softened when followed by e or i, becoming ď, ň or ť. Examples: deti (dye-tyee) children, neviem
(nye-vyem) Idon’tknow.
c -ts- asinoats,e.g.ocot (otsot) vinegar
č -ch- asinchild,e.g.človek (chlo-vek) man,humanbeing
ď -dy- asinduty,e.g.ďakujem (dyak-oo-yem) thankyou
dz -ds- asinheads,e.g.medzi (me-dsi) between
dž -j- asinjam,e.g.džús (juus) juice
ch -ch- asintheScottishloch,e.g.chata (cha-ta) cottage
j -y- asinyou,e.g.kraj(kray) region
ľ -ly- asinlurid,e.g. ľad (lyad) ice
ĺ longl(noEnglishequivalent)e.g. stĺp (stlllp) pole
ň -ny- asinnews,e.g.deň (dyeny) day
r rolledlikeaSpanishr,e.g.ryba (rrri-ba) fish
ŕ longrolledr,e.g.mŕtvy (mrrrrrrrtvy) dead
š -sh- asinshe,e.g.šesť (shesty) six
ť -t- asintune,e.g.dosť (dost) enough
w -v- asinvan(foundonlyinforeignwords),e.g.WC (ve-tse) WC
ž like-s- inpleasure,e.g.žena (zhe-na) woman
MoNTHs
January-január
February-február
March-marec
April-apríl
May-máj
June-jún
July-júl
August-august
September-september
October-október
November-november
December–december
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Excuseme,doyouspeakEnglish? Prepáčte,hovorítepoanglicky?
Doyouunderstand? Rozumiete?
Idon’tunderstand. Nerozumiem.
Idon’tunderstandSlovak. Nerozumiemposlovensky.
Pleasewriteitdownforme. Napíštemitoprosím.
Ibegyourpardon? Prosím?
Whereis...? Kdeje...?
Couldyouhelpme? Mohlibystemipomôcť?
Whatdoes....mean? Čoznamená....?
Howmuchisit? Koľkotostojí?
Whatisyourname? Akosavoláte?
MynameisXX. VolámsaXX.
Nicetomeetyou. Tešíma.
Howareyou? Akosamáte?(máš)
Takecare! Majtesadobre!
Isthereaphoneboothnearhere? Jetuniekdetelefónnabúdka?
Whereisthebathroom? Kdejetoaleta(WC)?
Whattimeisit? Koľkojehodín?
Doyouhaveanyvacancies? Mátevoľnéizby?
Whereismyluggage? Kdejemojabatožina?
Wouldyoucallataxiforme,please? Zavolátemiprosímtaxík?
Howfarisitto..........? Akoďalekojetodo..........?
Canyoutelluswhentogetoff? Prosím,kdemámevystúpiť?
Whatisthefare? Koľkostojílístok?
Usefulphrasesatarestaurant
DoyouhaveanEnglishmenu? Mátejedálnylístokvangličtine?
Thebill,please. Prosím,zaplatím.
Maywehave............ Môžemepoprosiť..........
Abottleofredwine. Jednufľašučervenéhovína.
Abeer. Jednopivo.
Anotherbeer. Eštejednopivo.
Weareinahurry. Ponáhľamesa.
Food ANd dRiNK
NáPoJE dRiNKs
pivo beer
červenévíno redwine
bielevíno whitewine
minerálnavoda mineralwater
čistávoda tapwater
jablkovýdžús applejuice
pomarančovýdžús orangejuice
káva coffee
čaj tea
JEdálNylísToK MENU
predjedlo appetizers
PoliEVKy: soUPs:
zemiaková potato
šošovicová lentil
hovädzia beef
hrachová pea
slepačia chicken
paradajková tomato
zeleninová vegetable
HlAVNéJEdlo MAiNCoURsE
mäso meat
šunka ham
čevabčiči spicedmeatballs
hovädzie beef
pečienka liver
kačica duck
klobásy sausages
kuracie chicken
saláma salami
slanina bacon
teľacie veal
bravčové pork
morčacie turkey
RyBy FisH
kapor carp
makrela mackerel
pstruh trout
treska cod
ZElENiNA VEgETABlEs
zemiaky potatoes
cibuľa onion
cesnak garlic
huby mushrooms
hrach pea
karfiol cauliflower
paradajka tomato
špenát spinach
kapusta cabbage
paprika pepper
šalát salad
oVoCiE FRUiTs
banán banana
broskyňa peach
citrón lemon
hrozno grapes
hruška pear
jablko apple
marhuľa apricot
pomaranč orange
čerešne cherry
iNé EXTRAs
ryža rice
opekanézemiaky roastedpotatoes
varenézemiaky boiledpotatoes
hranolky chips(British),Frenchfries(US)
chlieb bread
pečivo breadroll
maslo butter
syr cheese
džem jam
vajce egg
niva softbluecheese
oštiepok smokedcurd
tvaroh curdcheese
soľ salt
korenie pepper(spice)
horčica mustard
arašídy peanuts
vyprážaný fried
zapečená baked
zmrzlina icecream
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/CONTENTS
How to use this guide 2
Seven days in the city 4
History 6
Sight by sight
Historical centre 10
Walking distance 29
Around the city 36
Feature section
Changes 41
Coronation city 44
Personalities 46
Legends 48
Museums, galleries
and theatres 50
Best deals 53
For 100 Euros 54
Night life 56
Shopping and
the modern city 58
Under communism 60
Religion 62
Nations 64
Bird’s eye view 67
Extreme sports 68
The Danube 70
Parks, gardens, lakes 72
The unusual 74
Dining 76
Cafés 78
Wine 80
Luxury 82
Family 84
Without barriers 86
Running 87
Outside the city 89
Cycling 96
Hiking 98
Beyond the region 100
Basics for tourists
Language
(inside front cover)
Travellers’ needs 102
Guide to prices 105
Slovak cuisine 106
Souvenirs 108
Events 108
Index
Index 110
Street finder 112
Maps (inside back cover)
Pull-out map
Regional map
City map
The piano of
Johann Nepomuk
Hummel
The annual
coronation
ceremony
St Martin‘s
Cathedral
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/2 bratislava: How to use this guide
How to use this guide
This page is designed to help you navigate the
Bratislava City Guide.For this edition,we have selected
a list of the top sights in Bratislava that you should
make sure you visit.You can find the list on page 3.The
guide comprises five parts:
1.Sight by sight section (pages 10-39)
Practical information and useful contact details
related to selected sights in Bratislava
a.Bratislava: Historical centre (pages 10-28)
b.Bratislava: Within walking distance (pages 29-35)
c.Bratislava:Around the city (pages 36-39)
2.Feature section (pages 40-101)
a.Articles covering 23 different travel topics and
useful contact details related to the sites covered in
individual stories (pages 40-87)
b.Articles focusing on the region surrounding
Bratislava,with practical information and contact
details for the sites covered in individual stories
(pages 88-101)
3.Basics for tourists
Basic information about Bratislava and Slovakia,and
practical advice for travellers (pages 4-9,102-109 and
inside front cover)
4.Index (pages 110-112)
Index of all the places mentioned in the guide (pages
110-111) as well as a street finder
5.Maps (inside back cover)
a.Pull-out map
Detailed map of the city centre as well as public
transport in the city,with practical information
related to transport
b.Regional map
c.City map
A detailed list of contents can be found on page 1.
Feature page
The guide has more than 60
feature pages, covering 23
different traveller topics and
including useful contact details
related to the sites covered in
individual stories.
Feature article about the site(s)
in question, with title.
Sidebar with practical
information and useful
contact details related to
the site covered in the
individual story.
Each site in the guide
has its own reference
number, which may
be displayed in two
different ways.
A map related to the article,
with reference numbers for
selected sites connected to
the topic.
Sites not referred to
on other pages are
described directly on
the page.
Map references refer to the
pull-out map.
Walking distances are
from the Main Square
(Hlavné námestie).
Driving details are from the
city centre (Hodžovo nám.).
The name of the
closest public
transport stop.
Numbers of public transport
services that operate from the
closest stop.
Ticket prices are for adults.
Page references are given for
sites described in greater detail
elsewhere in the guide.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: How to use this guide / TOP SIGHTS 3
Sight by sight page
This page offers short profiles with useful
information on selected sights
in Bratislava.
Practical information and
contact details for featured
places in the city.
Short description of
each place.
Each site in the guide has
its own reference number,
which may be displayed in
two different ways.
A map related to the
relevant part of the city,
with reference numbers for
selected sights.
Map references
refer to the
pull-out map.
Walking distances are
from the Main Square
(Hlavné námestie).
Driving details are
from the city centre
(Hodžovo nám.).
The name of the
closest public
transport stop.
Numbers of public transport
services that operate from
the closest stop.
Ticket prices are
for adults.
3 Slovak National Gallery, map C 4
N page: 12, 50-52, 53
8 Slovak National Theatre - Historical building,
map C 3 N page: 13, 50-52, 82-83
14 Old Town Hall (museum), map C 3 (c 4)
N page: 16, 50-52, 53, 67, 80-81
16 Primate’s Palace (museum), map C 3 (c 4)
N page: 17, 64-66
18 Nedbalka Gallery, map C 3 (c 4)
N page: 15, 50-52
25 Franciscan Church, map C 3 (c 2)
N page: 19, 44-45
27 Michael’s Gate (museum), map C 3 (c 1)
N page: 20, 48-49, 67
35 Pálffy Palace (gallery), map C 3 (c 3)
N page: 22, 50-52, 64-66
38 St Martin’s Cathedral, map C 3 (c 3)
N page: 24-25, 44-45, 62--66
42 Bratislava Castle, map B 3 N page: 26-27,
48-49, 53, 54-55, 64-66, 84-85
48 Chatam Sófer Memorial, map A 3
N page: 29, 62-63, 64-66
51 Most SNP (bridge), map B,C 4
N page: 30, 41-43, 60-61, 67, 70-71, 82-83
56 Eurovea (river-front district), map E 4
N page: 30, 53, 54-55, 58-59, 70-71
58 Blue Church, map D 3 N page: 31, 54-55
77 Slavín(memorial), map B 1
N page: 34, 54-55, 60-61, 64-66, 67
80b Volkswagen (car plant) N page: 37
81 Devín Castle N page: 37, 60-61, 64-66
99 Danubiana Meulensteen Art Museum
N page: 39, 50-52, 53, 54-55, 70-71
58
77
35
27
18
16
25
14
56
51
48
81
99
42 38
Top sights in Bratislava
8
3
80b
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/4 bratislava: Seven days in the city
Seven days in the city
Bratislava is an ideal city-break
destination,it offers some of the most
diverse sites in a single city.Even
though the historical centre is much
smaller than those of nearby capitals
like Vienna and Budapest.The other
options mean that even travellers
here for an extended stay can be kept
busy for far longer than just the usual
two-day break.
Here’s a programme arranged by
the authors of this guide for seven
days in Bratislava,whichyou are
of course free to re-arrange asyou
see fit.
Day 1 - OldTown
Almost all of Bratislava’s OldTown
rewards in-depth exploration and
even just wandering the city streets
can be a richly rewarding experience.
However,an idea for a more formal
path is mapped out on pages 10-11,
starting on the banks of the Danube
at the Slovak National Gallery (SNG)
and then heading into the narrow,
winding streets.
Morning: Hop on the Oldtimer
XL or Blaváčik tourist trains (N
page: 13),which offer extended
tours of the historical centre,and
a ride to Bratislava Castle.Then
switch to art byvisiting the SNG
(N page: 12).Your next stop could
be the OldTown Hall complex (N
page: 16),which includes museums
and an overview of Bratislava from
its tower,before heading to the
Nedbalka Gallery (N page: 15) for
more wonderful art.Pick up a quick
lunch of soup,sandwiches or salad
at any location of the Štúr,Foxford
and Urban House cafés which are
close to the city centre.
(N page: 78-79).
Afternoon: Walk off lunch by
climbing up the castle hill (N page:
26-27),which can be approached
from several directions.On the way
back from the castle,pop in to St
Martin’s Cathedral (N page: 24-25)
and explore its interior and crypts.
Before dinner at Skybar (N page: 67),
head to the Pálffy Palace (N page:
22),a branch of the city art gallery.
After dinner with a magnificent
view over the streets you have now
explored,the last hours of your
busy day could be devoted to music
at the Slovak NationalTheatre (N
page: 13).
Day 2 - Communism
(Contact details for the sites mentioned
N page: 60-61)
Morning: For a taste of the way it
used to be in Bratislava,start your
day in the way most families started
it under communism: going to the
roofed marketplace atTrnavské
mýto or the Miletička open-air
market.Here you will experience an
altogether more authentic hustle and
bustle,as well as a variety of products
at local prices.FromTrnavské mýto
you can then take a walk towards
Kamenné námestie (Square) in the
city centre.TheTesco building here
dates from the 1970s,and housed
the main Prior supermarket under
the previous regime.(On your way,
you can see two majestic stone lions
which once guarded the headquarters
of the communist-era ŠtB secret
police force on 14 Špitálska street.)
FromTesco cross the street to SNP
Square and continue uphill toward
the underpass which will lead to the
Hodžovo nám.(Sq.).From there take a
203 trolleybus to the Slavín memorial
to the fallen soldiers of the Red
Army,which also offers an amazing
view over the city.Then walk back
to Námestie slobody (Square of
Freedom) where you can have a
quick lunch at the Savage Garden
restaurant.
Afternoon: Head to Petržalka,and
Hřbitov in particular,which is one
of the many bunkers left here from
the Second World War.Assuming
the weather is good,you can take a
swim at the Veľký Draždiak lake,in
another part of Petržalka.It is also
possible to recall the previous era at
escape room Brainteaselava located
on Obchodná street.Before sunset
head up to the pod at the top of the
SNP Bridge,which houses the UFO
restaurant and offers one of the best
views in the city.If you feel like
going out,Subclub,one of the most
vibrant nightclubs in the region,is
housed in a former bomb shelter.
Several of these activities are part of
post-socialist city tours.
Day 3 -Along the Danube
Morning: Take a lovely morning
walk from the Old Bridge through
the Sad Janka Kráľa park (N page:
72-73) to the SNP Bridge.
After crossing the river there,you
can take a boat from the city port to
Old Town Hall
Most SNP (bridge)
Sad Janka Kráľa (park)
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: Seven days in the city 5
Devín (N page: 37),which will get
you close enough to the Danube to
touch it.After enjoying the castle
and the surrounding area, take the
bus back to River Park (N page:
58-59),where you can have a quick
lunch at one of the riverside cafés.
Afternoon: The Chatam Sófer
memorial (N page: 29) is close by,
from where you can then take a walk
to the SNP Bridge.Hop on a bus to
the Danubiana Museum of Modern
Art (N page: 39),a 30-minute walk
along the dam from Čunovo.Čunovo
also offers white-water sporting
opportunities in the Divokávoda area
(N page: 68-69).Water attractions
like river cruises,speedboats or water
scooters are available also closer to
the city centre (N page: 68-69); after
returning to the city,you can end
your day at the Eurovea (N page: 58-
59) river front area for dinner.
Day 4 - New experiences
Pick anything from the article
on pages 74-75 and know that the
experiences offered inAlternative
Bratislava will set you apart from
99 percent of the tourists who visit
the city.
Day 5 -Wine
(Contact details for the sites mentioned
N page: 80-81,90)
Morning: Before you booze away
the afternoon and evening,why not
learn something about Slovakia’s
rich wine-making traditions in the
Museum of Viticulture in the Old
Town Hall complex (N page: 16) with
several wine tasting programmes.
Remember booking is necessary.
Taste also local popular variety
Blaufränkisch (Frankovka modrá)
from Rača district or currant wine
from Devín. Even better, find a
designated driver in your travel party
and then get them to drive you to
some of the numerous wine cellars
nearby,which offer wine tasting
throughout the year.The best stops
are Svätý Jur, Pezinok and Modra,
which are also accessible by local
buses. In Pezinok and Modra you can
even try to make your own pottery
(N page: 94) and then have lunch in
one of several restaurants.
Afternoon: More wine can be found
at Elesko,a vineyard and gallery
close to Modra.You might want to
drop in on Červený Kameň Castle
(N page: 89) for a break from all the
boozing,and check out the castle’s
magnificent cellars to cool off.If you
still need something to soak up the
alcohol,head to Slovenský Grob (N
page: 76-77) for a goose feast (and,of
course,more wine).
Day 6 - Stay active
Think holidays are about lazing
around by the pool all day? Forget
it. Head to the Malý Dunaj inland
waterway (N page: 71) for some
rafting, any of the three golf courses
(N page: 105) close to the city centre,
or just head off hiking (N page: 98-
99) or cycling (N page: 96-97) in the
surrounding countryside.
Day 7 - Shopping
Morning: Your last day is a good time
to get some presents for your friends
and family by visiting many of the
souvenir shops in the Old Town.
If you are a fan of folk art, head to
the outlets of ÚĽUV, the original
folk-art manufacturer,which has
two outlets in the city centre. For
something more contemporary, try
Avion, the biggest shopping centre in
Bratislava, close to the city’s airport.
There is also a decent food court for
some sustenance.
Afternoon: Further shopping
options can be found in Eurovea
(located close to the city centre,N
page: 30) or in Fresh Market which
offers local food and products (N
pages: 74-75).You can finish your
day at another shopping centre,
Central,which also has a swimming
pool and wellness centre.Dinner is
served at the Outlook Bar & Lounge,
located on the 13th floor of the
Lindner Hotel (N page: 67),which is
part of the shopping centre.
Note: For details of the main shopping
centres in Bratislava see pages 58-59.
Sandberg
On Vápenná hill in the Small Carpathians
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/6 bratislava dates
ANCIENT TIMES
2nd century BC – Celtic tribes establish a
settlement on the territory of today’s Bratislava
and mint coins here, including a golden coin
with the inscription “Biatec”.
58AD – A Germanic tribe led by Burebista
invades and defeats the Celts.
3rd century – Roman armies first visit the
region, establishing several buildings including
Devín, Dúbravka and a fortress that would
eventually become Bratislava Castle. The town
of Gerulata (in today’s Rusovce) grows up on
the border between the Roman Empire and
Germanic territories. Romans introduce wine-
growing and viticulture.
THE MIDDLE AGES
9th century – The territory becomes part
of the so-called Samo’s Land, established by a
Frankish tradesman Samo. It disintegrates after
his death and in 836 the region becomes part of
Great Moravia.
907 – The first written record of what is now
Bratislava. According to the Salzburg Chronicles,
old Hungarian tribes defeat Bavarian armies
near the castle called Pressalauspurc.
11th century – Bratislava
becomes part of the Hungarian
Kingdom and inhabitants of the
local castle mint silver coins with
the image of first Hungarian
King Stephen and the inscription
Breslava Civitas. The town becomes
the main economic and administrative centre
located on the borders of the kingdom.
1042 – The German chronicler Herriman
mentions a “densely populated town” under the
castle called Brecisburg. The town is attacked
and destroyed by German King Henrich I.
1073-1074 – The castle serves as a residence
for Hungarian King Solomon, the first time a
monarch occupies the building.
1096 – German Emperor Friedrich Barbarossa
and his knights stop at the castle during their
crusade to the Holy Land.
12th-14th century
– Hungarian and Austrian
aristocrats agree on a
reciprocal deal to rule the
town.
1140-1150 – The Arab
merchant Al-Idrisi from Sicilia
mentions in his documents a
town located on the territory of
today’s Bratislava, describing it
as part of the Czech Kingdom.
1151 – First mention of the
market place under the castle.
1204 – Hungarian King Emeric II receives
permission from the pope to relocate the church
from the castle, which at that time served as a
fortress, to the settlement under the castle.
1221 – The canonry, in which important
documents are written, verified and stored, is
relocated from the castle to the new settlement.
1241 – Tartars raid the settlement.
1250 – The so-called Water Tower is built to
protect the bridge across the Danube.
1287 – Austrian Duke Albert from
Babenberg conquers the castle and
occupies it until 1291. Bratislava becomes
a typical mediaeval town surrounded
by stone walls. Its inhabitants, mainly
Germans invited to the town by the
Hungarian king after being displaced by
Tartars, enjoy the privileges granted to
landowners.
1291 – Hungarian King Andrew III confers
further privileges on Bratislava.
1311 – Chapel of St Catherine is consecrated.
1312 – The town, the castle and its
surroundings are returned
to the Hungarian King
Charles Robert of Anjou.
1370 – Gothic funeral
chapel built near the
Franciscan monastery
church
1387 – Under the rule
of King Sigismund, son of
Emperor Charles IV and
husband of the Hungarian
Queen Mary, Bratislava is
included on the list of so-
called “free royal towns”, based
on the Small Decree issued in
1405. The town receives the right to mint silver
coins in 1430 and in 1436 King Sigismund gives
the town two documents that permit the town
to use the seal with its coat of arms. Bratislava
is the only European town that has two copies
of this document, made by the Viennese painter
Michal. Sigismund begins to build a residence
inside the castle.
1389 – The town buys the building that later
becomes the city hall.
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
Coronations in Bratislava started in 1563, when King Maximilian II and his consort, Mary of Spain, were crowned
Chapel of St Catherine
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/1452 – A bishop from Esztergom consecrates
the cathedral to St Martin.
1453 – The castle is turned into a residence
for Hungarian King Ladislaus V, known as
“Posthumous” because he was born after
the death of his father.
1467 – Hungarian King Matthias
Corvinus establishes Academia
Istropolitana, the first
university in Bratislava. The
university closes in 1490-91.
1526 – After the Battle of
Mohács, Ottomans occupy
the territories of today’s
Hungary, including the capital Buda and the
main religious centre in Esztergom. Bratislava,
then called Pressburg (or Pozsony or Prešporok
in Slovak), becomes the capital of the Hungarian
Kingdom in 1563.
1531 – Inhabitants of Bratislava expel Jews
from the town, blaming them for the lost battle
with the Ottomans.
1590 – An earthquake damages the tower of
the town hall and destroys the vault over the
nave of the Franciscan church.
1605-06 – Town is occupied by rebels led
by István Bocskai, a duke from Transylvania.
In 1606, after the rebels signed the Vienna
Peace Treaty, Protestants living in Bratislava
establish the Evangelical Lyceum, which still
serves as school.
1638 – Construction of the first Evangelical
Church in Bratislava is finished, but in 1672
King Leopold II takes the church away from the
Protestants and gives it to the Jesuits and the
Ursuline nuns. The church is now the
property of the Jesuits, and it is
called the Church of the Holy
Saviour.
1679 – The plague
epidemic sweeps through
Bratislava, dramatically
decreasing the population
of the city.
18th century – Period of great prosperity
for Bratislava as the most important town in
the Hungarian Kingdom. The aristocracy builds
countless palaces, churches, monasteries, etc;
the territory of the castle expands; new streets
are established; Hungarian parliament presides
from Bratislava and the city’s population grows
four-fold.
1712 – Bratislava is stricken by cholera,
resulting in hundreds of deaths. The column of
the Holy Trinity is erected on Rybné Square in
memory of the dead.
1740-80 – Maria Theresa oversees a period
of intense growth in Bratislava, which includes
the construction of several governmental
buildings, new palaces and a sewer system. The
castle becomes the royal residence. The whole
town becomes the centre of social and political
life, ending only with Maria Theresa’s death
and the decision of her successor Joseph II to
turn Bratislava back into a provincial town.
1781 – The residence of the Bishop of
Esztergom is built in the city centre.
1773-75 – The oldest publicly accessible park
in Europe opens on the banks of the Danube.
Today it is called Sad Janka Kráľa in Petržalka.
1774-76 – The first theatre is built near
Rybná Gate.
bratislava dates 7
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
Bratislava as it appeared in 1655 during the coronation of Leopold I, and the ceremony on the coronation mound
Maria Theresa
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/8 bratislava dates
19th century – Bratislava endures a
slump in its fortunes including, in the second
half of the century, the Hungarian capital
returning to Pest after the Ottomans retreat from
central Europe.
1805 – France and Austria sign the Peace of
Pressburg in the Mirror Hall of the Primate’s
Palace in Bratislava at the end of the war near
Slavkov, also known as Austerlitz.
1809 – Napoleonic armies bombard the town
and destroy the southern part of the castle.
Another fire, in 1811, destroys the royal palace
and part of the area under the castle, especially
the Jewish settlements.
1818 – The Steamboat Carolina starts to run
between Bratislava and Vienna.
1847 – A model of the Hungarian royal crown
is placed on the top of the tower of St Martin’s
Cathedral. The first lightning conductor in the
town is also installed at the same time.
1848 – The last meeting of representatives of
the Hungarian social classes, attended by key
political figures including Ľudovít Štúr, one of
the codifiers of the Slovak language. Emperor
Ferdinand V visits Bratislava for the last time in
April and signs the so-called “March Laws” in the
Mirror Hall of the Primate’s Palace. After the end
of the meeting, Pest becomes the official capital
of the Hungarian Kindgom.
1848 – Steam trains start to run between
Vienna and Bratislava.
1867 – The town buys the palace of Earl
Apponyi and turns it into the new town hall. The
old town hall becomes the city museum, making
it one of the oldest museums in central Europe.
1886 – The new city theatre – today the
historical building of the Slovak National Theatre
– opens in Hviezdoslavovo Square.
1895 – First trams run in Bratislava.
20th century – The century begins with
Bratislava in good economic shape, building
several new buildings including the Church of St
Elizabeth (or so-called Blue Church), the former
Military Headquarters, which now serves as a
Faculty of Philosophy of Comenius University,
as well as the building of Reduta located near
Hviezdoslavovo Square. Massive political turmoil
throughout the century, however, changes the
city beyond all measure.
1914 – The Pressburger Bahn, the first electric
railway between Vienna and Bratislava, opens.
November 1918 – March 1919
– Bratislava becomes known as Wilson’s Town,
after the then US President Woodrow Wilson.
1919 – According to the Treaty of Versailles
at the end of the First World War, Bratislava
becomes part of Czechoslovakia, but will be the
residence for the Ministry with Full Power for
Administration of Slovakia, led by a regional
president. The town adopts Bratislava as its
name for the first time and becomes the new
capital of Slovakia. Comenius University is
founded.
1921 – First running of the national Devín-
Bratislava run.
1939 – Bratislava becomes the capital of the
Nazi satellite Slovak state, led by president
Jozef Tiso.
1943 – The borough of Karlova Ves is officially
attached to Bratislava, the first official inclusion
to the city.
1944-45 – Bratislava is bombarded during
the Second World War, causing significant
damage to the city. The Red Army liberates
Bratislava on April 4, 1945. Retreating German
armies destroy the only bridge over the Danube.
1946 – Seven neighbouring villages are
attached to Bratislava, significantly increasing
the population.
1947 – Former president Jozef Tiso is executed
in Bratislava.
1947-48 – Hundreds of new flats are built in
the city. The new borough between Rača and the
city centre, Krasňany, is established.
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
Františkánske nám. (square) in 1830, with crowds waving to Ferdinand V, the last monarch to be crowned in Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava dates 9
1948-89 – The communist era begins in
Bratislava and across the so-called Eastern Bloc.
1950s – Hundreds of families of alleged
enemies of the communist regime are moved
from Bratislava, during the so-called “Action
B”. Families are subsequently replaced by
supporters of the regime.
1953-68 – Reconstruction of the ruins of
Bratislava Castle begins.
1968 – Soviets occupy the city, destroying
archaeological remains of the Great Moravian
church in Bratislava Castle.
1968 – Czechoslovakia officially becomes
a federation after a meeting and document
signing at Bratislava Castle.
1960s – The city borough of Petržalka is
established.
1972 – A further seven villages are attached to
Bratislava, from south of the Danube and from
the Záhorie region. Bratislava grows into its
present day form.
1973 – The SNP Bridge and Port Bridge open,
the latter originally called the Bridge of Dukla
Heroes.
1988 – Thousands of people pour onto
the streets of Bratislava for a candlelit
demonstration against the oppression
of human and religious freedom by the
communist regime. The regime responds
by sending state police units into the streets
armed with water cannons.
1989 – The Velvet Revolution takes place,
which, among other things, contributes to the
fall of communism in Slovakia.
1990 – John Paul II visits Bratislava for the
first time.
1992 – Lafranconi Bridge opens.
1993 – Bratislava becomes the capital of
the newly-established Slovak Republic. The
residence of the Slovak president is moved to
Grassalkovich Palace.
2000 – The new National Bank of Slovakia
building is finished.
2004 – Slovakia joins the European Union.
2005 – Bratislava hosts a summit between
former US President George W Bush and Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
2005 – Apollo Bridge opens.
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy Building of the Slovak National Bank
Photo: TASR
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
A huge demonstration on SNP nám. (square) during the Velvet Revolutionin 1989
Construction of the SNP Bridge, with the emerging landscape of present-day Petržalka behind it
2007 – The new building of the Slovak
National Theatre opens.
2016 – Bratislava hosts the presidency of the
Council of the EU.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/1 Port, D 4 (pg 70-71)
2 Slovak National Museum, map D 4
(pg 12, 50-52, 53, 84-85)
3 Slovak National Gallery W, map C 4
(pg 12, 50-52, 53)
4 Reduta (Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra),
map C 4 (pg 12, 50-52, 64-66)
5 Carlton Hotel, map C 4 (pg 12)
6 Church of Virgin Mary’s Assumption, Notre Dame,
map C 4 (pg 13)
7 Prešporáčik & Blaváčik (Bratislava tourist trains),
map C 4 (pg 13)
8 Slovak National Theatre - Historical building W,
map C 3 (c 4) (pg 13, 50-52, 82-83)
9 Hviezdoslavovo nám. (square), map C 4,3 (c 4)
(pg 14, 64-66, 108-109)
10 Rubberneck (statue), map C 3 (c 4) (pg 14)
11 Schöner Náci (statue), map C 3 (c 4)
(pg 14, 46-47)
12 Main Square (Hlavné nám.), map C 3 (c 4)
(pg 14, 44-45, 48-49, 108-109)
13 Napoleonic soldier (statue), map C 3 (c 4)
(pg 15, 64-66)
14 Old Town Hall (museum) W, map C 3 (c 4)
(pg 16, 50-52, 53, 67, 80-81)
15 Church of the Holy Saviour - Jesuit Church,
map C 3 (c 4) (pg 15)
16 Primate’s Palace (museum) W, map C 3 (c 4)
(pg 17, 64-66)
17 Tourist Information Centre, C 3 (c 4)
(pg 53, 105)
18 Nedbalka Gallery W, map C 3 (c 4)
(pg 15, 50-52)
19 Old Market Hall, map D 3 (pg 18)
20 Manderla’s house, map D 3 (pg 18)
21 Church of the Merciful Brothers, map C 3
(c 2) (pg 18)
22 Church of Clerical Congregation of the Reformed
Christian Church, map C 3 (c 2) (pg 18)
23 KC Dunaj (Centre of culture), C 3 (c 2) (pg
56-57)
24 Ursuline Church and Convent, map C 3
(c 2) (pg 19)
35
38
39
41
40
34
13
26
27
31
28
32
33
36
Bratislava historical centre
37
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Obchodná
17 min
Primaciálne
nám.
Zámocká
Zelená
Hurbanovo
nám.
Klariská
Michalská
Prepoštolská
Františ.nám.
Farská
Riečna
Gorkého
Zámočnícka
Jesenského
Paulínyho
Vajanského nábrežie
Kúpeľná
Uršulínska
Štúrova
Škarniclova
Klobučnícka
Zochova
Palisády
Sedlárska
Veterná
Bradlianska
Svoradova Kamenné
nám.
Panská
Strakova
Nám. SNP
Rybné nám.
Panská
Ventúrska
Kozia
Hviezdoslavovonámestie
Rudnayovo
nám.
Fajnorovo nábr.
Rigeleho
Heydukova
Františkánska
Navŕšku
Kapitulská
Biela
Most SNP
Kolárska
Poštová
Staromestská
Jedlíkova
Rybárskabr.
Dvořákovo nábrežie Rázusovo nábrežie
Palackého
Laurinská
Mostová
Tobrucká
Drevená
Hlavné
nám. Radničná
Baštová
Nedbalova
Župné nám.
Medená
Staromestská
Staromestská
Medená
Nedbalova
Zámocká
Podjavorinskej
Vodnývrch
Žižkova
Pilárikova
Židovská
Židovská
Mikulášska
Beblavého
Konventná
Suché mýto
19min
8
9
14
15
25
12
10
11
N
42
3
4
8
10
14
16
18
13
15
35
39
40
38
45
25
27
26
25 Franciscan Church of Lord’s Annunciation,
map C 3 (c 2) (pg 19, 44-45)
26 Mirbach Palace (gallery), map C 3 (c 2) (pg
20, 50-52)
27 Michael’s Gate (museum) W, map C 3 (c 1)
(pg 20, 48-49, 67)
28 Red Crayfish Pharmacy (museum), map C 3
(c 1) (pg 20)
29 Church of St John of Matha, map C 3 (c 1)
(pg 20, 64-66)
30 Church of St Stephen, map C 3 (c 1) (pg 21)
31 St Catherine’s Chapel, map C 3 (c 1) (pg 21)
32 University Library, map C 3 (c 1) (pg 21)
33 Zichy Palace (gallery), map C 3 (c 3) (pg 22)
34 Academia Istropolitana, map C 3 (c 3) (pg 22)
35 Pálffy Palace (gallery) W, map C 3 (c 3)
(pg 22, 50-52, 64-66)
36 Erdödy Palace (privat gallery), map C 3
(c 3) (pg 22)
37 Bibiana (children‘s centre), C 4 (pg 84-85)
38 St Martin’s Cathedral W, map C 3 (c 3) (pg
24-25, 44-45, 62-63, 64-66)
39 City walls, map C 3 (c 3) (pg 22)
40 Kapitulská Street, map C 3 (c 3) (pg 23)
41 Church of the Clarisses, map C 3 (c 3) (pg 23)
42 Bratislava Castle W, map B 3
(pg 26-27, 48-49, 53, 54-55, 64-66, 84-85)
43 Museum of Jewish Culture, B 3 (pg 50-52, 53,
64-66)
44 Podhradie (settlement below the castle),
map B,C 3 (c 1, c 3) (pg 28)
45 House of the Good Shepherd (museum),
map C 3 (c 3) (pg 28)
46 Subclub (music club), B 4 (pg 56-57, 60-61)
47 Zuckermandel (church and museums),
map B 4 (pg 28, 64-66, 53)
31
47
24
23
11
12
9
7
6
5
2
20
19
17
21
22
36
37
34
33
32
44
41
30
29
28
43
46
1
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/12 bratislava: Historical Centre
1 Port pages 70-71
2 Slovenské národné
múzeum
(Slovak National Museum)
Vajanského nábr. 2; map D 4 0.65 km
(8 min) Å +421 (0)2 2046-9122 G www.snm.sk
a Sep-Jun: Tue-Sun 9:00-16:30; Jul-Aug: Tue-Sun
10:00-17:30 €4 é e WC
This building on the banks of the
Danube was designed and built
between 1925-27 by the Slovak
architect Milan Michal Harminc.
It was originally intended to house
a branch of the Czechoslovak
Museum of Agriculture, but became
home to the Slovak National
Museum (SNM), established in
1961. Nowadays this monumental
edifice,which is one of only a
handful of well-preserved examples
of the official architecture of
the 1920s in Slovakia, holds the
management of the SNM and the
Natural History Museum.The SNM
also uses its exhibition premises for
temporary exhibitions.
The buildingwas badlydamaged
during the Second World War and
its roof had to be rebuilt.However,
the monumental tympanum,which
originally contained a relief with a
ploughman with a horse,remains
empty.
3 Slovenská
národná galéria W
(Slovak National Gallery)
Nám. Ľ. Štúra 4; map C 4 0.45 km (5 min)
Å +421 (0)2 2047-6111 www.sng.sk
a Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00 Thu 12:00-20:00
€3.50 (free entry in 2016) e é WC
The Slovak National Gallery (SNG)
is the most important art museum
in Slovakia, managing around
60,000 exhibits. Its main Bratislava
site comprises a complex of three
buildings: the historical, baroque,
Vodné kasárne (Water Barracks),
the neo-Renaissance-style
Eszterházy Palace, and the modern
extension by the Slovak architect
Vladimír Dedeček. Opinions over
the latter wing are divided,with
some architecture experts praising
it as an example of excellent
modern and functionalistic
architecture,while others
condemn it for damaging the
harmony of the historical setting.
The Water Barracks and the
extension known as “bridging”,
facing the Danube River
embankment,are currently closed.
The reconstruction of the premises
started in autumn 2014.The SNG
promises that after reconstruction
the premises will include a world
class art venue.In the meantime,
the gallery’s options for displaying
masterworks from its collection and
travelling exhibitions are limited to
the Eszterházy Palace.
4 Reduta
Nám. E. Suchoňa 1; map C 4 0.45 km (5 min)
Å +421 (0)2 2047-5233 ¯ www.filharmonia.sk
a for performances from €6 å é WC
Bratislava’s Reduta was designed
by the Hungarian architects
Dezső Jakab and Marcell Komor
and built on the site of a former
granary from the 18th century.
Construction started in 1911 but was
complicated by the outbreak of the
First World War.The building was
fully completed some years later,
and the organ was installed only
in 1956.The Reduta
was a place for
entertainment,
shows,art
performances
and
meetings,and for manyyears there
was a cinema Reduta,restaurant,a
bookshop and a casino.The building
belonged to the city and after the
Second World War was assigned to
the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra.
Concerts,balls and other social
events continue to be held in the
Reduta to the present day.
In 2013 the building underwent
extensive reconstruction and
included the acquisition of a
new organ by Orgelbau GmbH
fromAustria,whose instruments
can also be found in the Vienna
Stephansdome and in the concert
hall of the Paris Conservatory.
The courtyard formerly used
for parking was roofed and now
provides another concert space,
while the bronze decoration on
the stuccos was replaced by gold,
as per the original plans.A lack of
money during the inter-war years
had meant the cheaper metal was
originally used.
5 Carlton Hotel
Hviezdoslavovo nám. 3; map C 4 0.35 km
(4 min) Å +421 (0)2 5939-0500 www.carlton.sk
www.radissonblu.com/hotel-bratislava ä e é WC
Ever since the 13th century,visitors
to what is now Bratislava have
stopped on the site of the present-
day Radisson Blu Carlton Hotel
in the heart of the city.Originally
a basic inn,it became a hotel
named “AtThree GreenTrees” in
1760,and was further extended
under the ownership of Johann
Löwy,the director of the first
railway line between Bratislava
andTrnava,who bought it in 1838.
He rebuilt the original one-storey
structure according to the design
of the architect Ignác Feigler Jr.,
transforming it into a three-storey
building with a classicistic façade.
Later it was further extended to
encompass neighbouring buildings
and became the Savoy-Carlton hotel
complex.
The name Carlton was an
amalgamation of its mid 19th-
century owners’ names: “Carl” from
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: Historical Centre 13
the wine merchant Karol Palugyay,
and “ton” from his wifeAntónia.
From 1905,one of Slovakia’s first
cinemas,“Elektrobioscop”,was
housed in the hotel.After the fall of
the communist regime,the hotel
underwent extensive reconstruction
and reopened in 2001 as one of the
most luxurious hotels in Bratislava.
Part of the hotel complex is also
the Savoy restaurant with recipes
following the culinary tradition of
Bratislava.
6 Kostol
Nanebovzatia Panny
Márie,Notre Dame
(Church ofVirgin Mary’s
Assumption,
Notre Dame)
Palackého 1; map C 4 0.3 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-2846a7:30-17:30 (entrance hall)
U Mon-Sat 16:30 Sun 10:30 voluntary
What constitutes the Church of
the Virgin Mary’sAssumption
todaywas actually only planned to
be the presbytery of a much larger
single-nave church,which in turn
was intended as the final part of a
four-winged cloister of the Canons
Regular of SaintAugustine.The
construction was thwarted by the
unexpected death in the mid-18th
century of Countess O’Neille,
who was providing the finances.
Only the presbyterywas
completed and it was therefore
adapted into a church with a
wooden tower,which hosted
its first holy mass onAugust
28,1760.Nowadays the cloister
houses the Elementary School
of MotherAlexia and the
Gymnasium of MotherAlexia.
The church is notable for its
ceiling fresco by the baroque
painter PaulTroger.
7 Prešporáčik &
Blaváčik (Bratislava
TouristTrains)
(Prešporáčik) Nám. E. Suchoňa; map C 4
(Prešporačik XL) Hlavné nám.; map C 3 (c 4)
(Blaváčik) Fajnorovo nábrežie (in front of Slovak
National Museum) ; map D 4
Å +421 (0)903 302-817 (Prešporáčik)
Å +421 (0)2 5263-5697 (Blaváčik)
www.tour4u.sk; www.blavacik.sk
a Mar-Nov: Mon-Sun 9:00-17:00
from €8 é
Bratislava tourist trains
(Prešporačik and Blaváčik),
have become some of the
city’s best known symbols.
Trains were created by
companiesTour4U and
Blue DanubeTour.
Prešporáčik is the only
vehicle allowed to drive
through the most historic
parts of the OldTown.It has a
retractable roof,folding windows
and an ecological engine,which
propels it at a maximum speed
of about five kilometres per hour.
One standard tour lasts about
50 minutes.Its big brothers,
Prešporačik XL and Blaváčik,
travel faster up to Bratislava
Castle,Devín Castle (tour is
combined with boat trip) or to
Bratislava Forest Park Železná
studnička (ticket includes also
ride by cablecar).All vehicles
are equipped with audio guides
about the many buildings the
tours pass,available in several
languages,including English and
German.
8 Slovenské
Národné Divadlo -
Historická budova W
(Slovak National
Theatre – Historical
building)
Hviezdoslavo nám. 1; map C 3 (c4) 0.25 km
(3 min) Å +421 (0)2 2047-2293¯ ® www.snd.sk
a Sep-Jun for performances from €4 éåWC
The neo-Renaissance building of
the Slovak NationalTheatre was
designed by the Viennese duo of
Ferdinand Fellner and Hermann
Helmer,architects with more
than 200 notable buildings to
their names across Europe.The
current construction dates from
1886 and replaced the city theatre
which stood on the site since
1776.The building has undergone
several reconstructions since
then,usually to make it
more functional and to meet
contemporary demands,
although a recent project also
allowed for busts of significant
cultural figures – Liszt,
Shakespeare,Goethe,Katona,
Mozart – to be returned to the
niches on the façade.
Nowadays the building is
known as the historical building
of the Slovak NationalTheatre
and hosts performances of
drama,opera and ballet as well
as balls and other prominent
events.
Slovak National-
Theatre – Historical
building
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/14 bratislava: Historical Centre
9 Hviezdoslavovo
námestie (square)
map C 4,3 (c 4) 0.23 km (3 min)
¯ ® ä å e
The area now known as
Hviezdoslavovo námestie
(Hviezdoslav’s Square) is today one
of the greenest parts in the city
centre.However,some 200 years
ago,a branch of the Danube flowed
through this part of Bratislava,
before a decree from MariaTheresa
in 1781 ordered the river bed to be
filled.The empress also ordered a
citywall to be demolished,which
she said was preventing the city’s
growth.The river branch is now
remembered by a long,rectangular
fountain.
The square has had numerous
names throughout the years: the
Promenade,Thearplatz,and in 1889
it was named after Lajos Kossúth,a
Hungarian revolutionary.From 1932,
however,it has carried the name
of the Slovak poet Pavol Országh
Hviezdoslav.The most prominent
buildings in the square include the
neo-Renaissance Slovak National
Theatre and the US embassy,which
is now heavily barricaded behind an
ugly barbed fence.
In the winter the square hosts
the Christmas market and often an
ice-rink.
10 Čumil (Rubberneck)
Rybárska brána/Panská; map C 3 (c 4)
0.1 km (1 min)
The bronze statue of a man
sticking his head out of
a manhole – known as
Čumil or “Rubberneck”–
is among the most
favourite and photographed sights
in Bratislava.Designed byViktor
Hulík in 1997,Čumil is located at the
intersection of Laurinská,Panská
streets and Rybárska brána.It is
now accompanied by a sign reading
“MANAT WORK” after several
motorists drove into it.
11 SchöneR Náci
Rybárska brána; map C 3 (c 4) 0.11 km (1 min)
The Schöner Náci statue comme-
morates one of Bratislava’s unique
characters: Ignác Lamár,who was
born onAugust 12,1897 in Petržalka
and became an unforgettable figure
along the city streets thanks to his
outfit and exceptionally good mann-
ers.He died in Lehnice in October
1967 where he was originally buried
before his remains were moved to a
memorial grave in Bratislava’s Ond-
rejský cemetery in 2007.The life-size
statue is the work of Juraj Meliš
and welcomes visitors to the Main
Square in Bratislava’s OldTown.
12 Hlavné námestie
(Main Square)
map C 3 (c 4) ¯ G ä e
Throughout Bratislava’s history,
Hlavné námestie,the Main Square,
has been the centre of all that was
going on in the city,a fact that
remains true today.It is an almost
regular square,which began to
develop between the 13th and 14th
centuries,and all the houses
flanking it date from the
gothic era.
Since the 14th
century the Main
Square
has changed its name several
times,from the Latin name Forum
via the German Franz Joseph-
Platz and Hungarian FőTér.After
the First World War it was called
Masaryk’s Square (after the first
president of Czechoslovakia),
then Hitler’s Square (during the
period when the Slovak state was
under German rule) and theApril 4
Square (during the 40 years of the
communist regime).Throughout
all eras,the square has mainly been
known as a marketplace and still
hosts festivals,concerts,outdoor
events and ceremonies including
Bratislava’s famous Christmas and
Easter markets.Visitors can find
vendors selling crafts and souvenirs
throughout the whole year.
Among the most important
landmarks of the Main Square
are the Old Town Hall and the
Maximilian Fountain.The Old
Town Hall was not originally
constructed for such a purpose,
and consists of several buildings:
Jacobus’ House with a tower,
Pawer’s House,Unger’s House
and the Apponyi Palace.It ranks
among the oldest buildings in
the city and today houses the
Bratislava City Museum.
The Maximilian Fountain
(sometimes known as the
Roland Fountain) is named
after Hungarian King
Maximilian II, whose
statue stands at
its centre. He
provided the
finances to build
the fountain in
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: Historical Centre 15
year 1572. An original part of the
fountain was also four naked
little boys urinating into the
fountain’s basin, the same motif
as the famous Manneken Pis in
Brussel. This part of the fountain
was removed in the 18th century.
Today it can be found as part of a
small fountain in the courtyard
of a house at Uršulínska 6.
An interesting plaque
bearing the date of February 1850
is placed at the botton of the
Old Town Hall. It marks the day
and height to which the Danube
flooded the square. Higher up in
the same tower wall is a cannon
ball commemorating the attacks of
Napoleonic troops in 1809.
13 Statue of
Napoleonic soldier
Hlavné námestie; map C 3 (c 4)
The bronze statue of a soldier
leaning on a bench is a 1997 work by
the Slovak sculptor Juraj Meliš and,
judging by the number of photos
in which it features,has proven
to be a hit with locals and visitors
alike.The soldier wears a uniform
of Napoleon’s army,which twice
visited Bratislava: initially in 1805
when the peace treaty known as the
Treaty of Pressburg was signed in
Bratislava’s Primate’s Palace after
the Battle ofAusterlitz (Slavkov),
and latterlywhen the Little Corporal
attempted to capture the city in
1809 and his troops bombarded
Bratislava from the banks of today’s
Petržalka.This event is recalled each
June in Sad Janka Kráľa park,when
the battle is re-enacted with soldiers
in period costumes.
14 Stará radnica
(OldTown Hall) W page 16
15 Kostol
Najsvätejšieho
Spasiteľa - Jezuitský
kostol
(Church of the Holy
Saviour - Jesuit Church)
Františkánske námestie 4; map C 3 (c 4)
Å +421 (0)2 5277-5499
a Mon-Fri 14:30-19:00 Sat 15:30-19:00 Sun 7:00-
12:30, 16:00-19:00 U Mon-Fri 15:15, 16:30, 18:00
Sat 16:30, 18:00 Sun 7:30, 9:00, 11:30, 16:30, 18:00
voluntary ¯
The unusual architecture and
ground plan of what is now the
Roman Catholic Church of the
Holy Saviour – or the Jesuit Church
– originates from its previous
incarnation as a late Renaissance
Evangelical church,which was
rebuilt in the baroque style.The
original three-nave church was
built between 1636-38 by the
German architect Johan Hans
Stoss and was first used by German
Protestants.Restrictions in place
at the time meant that the church
could not have a tower,nor a
presbytery nor an entrance onto the
main street,but Stoss managed to
bend the rules slightly by elevating
the middle section of the nave by
three steps and building a front
entrance and presbytery regardless.
After re-catholisation of the
country,and following approval
given by Emperor Leopold I in 1673,
the church was given to the Jesuit
Order.They rebuilt the church’s
interior in the baroque style while
its outside design remained almost
unchanged.The church holds one
the most beautiful rococo pulpits in
central Europe,constructed in 1753
by Ludwig Gode.
16 Primaciálny palác
(Primate’s Palace) W page 17
17Tourist Info.
Centre page 105
18 Galéria Nedbalka
(Nedbalka Gallery) W
Nedbalova ulica 17; map C 3 (c 4) 0.3 km
(4 min) www.nedbalka.ska Tue-Sun 13:00-19:00
€4 å e é WC
Nedbalka Gallery opened in 2012
as an exhibition space for Slovak
modern and fine art and its
circular,four-floor,open-space
plan has earned it the nickname
Slovakia’s Small Guggenheim.
From the outside the building at
17 Nedbalova Street still has the
look of a classical construction,
built in the 19th century.But its
modern extension,originally
built for the Slovenská Sporiteľňa
bank,was added in the 1990s and
earned its architects Viktória
Cvengrošová and Virgil Droppa the
prestigious Dušan JurkovičAward,
given to outstanding examples of
architecture in Slovakia.
New owners turned the
building into a gallery and it now
contains more than 150 works
by prominent Slovak artists
from the end of the 19th century
to the present day,including
pieces by Ladislav Medňanský
(Mednyánszky),Ladislav Guderna,
Mikuláš Galanda,Ján Fulla and
Vincent Hložník.
Rococo pulpit in
the Jesuit Church
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Museum
of Viti-
culture
The museum
presents a history
of Bratislava’s wine-
-growing culture, from
the vineyards through
production, to the
bottle. Several wine-
-tasting programmes
are available.
14 Stará radnica W
(OldTown Hall)
Primaciálne námestie 3 / Hlavné námestie; map C 3 (c 4)
0 km (0 min) Å +421 (0)2 5910-0847 G www.nsvsr.sk
www.muzeum.bratislava.ska Tue-Fri 10:00-16:30 Sat-Sun 11:00-17:30
€6 (museum), from €18.99 (opened wine-tasting) åé(excluding
Old Town Hall Tower and Apponyi Palace) WC
The Old City Hall,which
dominates Bratislava’s Hlavné
námestie (Main Square),
is a complex of historical
buildings dating from the
13th century.Its current
appearance is the result
of development spanning
centuries.
The oldest section is the
early gothic edifice belonging
to the Jacobus’ House,
which served as a town hall
in the 14th century.The city
council gradually bought
neighbouring buildings and
re-developed and extended
the complex in Renaissance,
baroque and neo-gothic styles.
The complex has formerly
housed mayoral offices,
accommodation for town
guards,an armoury and a
prison.
Nowadays the OldTown
Hall,with preserved historical
architecture and decoration,
is square-shaped,around a
courtyard in which are held
various cultural events.The
tower affords a view over the Main Square and
all of the OldTown.
The town hall houses the Bratislava City
Museum,which opened in 1868 and is the
oldest continually-operating museum in
Slovakia.Today it is spread across the OldTown
Hall and the adjoiningApponyi Palace,the
former home of CountApponyi,which was
built in 1761-62.The museum houses three
permanent exhibitions,focusing on city history,
viticulture and a Period Rooms Museum,which
provides an insight into the lives of Bratislavan
aristocracy from the 18th-19th centuries.The
cellar of theApponyi Palace houses the National
Collection of Slovak Wine,a collection of 100 of
the country’s best vintages of any given year.
Period Rooms
Museum
The rooms of the Apponyi Palace
are furnished to resemble the inte-
riors of noble town houses through
Bratislava’s history, featuring
restored wall paintings, interior
architecture and furniture.
16 bratislava: Historical Centre
Museum of
the City
History
The Old Town Hall
houses an exhibition of
the history of Bratislava
from pre-history to the
present day.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: Historical Centre 17
The Fountain of
St George
In the Slovak version of the St George
legend, the brave knight saved the maiden
Dúbravka from the dragon, gaining her
hand in marriage as a reward.
Renaissancetapestries
The tapestries are the work of the English royal manufacturer in
Mortlake, near London.
The Chapel of St Ladislaus is easily missed, for although
it is part of the 18th century Primate’s Palace, and its
impressive space stretches through each of its storeys, there
are no exterior signs of a chapel, not even a tower. The
classicist-style chapel was established by Archbishop József
Batthyányi in 1780 with an interior ceiling decorated by
paintings probably by the Austrian artist A. F. Maulbertsch.
The chapel continues to serve to its original purpose and
holy masses are held here regularly (Sun 8:30).
Chapel
of St Ladislaus
16 Primaciálny palác W
(Primate’s Palace)
Primaciálne námestie 1; map C 3 (c 4) Å +421 (0)2 5935-6394
¯a Tue-Sun 10:00-16:30 €3 åé WC
The classicist Primate’s Palace,commissioned in the
late 18th century forArchbishop József Batthyányi,
is considered to be one of the most beautiful
palaces in Bratislava.The first occupant is
recalled by the Batthyányi coat of arms and
hat,made from iron and weighing 150kg,
which can still be seen at the top of the
tympanum.
The palace’s splendid Mirror Hall,which
extends over two floors,has witnessed
several important historical events,
including the signing of theTreaty of Pressburg on
December 26,1805,which followed Napolean’s triumph
in the Battle ofAusterlitz.The event is commemorated
by a board located near the entrance to the palace.
The city council bought the palace at the beginning
of 20th century and currently it serves as the seat
of Bratislava’s mayor,a place for meetings of the
city council,and for various special meetings and
negotiations.Ordinarily,visitors can only see certain
rooms of the palace,including the Mirror Hall,but can
also visit St Ladislav’s Chapel,in the western part of the
palace,during masses and other very special occasions.
One of the most precious collections owned by
the city comprises six late Renaissance English
tapestries – the “Mortlake tapestries”– from
the beginning of the 17th century,which were
found during the reconstruction of the palace
in 1903.(Some sources falsely report that
theywere found in the palace’s chimneys.)
Similar tapestries,depicting the tragic love
story of Hero and Leander can be seen in
the residence of the Swedish royal family in
Stockholm.
The Fountain of St George,in the inner courtyard of
the palace,depicts the famous tussle with the dragon
and,according to legend,symbolises the efforts of the
Catholic Church to resist the reformation.The Primate’s
Palace,in particular its Mirror Hall,is these days often
used for marriages or concerts.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/18 bratislava: Historical Centre
19 Starátržnica
(Old Market Hall)
Námestie SNP 30; map D 3 0.4 km (5 min)
www.staratrznica.sk ¯WC
a market hall: Sat 10:00-15:00 and for performances,
a café: Mon-Sat 8:00-24:00, Sun 9:00-24:00
free or depending on performance
For more than 50 years since it
opened in 1910,Bratislava’s Old
Market Hall served its original
purpose,an iron basilica-like
shell covering a bustling market
place.Later it became a television
studio for SlovakTelevision,
before reverting back to being
a market for eight years after
reconstruction in 2000.It was
closed to the public in 2008,
serving only as an occasional
venue for cultural events,
however,it reopened in autumn
2013 as a multifunctional hub,
offering space for various cultural
events,festivals and farmers’
markets (every Saturday 10:00-
15:00).On the other side of the
main entrance to the building is a
small café.
20 Manderlák
(Manderla’s House)
Námestie SNP 23; map D 3 0.4 km (5 min)
a exterior views only
Manderla’s House,known as
Manderlák and constructed in 1935,
was the first high-rise building
in the former Czechoslovakia.
Rudolf Manderla was a butcher and
businessman and commissioned
architects Christian Ludwig,
Emerich Spitzer andAugustín
Danielis to design something special
for him.They designed a 45-metre
high building
with
shops on the ground floor including
a butchers shop,which remained
there for 73 years,with offices,a
café,and apartments on the upper
floors.The building had 11 storeys –
a exceptional number for the period.
21 Kostol
Milosrdných
bratov (Church of the
Merciful Brothers)
Námestie SNP 9; map C 3 (c 2) 0.4 km (5 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5930-2927a Mon-Sun 8:00-19:00 (en-
trance hall) U Mon-Fri 8:00, 18:00 Sat 8:00 Sun 9:30,
11:30 (mass in Italian, except holidays) voluntary
The Order of the Merciful Brothers
arrived in Bratislava in 1672 at
the invitation of theArchbishop
of Esztergom,Juraj Szelepcenyi,
who gave them land on which
they built a complex including
church,monastery and hospital.
The construction lasted from the
1680s until the early 18th century,
and when finished resembled the
monastery and church of the same
order in Vienna.The hospital was
intended for people in poverty and
became greatly significant during
the plague epidemic of 1711-13.
The interior of the church is
dominated by a main altar from
1737,featuring the work of the
German late-baroque painter
Martin Speer.His painting depicts
the Visitation,i.e.,the visit of the
pregnant Virgin Mary to Elizabeth,
who was pregnant with John the
Baptist.The precious baroque
pulpit,with reliefs of saints,is
another important feature.
During the communist
regime the complex was
nationalised and continued to
serve as a hospital.The Merciful
Brothers were ousted,however,
and could return only after the
fall of the totalitarian regime.
The order took back the hospital
in 1995 and continues to run the
hospital here.
22 Kostol
Cirkevného Zboru
Reformovanej
kresťanskej cirkvi
(Church of Clerical Cong-
regation of the Reformed
Christian Church)
Námestie SNP 4; map C 3 (c 2) 0.4 km (5 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-3426 a exterior views only
U Sun 9:00, 10:30 (HUN)
The neo-romanesque Church,also
known as the Calvinist Church,is
the work of the architects Franz
Wimmer and Flóris Opaterny and
was built in the 1910s.The Calvinist
Church formed in Bratislava
Old Market Hall
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: Historical Centre 19
only in the late 19th century,with
Calvinist liturgies originally carried
out in temporary premises,either
bought or rented.But calls grew
for a permanent church and this
structure was built on the site of
the former Saltzamt,where in the
17th century Protestant churchmen
were reportedly imprisoned or sent
to the galleys.
The church is still in use today
and holy masses are held in Slovak
and Hungarian.According to the
2011 census,the Reformed Christian
Church has about 100,000 members
in Slovakia.
23 KC Dunaj (Centre of
culture) pages 56-57
24 Kostola kláštor
uršulínok
(Ursuline Church
and Convent)
Uršulínska; map C 3 (c 2) 0.22 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-4696a 6:00-17:00 (entrance hall)
U Mon-Sat 6:30; Sun 8:00, 10:00 voluntaryé
The Renaissance Ursuline Church
was built between 1659-63,
originally for the Protestants of
the citywho used it for only seven
years.In 1670,it was taken over by
the Order of St Ursula,in whose
possession it remains today.The
interior of the church is dominated
by a baroque main altar,from the
late 18th century,and its sculpture
of the Virgin Mary.The sculpture
is a copy of the Virgin Mary from
Loretta,received byArchbishop
Leopold Kolonich in 1684.Pope
John Paul II stayed in the convent
here during his visit in 1995,a
visit commemorated by a bronze
relief by the Slovak sculptor Ján
Borko.Nowadays the primary and
grammar schools of St Ursula are
also located here.
25 Františkánsky
kostol Zvestovania
Pána W
(Franciscan Church of
Lord’s Annunciation)
Františkánske námestie 2; map C 3 (c 2) 0.14
km (2 min) Å +421 (0)2 5443-2145 ¯ a Apr-Oct
Mon-Sat 10:00-17:00 (entrance hall) Jul-Aug Mon-Fri
10:00-17:00, Sat 10:00-17:00 (entrance hall)
U Mon-Sat 9:00, 19:30 Sun 10:30, 12:00, 16:30,
18:00 voluntaryéwww.frantiskani.sk
The Franciscan Church,part of the
Franciscan monastery,is the oldest
religious building in Bratislava’s
OldTown,originally built in the
gothic style between 1280-97.After
suffering damage in the earthquake
of 1590,the church was rebuilt in
the Renaissance style and nowadays
the façade is mostly baroque.
The church was consecrated in
1297 in the presence of KingAndrew
III,and the oldest remaining part is
the presbytery.A gothic tower was
replaced by a neo-gothic version
in 1897,but the original is now in
Sad Janka Kráľa park,in Petržalka
across the Danube,where it serves
as a small pavilion.Legend has
it that the bell in the tower came
to be known as the “beer bell”,
announcing the closing time for
pubs.
The church was an important
place during coronation ceremonies
in Bratislava.New
kings of Hungary
walked here
from St Martin’s
Cathedral and
appointed their
Knights of the
Golden Spur.In
1526,Ferdinand
I,the holy
Roman
emperor,was
elected as King
of Hungary
here and
throughout
mediaeval
times,the
huge church
premises were
also used for
public meetings,
including the
election of the
city mayor.
The gothic
Chapel of
Saint John the
Evangelist at
the church’s
northern end
is a double-
floored chapel
with crypt
that was built
in the 14th century by Ján,son of
Bratislava’s then mayor Jakub.It
became the funeral chapel for the
mayoral family.Reconstructed in
1831,the chapel is now one of the
most significant works of gothic
architecture in Slovakia.New
residential wings of the monastery
were added during the 17th and
18th centuries.The main altar
representing the annunciation was
constructed between 1720-30.
Another chapel was added to
the church in 1708,dedicated to
Santa Maria di Loreto,containing
a statue of the Black
Madonna with Jesus.
The church
also houses a rare
relic: the torso of
Saint Reparat,
who was a
4th century
Christian deacon
from Italy.
Reparat died
a martyr in
353 and had his
tongue cut out
and his right
hand cut off.
He was buried
in Rome until
1769,when
his bodywas
moved to
Bratislava on the
request of the
Franciscan friar
Eugen Kósa.
Today the
church and
monasterywith
garden belong
to Franciscan
monks and mass
is celebrated
every day in
both Slovak and
Hungarian.
Black Madonna with Jesus
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/20 bratislava: Historical Centre
26 Mirbachov palác
(Mirbach Palace)
Františkánske nám. 11; map C 3 (c 2) 0.15 km
(2 min) Å +421 (0)2 5443-1556 www.gmb.sk
a Tue-Sun 11:00-18:00 €4 e¯WC
Mirbach Palace is one of the
best preserved pieces of original
architecture from old Pressburg,
named after its last owner Emil
Mirbach.The palace todayhouses
the Bratislava CityGalleryand is a
fine example of rococo architecture.
Itwas built on the site of buildings
first mentioned in 1459,as Curia
Civitatis orWeite Hof,but a
wealthybrewer named Michael
Spech had the old buildings torn
down and built the palacewe see
todaybetween 1768-70.Spech sold
the palace after its completion
and it had a number of owners,
including Koloman Nyáry,whose
beautiful coat of arms decorates the
tympanum in the upper central part
of the façade.On the palace’s patio
is a fountainwith a sculpture of
the Greek godTriton and nymph by
ViktorTilgner. The gallery houses
a permanent exhibition of central
European baroque painting and
sculpture as well as ever-changing
temporary exhibitions,plus
numerous concerts and recitals.
27 Michalská brána
(Michael’s Gate) W
Michalská 22; map C 3 (c 1) 0.26 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-3044 G
www.muzeum.bratislava.ska Tue-Fri 10:00-17:00
Sat-Sun 11:00-18:00 €4.30 e
At one point,there were four
main gates through solid city
fortifications into what is now
Bratislava’s OldTown.Michael’s
Gate,built at the end of 13th century,
is the only one that remains today.
In the past,Michael’s Gate had a
drawbridge,portcullis and heavy
wooden doors,but is now most
notable for its gothic tower,which
was extended to its present height
in the mid-18th century and has a
sculpture of St Michael standing
at its top.Its name is derived
from St Michael’s Church and a
settlement in a suburb outside the
gate.Nowadays the gate houses
the Museum of Weapons andTown
Fortification and climbing the
tower offers a view over the old
city.Beneath Michael’sTower is
the so-called “zero kilometre” with
marks showing the distances from
Bratislava to 29 major cities around
the world.
28 Lekáreň U
červeného raka
(Red Crayfish Pharmacy)
Michalská 26; map C 3 (c 1)
0.28 km (4 min) Å +421 (0)2 5413-1214 G
www.muzeum.bratislava.ska Tue-Fri 10:00-16:45
Sat-Sun 11:00-17:45 €4.30 e é
Bratislava’s Museum of Pharmacy
is housed in the baroque burgher
house that was formerly the
premises of the Red Crayfish
Pharmacy,a company that dates
from the 16th century.The building
was constructed within the
barbican of St Michael’s Gate in
the second half of the 18th century,
specifically for the pharmacy,
and the pharmacy remained in
operation until 1953 when it was
transformed into the museum.
The museum contains historical
pharmaceutical equipment,
the oldest of which dates from
the 16th century,and ancient
pharmaceutical literature.
During the summer,visitors can
also visit Čitáreň u Červeného raka,
the open-air reading room,as well as
a garden behind the building which
used to be part of a defence moat.
The stone bridge of St Michael above
is from the 18th century,when it
replaced an older wooden bridge.It
is the oldest bridge in Bratislava.
29 Kostol sv.Jána
z Mathy (Church
of St John of Matha)
Župné nám.; map C 3 (c 1) 0.55 km (7 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5441-5106 a Mon-Sat 6:30, 17:00
Sun 6:30, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30, 19:30 (entrance hall)
U Mon-Sat 7:00, 17:30 Sun 7:00, 9:00 (in Latin),
10:30, 12:00, 20:00 voluntary
The Church of St John of Matha,
sometimes incorrectly referred
to as the HolyTrinity Church,is a
baroque-style structure from the
18th century built by theTrinitarian
Order.Its curved three-tower façade
is similar to St Peter’s in Vienna,
designed by Lukas von Hildebrandt.
The centre of the church is an oval
nave with a trompe-l’œil fresco by
the Italian baroque painterAntonio
Galli Bibiena on the dome.It is one
of a few examples in Slovakia of
an art technique that makes the
objects depicted appear in three
dimensions.The church has an
almost untouched original baroque
interior,dominated by the main
altar,which is decorated with a
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: Historical Centre 21
painting by Franz Xavier Karl Palkó
from 1745.It depicts John of Matha
with Felix Valois,founders of the
Trinitarian Order,setting slaves
free from the Ottomans.The church
continues to serve to its original
purpose,holding regular masses,
weddings and concerts.
30 Kostol sv.Štefana
(Church of St Stephen)
Župné námestie 10; map C 3 (c 1) 0.6 km (7
min) Å +421 (0)2 5930-3800 a 15:15-20:00 U
Mon-Sat 6:00, 17:00, 19:00 Sun 5:15, 6:00, 8:00, 9:30,
11:00, 17:00, 19:00 voluntary é
The Church of St Stephen,dedicated
to the Hungarian king,is attached
to the monastery of the Capuchin
Order,who first arrived in Bratislava
in 1676 and initially used St
Catherine’s Chapel.The cornerstone
of their monasterywas laid in
1708,with building of the church
beginning three years later.The first
monks became permanent residents
in 1712 and the church was finished
in 1717,but extensive rebuilding
was necessary in 1736-7 owing to
moisture in the soil beneath the
church.The architecture of the
church and the monastery is very
simple,without a bell-tower,and
typical for the Capuchin Order.But
further renovations changed the
church again,including in 1961
when its façade was rebuilt in the
neo-gothic style according to plans
drawn up by the architect Ignác
Feigler Jr.The central altar in the
church holds a painting,believed
to be by Capuchin Udalricus of
about 1747,depicting King Stephen
consecrating the country.It also
depicts the skyline of Bratislava as
it would have appeared at time of
painting,with the castle,cathedral
and town hall all clearlyvisible.
31 Kaplnka sv.
Kataríny
(St Catherine’s Chapel)
Michalská 8; map C 3 (c 1) 0.23 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-1359 a exterior views only
U Sun 9:30é
St Catherine’s Chapel,founded
by the Cistercian friar Franciscus
Colomba in 1311,is the oldest gothic
chapel in Bratislava.The building
was finished in 1325 and consecrated
by Bishop Ondrej of Székesfehérvár.
The architect Ignác Feigler Sr.
changed its façade to its present
classicistic form around 1840.
Between 2003-06,the chapel
underwent another reconstruction,
during which the chapel reverted to
its original gothic appearance.This
reconstruction also uncovered an
original pastophorium,i.e.,a niche
in which sacrament was stored,
behind a stone epitaph in the wall.
Restorers moved the epitaph to
another part of the chapel,leaving
the pastophorium visible.
The chapel,which was named
Monument of the Year in 2007 by the
Culture Ministry,is still in regular
use for holy mass.
32 Univerzitná
knižnica
(University Library)
Michalská 1; map C 3 (c 1) 0.22 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 2046-6111 www.ulib.sk
a exterior views only
The magnificent building that
currently houses the university
library began life as the baroque
Palace of the Hungarian Royal
Chamber,the leading financial
institution of the Hungarian
Kingdom.It was designed by the
Italian architect G.B. Martinelli
and built in 1753-56.The Hungarian
Royal Chamber resided in
Bratislava between 1531-1782,and
the building latterly housed the
Hungarian Parliament,between
1802-48.The famous session
that adopted the “March Laws”,
essentially establishing Hungary’s
independence fromAustria,took
place here.
Between 1860-67,the royal
regency resided in the building;
after it was abolished,Hungarian,
Czechoslovak and Slovak judicial
institutions resided there.In 1953-55,
the building was remodelled again
to serve its next purpose: to hold the
library,which remains today.
The library holds some of
the most important documents
in Slovakia,including Basagic’s
Collection of Islamic Manuscripts,
which are on the UNESCO heritage
list and commemorated by a
plaque in the building.Another
plaque is dedicated to Ľudovít Štúr,
the politician and writer,who
campaigned throughout the early
19th for an independent Slovak
nation,and who later codified the
Slovak language.
Church of St John of Matha
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/22 bratislava: Historical Centre
33 Zichyho palác
(Zichy Palace)
Ventúrska 9; map C 3 (c 3) 0.24 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-1681¯ a Galéria Z: Mon-Sat
13:00-18:00 afor performances from €1 é
ä e WC
Zichy Palace is a typical example
of classicist architecture built
between 1770-80 by Count Franz
Zichy.In the 19th century,one of
the founders of German Romantic
opera,Heinrich Marschner,was a
music teacher to the Zichy family.
Nowadays the palace hosts galleries,
civil ceremonies,including
weddings,as well as cultural events
such as concerts,readings and art
exhibitions.
34Academia
Istropolitana
Ventúrska 3; map C 3 (c 3) 0.25 km (3 min)
Å University of Performing Arts +421 (0)2 5930-1411
www.acadistr.ska 6:00-21:30 (courtyard)é
Academia Istropolitana was
established in 1467 by King Matthias
Corvinus as the first humanist
university in the Hungarian
Kingdom.It was the second oldest
university in what is now Slovakia
and the Czech Republic.The school,
built in the gothic style,had four
faculties,focusing on philosophy,
theology,natural sciences and law.
One of the teachers at the
universitywas Johannes Müller
Regiomontanus,a significant
European pedagogue,who is reputed
to have taught about the Earth
moving around the sun before
Galileo Galilei.The schoolwas
closed after Corvinus’ death in 1490,
according to some historical sources,
and the building nowserves as the
Theatre Facultyof theAcademy
Universityof PerformingArts.
35 Pálffyho palác W
(Pálffy Palace)
Panská 19; map C 3 (c 3) 0.28 km (3 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-3627 www.gmb.sk
a Tue-Sun 11:00-18:00 €4 åe WC
Pálffy Palace offers a thorough
overviewof thevarious architectural
styles and historical phases through
which Bratislava developed.The
basement holds evidence of Celtic
settlements from the 1st century
AD,while the Roman period can be
traced through secondary building
materials in the preserved early
mediaeval walls from the 13th
century.Excavations have also
revealed the basis of a gothic palace
with a chapel in the basement and
a stellar vault from the 15th century
on the first floor of the building.The
Slavonic period left its traces in the
basement,where four graves from
the 9th and mid-10th centuries have
been discovered.Other building
alterations date from the 17th and
19th centuries.
The Pálffy family took
ownership of the palace in the 18th
century but after the death of the
last owner,count János Pálffy,who
was a philanthropist,supporter
and collector of art,the palace was
assigned to the Bratislava City
Gallery.Today it holds permanent
exhibitions of gothic table painting
and sculpture and central European
painting and sculpture of the 19th
century.
36 Erdödyho palác
(Erdödy Palace)
Ventúrska 1; map C 3 (c 3) 0.29 km (4 min)
www.medusagroup.ska 11:00-24:00 (restaurant),
Thu-Sat 21:00-5:00 (club) from €3 (club) ä
é(restaurant only) WC
The rococo Erdödy Palace was
built in 1770 for Count Georgius
Leopold Erdödy,the chairman of the
court and head of the Hungarian
Royal Chamber.Later,Erdödy’s
second son,Ján Nepomuk,re-built
the construction into a luxury
palace in which concerts and
opera performances took place.
(The Erdödys even had their own
opera company.) During a vast
reconstruction in the 1990s,a third
floor was added and the building’s
façade and paintings were restored
to their original rococo style.Today,
part of the building and courtyard
are occupied by restaurants,bars
and a club,while the first floor
houses a private gallery.
37 Bibiana (children‘s
centre) pages 84-85
38 St Martin’s
Cathedral W pages 24-25
39 Hradby (City walls)
map C 3 (c 3) 0.5 km (7 min)
a May-Sep: 10:00-20:00 free
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/In years past,only so-called “royal
towns” enjoyed the privilege to
have fortifications around them,
and Pressburg obtained this right
in 1297.The citywalls encircled the
relatively small area of the current
OldTown,while the castle had its
own fortification system.However
what initially helped the town
to thrive behind the protection
of thick stone walls and a moat
later hampered its development.
Finally Empress MariaTheresa
permitted demolition of the city
walls in 1775 to allow the town
to grow.
Relatively little of the
mediaeval fortification system
remains today,including only
one of the original four gates,
St Michael’sTower,St Michael’s
Bridge,the barbican and the moat.
The biggest section of preserved
walls is next to St Martin’s
Cathedral,whose façade used to
form part of the fortification – the
reason there is no entrance to the
cathedral from this side.Some
citywalls on the north side of
the cathedral became the back
walls of the houses in the Jewish
quarter,meaning they survived
until the 1960s.But theywere
eventually destroyed,along with
the rest of the area,during the
large-scale re-building of that era.
40 Kapitulská ulica
(Kapitulská Street)
map C 3 (c 3) 0.4 km (5 min)
Kapitulská Street is one of the oldest
thoroughfares in Bratislava and has
existed since at least 1204,when a
canonry relocated there from the
Castle Hill.St Martin’s Cathedral is
also located at one end,ensuring the
street’s great importance.
Citywalls built in the 14th
century separated Kapitulská
Street from the castle complex
and the street earned the
nickname “cvinger”,meaning
“the street behind the walls”.
It has also remained largely
untouched,without shops,cafés
or restaurants,to this
day.Most of the buildings along
the street are the property of the
Catholic Church and have resisted
development.
Fifteen buildings on
Kapitulská are on the list of
the cultural and historical
monuments, including two
palaces,the theological college
(Collegium Emericanum) and
some burgher houses.However,
a number of them are waiting
for reconstruction and one of the
palaces,the Esterházy Palace,is
considered to be the biggest ruin
in Bratislava.
41 Kostol Klarisiek
(Church of the Clarisses)
Klariská 5; map C 3 (c 3) 0.25 km (3.5 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5910-3133¯ a for performances
depending on performance é
The Church of the Clarisses (Kostol
Klarisiek) is a former Catholic
church that has become one
of Bratislava’s most important
gothic monuments.The Clarisses
– also known as the Order of
Poor Clares – came
to Bratislava in 1297
and built a church
and a convent with
the support of King
Andrew III on the
site of a Cistercian monastery.The
mendicant orders,which include
the Franciscans (male) and Clarisses
(female),were not allowed to
construct towers on their buildings,
so the pentagonal tower,which is a
rarity among gothic structures,was
added around 1400.
The single-nave church was
rebuilt in the rococo style in 1760,
and included altars designed by
FrantišekAnton Palko,dedicated to
theAnnunciation and to St Claire.
They remain in the church today,
as well as the original rococo-
style pulpit,with allegories of
Faith,Hope,Love and Holy Script,
designed by Jozef Sartory.
In 1782,the Order of Poor
Clares was dissolved,and the
church became the seat of a legal
academy and a Catholic school.
The composers Béla Bartók and
Ernest Dohnány,as well as scientist
Jozef Murgaš and poet Ján Hollý,
studied there.It is currently used
as a concert and exhibition hall,
while the adjacent convent is used
by the university library.During
reconstruction of the convent in
the first decade of the 21st century,
a metal box with a document from
the 19th century,describing the
previous past renovations and
repairs of the church,was found in
the top of the spire.
Bratislava: Historical Centre 23
Kapitulská street
and the Church of
the Clarisses
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/24 bratislava: HISTORICAL CENTRE
Rudnayovo námestie 1; map C 3 (c 3) 0.55 km (7
min) Å +421 (0)2 5443-1359 dom.fara.ska Apr-Nov
11: Mon-Fri 9:00-11:30, 13:00-18:00 Sat 9:00-11:30 Sun
13:30-16:30; Nov 11-Mar: Mon-Fri 9:00-11:30, 13:00-16:00
Sat 9:00-11:30 Sun 13:30-16:30 U Mon-Sat 7:30,
12:00 Sun 7:45 (GER), 9:00 (LAT), 10:30, 12:00,
17:00 €2.5 (Sun free) é e G ¯
St Martin’s Cathedral is the biggest
and most noteworthy church
in Bratislava,which reached
the height of its importance
between 1563-1830 as the
location for the coronation of
19 monarchs of the Hungarian Kingdom.
Beforethat,thecathedralstartedlife
asatiny13th centuryromanesquechurch,
originallyonthetopofwhatisnow
BratislavaCastlehill.In1221,PopeHonorius
IIIgavepermissionforthechurchtobe
movedtotheareabeneaththehill,but
congregationssoonoutgrewitasthecity
flourished.Constructionofagothicbuilding
startedintheearly14th centuryandwas
eventuallyconsecratedin1452.Further
reconstructionscontinued,includingthe
additionofabigger,late-gothicpresbytery
between1461-87,untilthecathedralassumed
moreorlessitspresentform.
Itisathree-navestructure,eachof
thesameheight,constructedbythesame
workshopresponsible
forStStephen’sin
Vienna.Althoughits
interiorissuitably
ornamental,much
ofthecathedral’s
exteriorisrelatively
plain,especiallycomparedwithother
gothiccathedrals.Thisisowingtothe
cathedral’sdualpurposeaspartofthe
city’sfortifications.Itsentrances,whose
importancechangedoverthe
centuries,areonitssidesandits
westernfaçade,withits“front”
comprisingpartofthefortification
wall.Remainsofthecitywallsare
preservedtodayatthesouthern
endofthecathedral.
After the Hungarian
Kingdom lost the Battle
of Mohács to the
Ottoman Empire in 1526–yielding
its capital Buda and its coronation
citySzékesfehérvár–Bratislava (then
Pressburg) became the de facto capital
of the displaced Hungarian monarchy
and the cathedralwas used for
coronations.With renewed importance,
the cathedral’s interiorwas rebuilt in
the baroque style,with most of the
work attributed to the prominent
Austrian baroque sculptor Georg Rafael
Donner,who had been invited to
Pressburg byArchbishop Imrich
Eszterházy.
Donnerspentaboutadecade
inPressburg,duringwhichtime
thecathedralgotanewmain
Citywalls
The façade of the cathedral used to be
part of the fortified city walls, whose
remains have been preserved on its
southern side.
The crypts
The crypts were used for burials of church dignitaries until the end of the
19th century.
Chapel of
St Johnthe
Almoner
A work by the baroque sculptor
Georg Rafael Donner, which
holds the shrine with the remains
of the 6-7th century saint John
the Almoner.
38 Katedrála sv.Martina (St Martin’s Cathedral) W
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: HISTORICAL CENTRE 25
baldachinaltar,featuringthreeofDonner’s
leadsculptures.Flankedbytwoangels,the
centralsculpturedepictsStMartinonahorse
cuttinghiscloaktoshareitwithabeggar.
ThecoronationofMariaTheresatookplace
infrontofthisaltarin1741.Donneralsobuilt
theChapelofStJohntheAlmonertoholdthe
mortalremainsoftheCypriotsaintfrom
the6-7th century.Thearchbishopis
nowalsoburiedinthechapel.
Inthe19th century,the
cathedralunderwentfurther
extensiverenovations,this
timetoremovealmostallthe
baroqueelementsandreplace
themwithgothicfeatures.
Themainbaroquealtarwas
re-assembledandwhilethe
equestriansculptureofSt
Martinremainedinthe
cathedral,theangelswere
movedtoBudapest.Only
theChapelofStJohnthe
Almoneranditsinterior
keptitsoriginalstyle.
Thecurrentshapeand
lookofthecathedraldates
more-or-lessfromthisperiod.
Itsmainentranceisfrom
thenorthernnave,beneath
an85-metrehightowerthatistoppedwith
agildedcopyofthecrownofStStephen.
Itis1.6mhighand300kginweight,an
appropriatereminderofthesignificanceof
thecathedralduringcoronationtimes.
Contemporaryvisitorscanseeinthe
cathedralavasthauloftreasuresamassed
hereduringits550yearsofexistence.These
includeallthepreciousitemsusedduring
Ribbed vault
The three-nave structure with eight monumental columns was constructed by
the same workshop responsible for St Stephen’s in Vienna.
Sculpture
of St Martin
The equestrian sculpture of
St Martin is a masterpiece
by Georg Rafael Donner and
used to be the central piece
of the main baroque altar in
the cathedral.
holymasses:chalices,reliquaries,bishops’
crosiersandchasubles,etc.,plusexceptional
paintingsandwalladornments.Probably
themostpreciousexhibitedpieceisthe
109-cmhighgothicmonstrance.Thereisalso
atreasurylocatedinthesacristybelowthe
towerandintheadjoiningchapel.
InthewesternfaçadeistheChapelof
SophiaofBavaria,whichonceservedasan
archivecontaining3,285medieval
documentsandmorethan23,000
papersfromtheperiodafterthe
1526BattleofMohács,aswellas
severalliturgicalbooks.The
cryptsbeneaththecathedral
wereusedforburialsupuntil
theendof19th century,andare
nowaccessibleviatheChapel
ofStAnnainthecathedral’s
northernsection.Thedoorat
thisendwaspreviouslythe
mainentranceportalforthe
churchandisdecoratedby
atympanumfeaturinga
reliefoftheHolyTrinity.The
chandelierinthethree-nave
hallwitheightcolumnsis
fromtheendofthe16th century.
Thecathedralcontinues
tobethehomeoftheBratislava
Archdioceseandapartfromholdingholy
masses,weddingsandotherreligiousevents,
itisalsothevenueforfrequentconcerts.In
thepast,LudwigvanBeethovenpremiered
hisMissaSolemnishereandFranzLisztis
alsobelievedtohavepremieredsomeofhis
worksinthecathedral.Theorganfrom1880
wasreplacedin2010withapiecebythe
GermanorganmasterGeraldWoehl.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/26 bratislava: HISTORICAL CENTRE
Bratislavský hrad; map B 3 1.2 km (18 min) 1.3 km
(2 min) u Zámocká v 203, 207 Å +421 (0)2 2048-3110
G www.snm.ska Summer season (Apr1-Nov16) Tue-Sun
10:00-17:00; Winter season (Nov17-Mar 31) Tue-Sun 9:00-16:00;
(areal of the castle open 8:00-24:00) €7 (museum) ä
e é (upon request, excluding tower and treasury) WC
The monumental Bratislava Castle –
described bysome as resembling a table
turned upside down – has been dominating
the city’s skyline for centuries.Built at the
top of an 85m-high hill,where it enjoys
a keystrategic location peering over the
Danube,the castle has experienced heydays
and periods of decline,all ofwhich have
contributed to its current appearance.
Reconstruction has been almost con-
tinual since its first brickwas laid,and the
most recent project intends to return it to
the baroque style of the period of Empress
MariaTheresa; itwas the castle’s golden age.
The recent project has alsoyielded some
fascinating archaeological discoveries that
yet againwill mean the castle’s history
will be rewritten and,in itswake,that of
Bratislava itself.
The castle’s location has been
significant since the StoneAge,
with the first settlers likelyto
have set up home around the 3rd
centuryBC.Bythe IronAge,the
site had grown important not
onlyfor its proximityto the Danube
(therewas a ford across the river here),
but also because of its position on some
significant trade routes.TheAmber Road,
for instance,alongwhich Celts and Romans
transported amber from the Baltics to the
Mediterranean,passed the castle.
In 2009,archaeologists unearthed 22
gold and silver coins bearing the names of
the Celtic nobles Biatec and Nonnos,among
other extraordinaryartefacts,during exca-
vations of the castle – a haul nowknown as
the “GoldenTreasure of Bratislava Castle”.
These findings,alongwith the discoveryof
the remains of Roman buildings built for
Celtic nobility,which are believed to be from
the 1st centuryBC.(The excavations are on-
going and further discoveries are expected.
However,there is some controversyover the
42 Bratislavský hrad (Bratislava Castle) W
building of the garages on the
archaeological site.The govern-
ment promises to exhibit the
excavations on the sitewhere
theywere found.)
Bratislava Castlewas
mentioned for the first time in
written documents in 907,bearing
the name Pressalauspruch.
However,the oldest part of
the castle still standing is
what is nowknown as the
CrownTower,from the 13th
century.In the 15th century,
the castle underwent its first
extensive re-building program
andwas transformed into a gothic
edifice during the rule of Sigismund of
Luxemburg.The king demolished almost
all the existing structure and built a two-
floored gothic palacewith a trapezium-
shaped ground-plan in its place.
The current layout of the castle,
with four wings around the main
courtyard,is the result of an
architectural movement in
the Renaissance and early
baroque eras.After Brati-
slava became the capital
and coronation city of the
Hungarian Kingdom in 1526,
the castle became the resi-
dence of the monarchs.It was
not considered grand enough
Repre-
sentative
rooms
During the
castle’s most recent
reconstruction, the
rooms in the southern
wing of the castle
received stucco gilded
decorations similar to
those that graced them
during Maria Theresa’s
occupation.
Windows
Preserved gothic and
Renaissance windows
have been left unco-
vered to show various
construction phases of
the castle.
The Crown
Tower
The oldest part of the
castle dating from the
13th century. Its name is
derived from its previous
function, when coronation
jewels used to be stored
here.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: HISTORICAL CENTRE 27
by Emperor Ferdinand I of Habsburg,who
decided to rebuild and modernise the out-
dated mediaeval castle in the 16th century.
He employed the best builders and artists
from Italy,but almost none of their work
remains today.Only the Renaissance
oriel of the former palace
chapel,with rich fresco
decorations,survives.
The castle’s current
look owes most to its
17th century redevelop-
ment,when another
floor was added to the
palace,as well as two
towers,bringing the
total to four.However,
only one of them – the
CrownTower – actually
qualifies as a real tower.
The others are merely
turrets on the rooftop.
After MariaTheresa
came to the throne
in the 18th century,
the castle was rebuilt
again into a stately baroque residence.Her
son-in-lawAlbert of Saxe-Teschen (who
married MariaTheresa’s favourite daughter
Marie Christine) added a family gallery,
a predecessor of theAlbertina gallery in
Vienna.The large areas of the yard behind
and around the castle were also cultivated
into terraces,French gardens,oranger-
ies,and summer and winter riding
schools and stables. The good
times came to a halt during the
reign of MariaTheresa’s son,
Joseph II,however,who
oversaw the return to
Pest for the Hungarian
Kingdom in 1783,which
caused a decline in pres-
tige for Bratislava.Albert
left the castle,and all the
family’s precious items
were moved to Vienna or
further afield.Joseph II
established at the castle
a school and seminar for the catholic clergy,
and then during the Napoleonic Wars at
the beginning of the 19th century,the castle
served as military barracks.This had unex-
pectedly dreadful consequences: the army
caused a great fire in 1811 and the castle
became little more than a ruined
shell for more than 140 years.
There were serious discus-
sions in the 20th century about
pulling down the ruins entirely,
or redeveloping the site into
something completely different.
However,common sense eventu-
ally prevailed and the ruins were
rebuilt to the castle’s previous
shape.The interior remains
rather plain – few documents
exist to give planners an idea of
how it would have previously
looked – but the castle was
opened to the public for
the first time in 1968.
Since then,it has been
home to numerous
museums and the
Slovak parliament has used its stately
premises for ceremonial events.
The castle’s treasury currently holds its
most exciting artefacts,including the coins
unearthed in 2009 and a selection of Roman
mosaic floors.There is also an exhibition of
historical paintings,in the southern wing,
overlooking the Danube that depicts former
owners of the castle.Part of the castle tour
is a permanent exhibition about the history
of the area which is now Slovakia.On the
third floor is located a Café and after refreh-
ment the tour is completed by climbing to
the top of the CrownTower,as one of the
oldest parts of the castle on a clear day it
offers a 360-degree view including Hungary
andAustria (wind turbines visible from the
tower are inAustria).The castle also hosts
temporary exhibitions.
Sigismund Gate
The gothic prism-shaped gate with rich stone decoration
dates from the 15th century.
Victory Gate
The gate now features sculptures of military symbols, including helmets, armour, shields,
various weapons, banners, etc., which symbolise the ruler’s power and victory.
Bastion
Luginsland
One of two semi-circular
cannon-bastions built
during the gothic redesign
of the castle to reinforce the
fortification.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/28 bratislava: HISTORICAL CENTRE
43 Museum of Jewish
Culture pages 50-52
44 Podhradie
(Settlement below
the castle)
Židovská, Zámocká, Beblavého; map B,C 3
(c 1, c 3) 0.65 km (9 min) ä e WC G
Podhradie is the name given the
area that spreads over the eastern
and southern slopes of Bratislava
Castle hill,which in mediaeval
times would have been
separated from the Old Town
by city walls.This is also the
site of the former Jewish
quarter, established in
the 16th century when
the palatine Mikuláš
Pálffy allowed Jews
expelled from the
city to settle here.
Podhradie became
part of what is now
Bratislava only in
the middle of the
19th century but it
was all but destroyed
by the construction
of the SNP Bridge in
the mid-20th century,
which served to renew
the mediaeval division.
The most significant build-
ings preserved in the narrow cob-
blestone streets of Podhradie are
the baroque Church of St Nicolas
from 1661, built by Francis Khuen,
a widow of František Pálffy, and
the House of the Good Shepherd,
which is one of only two rococo
buildings in Bratislava.
45 Dom u dobrého
pastiera (House of the
Good Shepherd)
Židovská 1; map C 3 (c 3) 0.65 km (9 min) G
Å +421 (0)2 5441-1940 www.muzeum.bratislava.sk
a Tue-Fri 10:00-17:00 Sat-Sun 11:00-18:00
€2.3 ä e WC
The House of the Good Shepherd
is among the most beautiful
rococo-style buildings in central
Europe, and is one of few
preserved buildings of the
old settlement around
Bratislava Castle.
It was named after
the statue of Christ,
the Good Shepherd,
which stands
in a niche on its
corner.
The four-floor
house was built
between 1760-65,
in the shape of a
trapezium,with
an extremely
narrow frontal
face; the width
of one room
and staircase.The
bottom part was
used for trade and
craft activities,
while the upper served for
accommodation.
The House of the Good
Shepherd has undergone several
reconstructions.In addition to
changes to the interior,there have
been also some modifications of the
exterior,including the addition of
white louvre windows.After a fire in
1913 the windows were substituted
for ones with glass wings.
The building now houses the
Museum of Clocks, an exhibition of
more than 60 historical timepieces
from the end of the 17th century to
the end of the 19th century.
46 Subclub
(music club) pages 56-57
47 Zuckermandel
and Vydrica
Žižkova; map B 4 1.2 km (15 min) 1.5 km
(2 min) u Chatam Sófer v 4, 6, 28, 29, 30, 31, 39
G www.snm.ska Tue-Sun 10:00-16:30
(museums) U Mon-Sat 17:00 Sun 8:00,
17:00 (the Holy Trinity Church) €3 (bulk
ticket for all museums at Žižkova street)
Zuckermandel and Vydrica are the
names of the former settlement
comprising several streets beneath
the Bratislava castle,which first
grew up in the 13th centurywhen
some important trade routes crossed
the area.
From the 18th century until the
Second World War it became a no-
torious red light district,and it was
mostly demolished between 1949-69,
with the construction of the SNP
Bridge completing the damage.
Only a few buildings from by-
gone eras remain intact along the
area’s narrow streets. These struc-
tures currently house a museum
that focuses on Hungarian and
Carpathian German minorities as
well as museums devoted to musi-
cal instruments and archaeology.
In 2013, construction began on a
complex that would include both
of residential, administrative and
commercial buildings.
Another preserved building
from the historical Zuckermandel
is the baroque HolyTrinity Church
(Kostol Najsvätejšej Trojice). It was
built at the foot of Bratislava Castle
hill between 1734-38 on a site once
occupied by a wooden chapel.
The church is known for its three
valuable paintings of Saint Peter,
Saint Paul and Christ on the cross,
as well as a rare organ from the
early 19th century,which has been
restored to full working order. On
the south wall of the church is a
bronze slab depicting the priest
Karol Scherz de Vasoja (1807-1888)
by the sculptor Alojz Rigele.The
priest was well known for his
generosity, philanthropy and self-
sacrifice during natural disasters
and reportedly saved more than 50
people from fire and floods during
his lifetime.
Podhradie
Church of St Nicolas
Holy Trinity Church
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: WALKING DISTANCE 29
48Pamätník
ChatamaSÓferaW
(Chatam Sófer Memorial)
Nábrežie armádneho generála Ludvíka Svobodu
24; map A 3 1.8 km (22 min) 2.1 km (3
min) u Chatam Sófer v 4, 6, 28, 29, 30, 31, 39
Å +421 (0)2 5441-6949 G www.chatamsofer.sk
a Mon-Fri, Sun (except Jewish holidays) booking
necessary at +421 (0)948 554-442 (9:00-17:00) €6
The Chatam Sófer memorial is a
Jewish burial shrine built over the
graves of prominent rabbis and
scholars,including that of Chatam
Sófer himself.Sófer (1762-1839),
whose original name was Moshe
Schreiber,is one of orthodox
Judaism’s most significant scholars,
described bywww.chatamsofer.sk as
“world renowned for his comments
on theTalmud andTora,and the
founder of conservative Pressburg’s
yeshiva,one of the most prominent
centres of traditional Jewish
learning in Europe”.
This is the sole remaining part
of the Jewish cemetery used until
1847 that was destroyed in 1943
during construction of the nearby
tunnel.The current memorial is
a result of an extensive re-devel-
opment of the site from 2000-02
– a project by the Slovak architect
Martin Kvasnica,who followed the
strict requirements of the halakhah
(Jewish law) when designing the
monument.The memorial,which is
a pilgrimage
destination
for many
Jews from
around the
world,was
opened in
2002 on
the 240th
anniversary
of Chatam
Sófer’s
birth.
49 River Park
Dvořákovo nábrežie; map A 3 1.8 km (22 min)
3.5 km (5 min) u Chatam Sófer or Park kultúry
(PKO) v 4, 6, 28, 29, 30, 31, 39 or 5, 9
Å +421 (0)914 399-999 www.riverpark.sk
a Mon-Sun 10:00-2:00 (restaurants/bars); Mon-Fri
8:00-20:00 (shops/services generally) éä e WC
On the banks of the Danube
between what was formerly the Park
of Culture and Leisure and the SNP
Bridge,River Park is now principally
a residential,commercial and hotel
complex comprising flats with a
river view and offices peering over
the busy street.Part of it also houses
the five-star Grand Hotel River
Park,with 231 rooms,including
the presidential apartment,which
opened in 2010.
The original architect was Erick
van Egeraat,from the Nether-
lands,whose plans followed the
demands of the city to harmonise
the shape of the complex with the
silhouette of Bratislava behind it.
Egeraat designed his structures to
avoid conflict with the height of
the buildings,even if the finished
product may have strayed from the
original plans.The construction
drew some critical responses from
civil activists,who protested against
the loss of urban greenery.Before it
became a multifunctional complex,
the site was part of the promenade
along the Danube River with a stone
balustrade.
50 Incheba (exhibition
centre) page 105
48 Chatam Sófer Memorial W
map A 3 (pg 30, 62-63, 6)
49 River Park (river-front district)
map A 3 (pg 30, 58-59, 70-71)
50 Incheba (exhibition centre), map B 4
(pg 105, 108-109)
51 Most SNP (bridge) W, map B,C 4
(pg 30, 41-43, 60-61, 67, 70-71, 82-83)
52 UFO restaurant, map B,C 4
(pg 30, 60-61, 67, 70-71, 82-83)
53 Sad Janka Kráľa (park), map C,D 4 (pg 72-73)
54 Starý most (bridge), map D 4 (pg 67)
55 Most Apollo (bridge), map E,F 4 (pg 30)
56 Eurovea (river-front district) W
map E 4 (pg 31, 53, 54-55, 58-59, 70-71)
57 Slovak National Theatre - New building
map E 4 (pg 31, 50-52)
58 Blue Church W, map D 3 (pg 31, 54-55)
59 Kamenné nám. (square), map D 3 (pg 32, 60-61)
60 Church of St Ladislaus, map D 3 (pg 32)
61 Church of St Elisabeth, map D 3 (pg 32)
62 Jewish Synagogue, map D 3 (pg 33, 64-66)
63 Obchodná ul. (Shopping Street), map C 3 (c 2); D 2
(pg 34, 108-109)
64 Great Evangelical Church, map C 2 (pg 33, 64-66)
65 Grassalkovich - Presidential Palace
map C 2 (pg 33, 54-55, 64-66, 72-73)
66 Archbishop’s Summer Palace, map C 2 (pg 34)
67 Námestie slobody (Square of Freedom)
map C,D 2 (pg 34, 60-61)
68 Slovenskýrozhlas(SlovakRadio)
mapD1(pg34,60-61)
69 National Bank of Slovakia, map D 2 (pg 34)
70 Aspremont Palace, map D,E 2 (pg 29)
71 Medická záhrada (Medical Garden), map D,E 2
(pg 54-55, 64-66, 72-73)
72 Main bus station, map E 3
73 Tržnica (market place), map F 1 (pg 60-61)
74 YMCA (multi-cultural hub)
map D 1 (pg 56-57, 74-75)
75 Main train station, map C 1
76 Museum of Transport, map C 1 (pg 50-52)
77 Slavín (memorial) W, map B 1
(pg 29, 54-55, 60-61, 64-66, 67)
58
60
61
62
63
67
68
77
69
70
66
65
64
59
55
56
51 52
53
54
50
48
49
57
71
72
73
74
75
76
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/30 bratislava: WALKING DISTANCE
51 Most SNP W
(Bridge of the Slovak
National Uprising)
52 UFO restaurant
map B, C 4 0.7-1.1 km (8-13 min) 3.5
km (4 min) u Most SNP (Slovenského národného
povstania) v 4, 6, 28, 29, 30, 37, 50, 70, 82, 88, 91,
133, 191, 901 (regional bus to Hainburg, AT) Å +421
(0)2 6252-0300 a Observation Deck & Bar Mon-Sun
10:00-23:00; Restaurant Mon-Sun 12:00-23:00
€6.5 (lift to Observation Deck) ä e é (upon
request; access only to the restaurant/bar) WC
The construction of the iconic
cable-stay bridge suspended over
the Danube, between 1967-72,
destroyed significant sections
of the Old Town and the former
Jewish quarter and cut the castle
away from the city. Originally
named after the Slovak National
Uprising (SNP), the bridge was
officially renamed the New Bridge
between 1993-2012, reflecting the
popular name for it among city
residents. But it officially reverted
back to its original name in 2012.
The only pylon of the bridge is
topped with a pod in the shape of a
flying saucer, and houses a restau-
rant 85 metres in the air.
The original concept was that
the bridge should resemble the
driver of a carriage,with the steel
cables representing reins and the
pylon the driver with a hat. Its ac-
tual appearance is best reflected in
its colloquial name: the UFO bridge.
There is an observation deck
above the restaurant offering 360°
views across the city and into Aus-
tria, made accessible to the public
after the fall of the previous
regime.
53 Sad Janka Kráľa
(park) pages 72-73
54 Starý most
(bridge) page 67
55 MostApollo
(Apollo Bridge)
map E, F 4 2.4 km (30 min)
3.9 km (6 min) u Most Apollo
v 50, 68, 87, 88, 95, 801 (regional bus to Rajka, HU)
TheApollo Bridge is Bratislava’s
long-awaited fifth crossing over
the Danube,constructed between
2002-05 to the design of the Slovak
architect MiroslavMaťaščík.To save
money,the four-lane,cable-stay
bridge,with paths for pedestrians
and cyclists,was first built on the
riverbank before,in September 2004,
crews used four tugboats to position
the completed bridge across the
river.Itwas the first time a bridge
this large had been put in place this
wayand the operation attracted
thousands of spectators.The bridge
is named after the refinerythat
used to stand nearbyandwhich
was destroyed during the Second
WorldWar.
56 Eurovea W
Pribinova; map E 4 1.2 km (15 min)
2.7 km (4 min) u Nové SND or Šafárikovo
nám. v 28, 133, 801, X13 or 2, 4, 6, 7, 78, 95
Å +421 (0)2 2091-5000 www.eurovea.com a
Mon-Sun 10:00-21:00 (shops); Mon-Sun 10:00-2:00
(restaurants/bars) ¯®éä e WC
Eurovea is a development of shops,
leisure and entertainment areas,on
the north bank of the Danube near
to the historical city centre and next
to the new building of the Slovak
NationalTheatre.It has become a
popular site for Bratislavans since
its opening in 2010,also thanks to
a generously designed public space
that slopes down to the river.The
complex was designed by the Slovak
architects Marek Varga,Miroslav
Vrábel and Branislav Kaliský and
consists of the five-star Sheraton
Bratislava Hotel,appartments,as
well as airy retail premises and
an office complex.A monumental
bronze statue of the Slovak
statesman Milan Rastislav Štefánik
occupies a central square,with a
lion standing atop a 27-metre high
plinth.
57Slovenskénárod-
nédivadlo - Nová
budova(Slovak National
Theatre - new building)
Pribinova 17; map E 4 1.4 km (18 min) 3.2
km (6 min) u Landererova or Nové SND v 50,
88, 95 or 28, 133, 801, X13 Å +421 (0)2
2047-2111 ¯ ® www.snd.sk
a for performances
from €4 å
é WC
Eurovea
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: WALKING DISTANCE 31
Few constructions in contemporary
Bratislava took as long to complete
as the new building of the Slovak
NationalTheatre (SND),by the
Slovak architects Martin Kusý,
Pavol Paňák and Peter Bauer.Its
construction lasted 21 years and
spanned two regimes,starting
under the communists inApril 1986
and finishing inApril 2007.It is tiled
with famous Spiš travertine,the last
pieces from a pit in eastern Slovakia.
The building has seven floors,
more than 2,000 rooms and three
main halls,for opera,ballet and
theatre,as well as a studio.It is also
packed with innovations,including
an unusual air-conditioning system
that blows air from the audience’s
armrests.Anumber of exterior and
interiorworks of art embellish the
building,including a fountain at the
front created byAlexander Biľkovič,
Iľja Skoček and Pavel Bauer; awater-
fall byPeter Roller and two towers by
the architect Bauer.The spring in the
lobbyis also thework of Bauer and
the painter Dušan Buřil.
58 Modrý kostolík
(Blue Church) W
Bezručova 2; map D 3 0.9 km (11 min)
3 km (6 min) u Šafárikovo námestie
v 2, 4, 6, 7, 78, 95, X13 Å +421 (0)2 5273-3573
a Mon-Sun 8:00-19:00 (entrance hall) U Mon-Sat
7:00, 18:00; Sun 8:00, 9:30, 11:00, 18:00 voluntary
St Elizabeth’s Church,commonly
known as the Blue Church,is one
of fewexamples of art nouveau
architecture in Bratislava.Itwas
built between 1909–13 according to
plans bythe Hungarian architect
Edmund Lechner andwas initially
intended to be a chapel
for students from the
nearbyhigh school.It is
dedicated to St Elizabeth
of Hungary,daughter
of KingAndrewII of the
Árpád family,
whowas
probablyborn in Bratislava Castle
in 1207.Its familiar name is drawn
from the colour that dominates
both its interior and façade: it is
decked in a pastel blue mixedwith
white elements,and patterned
with flowers and leaves.The church
remains in use todayand is a popular
site forwedding ceremonies.
59 Kamenné nám.
(Kamenné Square)
map D 3 0.6 km (7 min)
2.3 km (6 min) u Kamenné námestie or
Rajská v 3, 4, 9 or 202, 205 é ä e WC
Developers,architecture experts
and city administrators continue
to squabble about the future
of Kamenné námestie,one of
Bratislava’s busiest central squares,
but which has been waiting for
refurbishment for manyyears.
Currently the central features of
the square are a department store
built in 1968 (now housing a branch
ofTesco) and the adjacent Kyjev
Hotel (1973),both examples of
Slovak modernist architecture by
Ivan Matušík and both registered
with the Documentation and
Conservation of Buildings,Sites
and Neighbourhoods of the Modern
Movement (DOCOMOMO),an
international organisation aimed
at research,documentation,
promotion and preservation of
Modern Movement architecture.
Hotel Kyjev used to be one of
the most prominent and visited
hotels in Bratislava,and even after
the fall of the communist regime
and a change in owners,it served as
a low-cost hotel enabling visitors to
sample the atmosphere and design
of the previous regime.However,
since late 2011 it has been closed
completely and its future is unclear.
Various civic initiatives have also
centred on the square,mainly
intended to prevent extensive
re-building of the area.In 2013 a
project called “Adopt a Pot” invited
people to assume responsibility for
one of the neglected pots on the
square,plant flowers in it and take
care of it during the summer.
Kamenné
námestie
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/32 bratislava: WALKING DISTANCE
60 Kostol
sv.Ladislava (Church
of St Ladislaus)
Špitálska 5; map D 3 0.5 km (6 min)
2 km (5 min) u Kamenné námestie v 3, 4, 9
Å +421 (0)2 5296-7598a Mon-Sun 8:30-18:30
(entrance hall) U Mon-Sat 17:30 Sun 9:30,
11:00 (mass in English), 17:30 voluntary
The classicist Church of St Ladislaus,
designed by Ignác Feigler in the
1830s,is the third sacral building to
occupy the site.Originally the Order
ofAntonites had a hospital here,
adjoining a chapel and monastery,
which remained until a new
hospital building,comprising the
first St Ladislaus,took its place in
1397.In the 15th century,the complex
was seriously damaged during
Hussite attacks,but was restored
and remained until 1529,when it
was pulled down as the city began
preparations to defend itself against
the Ottomans.The new hospital was
built in 1543,but by the early 19th
century has fallen into dereliction.It
was replaced by the current church,
albeit with a plain white interior.In
1927 the church painter J.Grünwild
covered its walls with figurative
paintings,supressing the classicist
character of the construction.
The main altar features
a painting by the
Viennese painter
Ferdinand Lütgendorf
from 1830.
61 Kostol
svätej
Alžbety
(Church of St
Elizabeth)
Špitálska 21; map D 3
0.6 km (7 min) 2 km (5
min) u Kamenné námestie
v 3, 4, 9 Å +421 (0)2
5924-9630 a Mon-Fri
5:30-18:30 Sat-Sun
6:30-19:00 (entrance
hall) U Mon-Fri 6:00
Sat 7:00, 18:00
Sun 7:00, 9:00,
18:00 voluntary
The baroque Church of St
Elizabeth was commissioned by
Archbishop Imrich Esterházy
and constructed between 1739-42
to the plans drawn up by the
Vienna-based architect Franz A.
Pilgram.The single nave church
is decorated with paintings by
the Austrian artist Paul Troger, as
well as sculptures of St Stephan,
St Ladislaus and St Elizabeth with
a beggar.The latter are works by
Ľudovít Gode, a contemporary of
the prominent baroque sculptor
G. R. Donner.The Order of Saint
Elizabeth continues to care for
seriously ill patients in their own
hospital, the Oncological Institute
of St Elizabeth, which is adjacent
to the church.
62 Židovská
synagóga
(Jewish Synagogue)
Heydukova 11-13; map D 3 0.6 m (7 min)
3 km (6 min) u Námestie SNP v 2, 7, 8, 9
Å +421 (0)2 5441-6949 G www.synagogue.sk
a Community Museum May 20 - Oct 9
Fri, Sun 10:00-16:00 (except Jewish
holidays) €6 e WC
The synagogue on Heydukova
Street is the only remaining
synagogue in Bratislava, designed
and built in 1923-26 by the
Bratislava-based Jewish architect
Arthur Szalatnay-Slatinský. Its
construction was in response
to the increasing number of
Jewish residents in Bratislava,
which reached 10,973 in 1921.The
interior combines the innovative
design of reinforced concrete
and contemporary details with
Cubist elements and also meets
traditional religious requirements,
such as separation of men and
women and placement of the
bimah in the centre.
The synagogue still serves
as an active Jewish
house of worship and
in 2012 was extended
to house the Bratisla-
va Jewish Community
Museum. It is located in
the synagogue’s disused
women’s gallery and in-
cludes key items from
the Judaica collection
of the Bratislava
Jewish community as
well as other objects
– some of them
associated with
the Holocaust
– donated by
individual
commu-
nity
mem-
bers.
63 Obchodná ulica
(Shopping Street)
map C 3 (c 2); D 2 0.5 km (6 min)
u Poštová v 2, 5, 7, 8 www.obchodnaulica.sk
a Mon-Sat 9:00-20:00 (shops
generally) ä å e
Obchodná ulica,which literally
translates as the “Shopping Street”,
is one the oldest streets outside
the historical centre of Bratislava,
mentioned for the first time in
documents from the 13th century.
It leads from Michael’s Gate up
to Kollárovo námestie and before
the likes of Polus,Aupark and
Eurovea were built was, as its name
suggests,where Bratislavans did
their shopping.
64Veľký
evanjelický kostol
(Great Evangelical Church)
Panenská 28; map C 2 0.8 km (8 min)
u Hodžovo námestie v 34, 83, 84, 93, 147,
184, 203, 206, 207, 208, 212, X13 U Sun 10:00
Å +421 (0)2 5441-4604 ¯ voluntary
The baroque-classicist Great
Evangelical Church was built
between 1774-76 to cater for the ever-
growing church congregation sizes
of the 18th century.Empress Maria
Theresa granted special consent
permitting construction of the
church on Panenská Street,but only
on the condition that the church
remained modest in decoration and
Church of St Elizabeth
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: WALKING DISTANCE 33
without a bell-tower.The architect
Matias Walch built the church with
a central space with a pulpit altar
by Peter Brandenthal and two floors
of choirs below the monumental
vaults of the ceiling.The church
is also known for its outstanding
acoustic qualities and hosts regular
concerts as well as still being one
of the key centres for Evangelical
worshippers in Bratislava.
65 Grasalkovičov -
Prezidentský palác
(The Grassalkovich
- Presidential Palace)
Hodžovonámestie1;mapC20.7km(9min)
uHodžovonámestiev34,83,84,93,147,184,203,
206,207,208,212,X13free
aPark/GardenOct-MarMon-Sun10:00-19:00;
Apr-MayMon-Sun10:00-20:00;Jun-SepMon-Sun
8:00-22:00;Palaceisopentothepubliconlyonceayear
duringofficialPresidentialOpenDay,usuallyinJune
Bratislava’s Presidential Palace dates
from 1760 andwas formerlyowned
byCountAnton Grassalkovich,an
advisor to Empress MariaTheresa
and the chairman of the Hungarian
Royal Chamber.Originally,the
late-baroque summer palace
would have been at the centre of
the city’s high society,but has
subsequentlybeen adapted for
various purposes.During the
previous totalitarian regime itwas
turned into the Klement Gottwald
House of Pioneers andYouth,i.e.,
a facilitywhere schoolchildren
could spend their free time.After
the fall of the communist regime
in 1989 it underwent an extensive
reconstruction and became the
seat of the Slovak
president.The rear part of the park is
accessible to the public.
66 Letný
arcibiskupský palác
(Archbishop’s
Summer Palace)
Námestie slobody 1; map C 2
1.2 km (15 min) 0.7 km (2 min)
u Štefanovičova v 203 a exterior views only
What is now known as the
Archbishop’s Summer Palace was
commissioned byArchbishop
Ferenc Forgách in the 17th century
and underwent several stages of
rebuilding and refurbishment
until it reached its current
form: a baroque façade,with a
rococo interior.The architect
F.A. Hillebrandt made the last
significant changes to building,
adding a columned hall with an
upper terrace, a portico in front of
the main entrance and the massive
double-armed staircase carried by
muscular figures of Atlas on the
garden side.
The historical building,and
its extensions from the mid-1970s,
now serve as the seat of the Slovak
government and is accessible to
the public only during special
occasions.Slovak prime ministers
have not been able to resist the
temptation to leave their own mark
on the building: Mikuláš Dzurinda,
for instance,ordered a replica of
the fireplace from the White House
to be added before George W.Bush
visited Slovakia in February 2005,
and although Iveta Radičová hid
a majolica tablet depicting Slovak
outlaw Juraj Jánošík,Robert Fico
has brought the piece back to light
again.
67 Námestie slobody
(Square of Freedom)
map C, D 2 1.2 km (15 min)
0.7 km (2 min) u Námestie 1. mája
v 31, 34, 39, 94 ä å
What is now known as Square
of Freedom originally dates
from the 17th century,when the
Archbishop’s Summer Palace,
now the headquarters of the
Slovak government,would have
been one of the only buildings
surrounding it.These days it is
also flanked by buildings of the
Slovak University of Technology
and the Ministry of Transport.
During the previous communist
regime the square bore the
name of the notorious former
president Klement Gottwald, and
also housed a huge stone statue
of him,which was removed
in 1990.The biggest fountain
in Bratislava, named Družba
(Druzhba or “Friendship”) has
stood at the square’s centre
since 1980, but has been out of
order for years and awaiting
reconstruction.
Presidential Palace
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/34 bratislava: WALKING DISTANCE
68 Slovenský
rozhlas (Slovak Radio)
Mýtna 1; map D 1 1.5 km (19 min)
0.8 km (2 min) u Slovenská technická univerzita
v 2, 5, 7, 8, 31, 34, 39, 94 Å +421 (0)2 5727-3624
¯ www.rozhlas.sk a for performances
from €5 ä WC
It is impossible to miss the distinc-
tive upside-down pyramid-shaped
building opposite the offices of the
National Bank of Slovakia.This
was the headquarters of Slovakia’s
public-service radio,designed by the
Slovak architect Štefan Svetko (and
others) and built between 1963-85.
Ironically,Svetko was not invited to
the official opening of his building
due to his critical opinions of the
communist regime. The structure
is one of the first steel buildings in
Slovakia,reaching 61 metres into the
Bratislava sky,with an antenna add-
ing a further 19 metres.It contains
generous inner spaces,including an
excellent concert hall,with one of
the biggest organs in Slovakia,and
recording studios.Six radio stations
still broadcast from the tower and
public concerts are held.
69 Národná banka
Slovenska (National
Bank of Slovakia)
Imricha Karvaša 1; map D 2 1.5 km (19 min)
0.8 km (2 min) u Slovenská technická univerzita
v 2, 5, 7, 8, 31, 34, 39, 94 Å +421 (0)2 5787-1111
www.nbs.sk aCentral Cash-desk Mon-Fri 7:30-12:00
The new headquarters of the
National Bank of Slovakia occupy
the tallest building in Bratislava – a
111m high structure with 33 floors
above ground and three below,with
a helipad on top.The building was
designed by the Slovak architects
Martin Kusý and Pavol Paňák
and opened in 2002.There are 23
elevators in the building, including
six glazed high-speed elevators
for personal service with a view
over the capital (for those who
do not suffer from dizziness). In
the centre of the lower part of the
building, there is an atrium with a
green area, creating a contrast with
the modern glass and concrete
architecture.
70Aspremontov
palác (Aspremont
Summer Palace)
Špitálska 24; map D,E 2 1 km (12 min) 1.4
km (4 min) u Americké námestie or Špitálska v 3,
4, 9, 207, 212 or 206, 208 a Palace - exterior views
only; Medická záhrada (garden) Apr-Sep 7:00-21:00,
Oct-Mar Mon-Wed 10:00-18:00, Thu-Sun 10:00-18:00
Aspremont Summer Palace is one of
the most beautiful garden palaces
in Bratislava,designed and built in
1769 by Johann JosephTallher.It
stands in a baroque garden owned
by the French count Johann Gobert
ofAspremont.The palace façades
and interiors were influenced by
the décor of Louis XVI and the
palace also includes a late baroque
style chapel featuring paintings
depicting Old and NewTestament
allegory,plus anAltar of the
Crucifixion fashioned from white
and red marble.
CountAspremont was a de-
scendant of the famous Hungarian
magnate families of Rákóczi and
Báthory,but he sold the palace after
10 years to the Esterházy family,
and it remained their property for
nearly 100 years.(It was commonly
known as Esterházy or Schiffbeck
Palace.) MariaTheresa often stayed
here while in Bratislava.Nowadays
the palace houses the office of the
dean of the Faculty of Medicine
of Comenius University and most
locals refer to the Medická záhrada
(Medical Garden),the public garden
in which the palace is
located,rather than the
structure itself.
71 Medická záhrada
(Medical Garden) pages 54-55
72 Main bus station
Mlynské Nivy 31, Bratislava
73Tržnica
(market place) pages 60-61
74YMCA (multi-cultural
hub) pages 56-57
75 Maintrainstation
Predstaničné námestie 1, Bratislava
76 Museum
ofTransport pages 50-52
77 Slavín W
Na Slavíne; map B 1 2 km (30 min)
1.8 km (4 min) u Búdková
v 41, 147, 203, 207a non-stop free
The Slavín monument remembers
the lives of the 6,845 Soviet
soldiers who died during the lib-
eration of Bratislava in April 1945,
many of whom are buried in six
mass and 278 individual graves.
The monument was designed
by the Slovak sculptor and ar-
chitect Ján Svetlík and was built
between 1957-60 to be officially
unveiled on April 4, 1960, the 15th
anniversary of the liberation. On
the same day every year since,
representatives of the Slovak
government and the Russian Em-
bassy lay wreaths to commemo-
rate the victims.
The central and dominant
section of Slavín is a ceremonial
hall tiled with marble, which is
surrounded by a monumental
colonnade. The entrance door is
decorated with a bronze relief by
Rudolf Pribiš. Above the ceremo-
nial room there is a monumental
granite pillar, towering 39.5m, and
topped by an 11m-tall sculpture,
designed by Alexander Trizuljak
and depicting a soldier carrying a
flag and crushing the Nazi swas-
tika beneath his boot.
A list of Slovak towns liber-
ated by the Red Army adorn the
walls of the memorial’s basement.
The monument is surrounded
by a park containing trees from
various parts of the former
Soviet Union. Slavín also affords
spectacular views
over major parts of
Bratislava, includ-
ing Bratislava
Castle.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/www.visitbratislava.com
Cultural
Summer at the
Main Square
J.K. Mertz
Guitar
Festival
Music on
the Danube
Fashion
in the City
Cathedral
Organ Festival
Knights
in Devín
Walk
of Fame
Minority
Cultural
Summer
International
Festival of
Children‘s
Folklore
Ensembles
Get to know the news and attractions of the modern city on the Danube at
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/90
81
91
82
92
83
93
84
94
85
95
96
87
97
88
98
89
99
78 Lourdes cave (Church of Our Lady of the Snows),
pg 62-63
79 Horský Park (park), pg 72-73
80a Sandberg (sandstone hill), pg 37, 74-75
80b Volkswagen (car plant), pg 37, 68-69
81 Devín Castle, pg 37, 50-52, 54-55, 60-61, 64-66
82 Botanical Garden, pg 72-73
83 ZOO, pg 84-85
84 Iron Spring (Železná studienka), pg 37, 72-73
85 Kamzík (TV tower), pg 38, 67, 72-73
86 Atlantis Science Centre, pg 84-85
87 Ondrej Nepela Arena (hockey stadium),
pg 38
88 National Tenis Centre, pg 105
89 Kuchajda (lake), pg 72-73, 53
90 Zlaté Piesky (lake), pg 39, 72-73
91 M. R. Štefánik Airport, pg 39
92 Divadlo Aréna (theatre)
93 Petržalka (estate housing), pg 32, 60-61, 64-66
94 B-S 8 Hřbitov (museum), pg 60-61
95 Veľký Draždiak (lake)
and Hotel Bonbón, pg 72-73, 74-75, 53
96 Gerulata (museum), pg 38, 50-52, 84-85
97 Rusovce Manor House, pg 38
98 Divoká voda (rafting), pg 68-69, 70-71
99 Danubiana Meulensteen Art Museum,
pg 38, 50-52, 53, 54-55, 70-71
= 0.9 mile
0 0.6 1.2 1.9 2.5 3.1 mile
86
79 78
80b
80a
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: AROUND THE CITY 37
78 Lourdes cave
(Church of Our Lady of the
Snows) pages 62-63
79 Horský Park
(park) pages 72-73
80a Sandberg
Devínska Nová Ves, Bratislava 16 km
(20 min) u Sandberg v 28, 128
A demanding uphill walk above
Devínska Nová Ves will take the
traveller to the Sandberg lookout,
with views of the Danube,Morava
rivers and as far as the Palace Schloss
Hof inAustria.Sandberg is the site
of some significant paleontological
finds,including the bones of
prehistoric sharks and seals.The area
is known as the “Slovak desert” for
its sandy deposits.
80bVolkswagen W
(car plant)
Jána Jonáša 1, Bratislava 24 km (18 min)
Volkswagen 21, 24, 25, 26, 92 +421 (0)2 6964
6964 sk.volkswagen.sk Mon-Fri 8:00-18:00 (visits
must be arranged at least one day in advance via phone
or email – visit@volkswagen.sk; group size: 5-15 people;
age requirement: 12; tours in Sk, G, E)€4 solid
boots required
The plant of Volkswagen
in Bratislava offers
special programmes
for tourists.After
getting special head-
phones for both noise
protection and to hear the guide
when the tour makes its way directly
through production halls during
working hours,the mechanically-
inclined can observe selected parts
of the Bratislava-based Volkswagen’s
body shop,as well as production
and press halls.Visitors can directly
watch workers create what will
be a future car.The company also
organises specialThink Blue.Factory.
tours,which focus on environmen-
tal-driven technologies.Another
option for visitors is a special drive
with an electric car or on an off-road
course.For the off-road,the company
uses specially modified vehicle at a
track which simulates various tough
terrains,from a wooden roadway,
through sand,water and steps,to
hills at various gradients.Visitors can
either travel as a passenger or take a
turn behind the wheel with the help
of an instructor.
81 Hrad Devín W
(Devín Castle)
Muránská 11 km (12 min) u Hrad Devín
v 29; during the summer season, boats operate from
the port in Bratislava to Devín Castle
Å +421 (0)2 6573-0105 G www.muzeum.bratislava.sk
a Nov-Mar Mon-Sun 10:00-15:30 (entry possible
only in good weather); Apr, Oct Tue-Sun 10:00-16:30;
May-Sep Tue-Fri 10:00-17:30; Sat-Sun 10:00-18:30
€3 é e (partial access; except castle tower) WC
The Devín Castle,perched on a
rocky cliff at the confluence of the
Danube and Morava Rivers,is one
of the oldest castles in Slovakia and
one of its best known.Its perfect
strategic location has attracted
settlers since prehistoric times,and
it has played an important role in
the country’s military and cultural
development.It remains a vivid
symbol of Slovakia’s history.
The first written record of
Devín dates from 864,when a place
named Dowina is mentioned in
documents belonging to Fulda
monastery.At that time it was
a border fortress and one of the
political and administrative centres
of the Great Moravian Empire.
However,the oldest artefacts found
on the site date from the StoneAge,
when the cliff was settled byvarious
tribes.The Celts arrived and settled
in the region in the 1st centuryAD,
followed by the Romans.Some
ruins of Roman buildings have been
found here.
After the fall of the Great
Moravian Empire,the owners of
the castle changed
frequently and each
gradually developed
and extended it.
In the 15th century
the castle became
the property of the Garay fam-
ily,who built a palace inside the
fortifications and modernised the
walls around.Between 1527 and
1605,it was home to the Báthorys,
who built a new palace wing in the
area of the middle castle and who
transformed the whole complex
into the Renaissance style.The
castle then became the property of
the Pálffys,who were the last noble
family to occupy it.Devín was no
longer used as a residence from the
18th century,and subsequently it
began to deteriorate.Its decline was
complete in 1809 when Napoleonic
armies besieged it,and blew up
large portions.
As the Slovak nation gradually
came into being in the first half
of the 19th century,however,the
Devín Castle became a symbol of the
national awakening,and some of its
fame was restored.Various sensitive
reconstruction projects throughout
the 20th century have helped to offer
the contemporaryvisitor a sense of
the place’s former majesty.
When visiting the castle ruins
nowadays,visitors can see pieces of
preserved Roman architecture plus
remains of the Báthory and Garay
palaces.The gothic tower palace also
peaks above the whole castle area,
which is still circled by fortification
walls.Visitors can see the remains
of the Great Moravian church from
the 9th century,and although only its
foundations marked by stones can
be seen nowadays,there is a model
depicting how the rectangular
church with a trefoil apse may have
looked.The whole area offers an
excellent view over the Danube and
intoAustria.
Devín’s most iconic feature is
the so-calledVirginTower,a small
late Renaissance tower at the castle’s
extremity,jutting out over the river
path.It is the setting for numerous
myths and legends,some ofwhich
are detailed in the museum about
the castle’s historythat can be found
in its best preserved parts.There is
also information about howDevín
conqueredwater leaking into the
placewhich is common in buildings
of its age.A 55m-deepwell,probably
built bythe Garays,can still be seen
in the castle grounds.
82 Botanical
Garden pages 72-73
83 ZOO pages 84-85
84 Železná
studienka (Iron Spring)
Železná studienka 5 km (6 min) u Vojenská
nemocnica v 130, 211, 212, 43 (bus 43 offers daily
service for all area but do not get out on the Vojenská
nemocnica stop) å WC Å +421 (0)2 4425-9188
(cablecar); +421 (0)944 056-309 (fishing) +421 (0)2
5443-3715 (rowing)a Thu-Sun 10:00-17:45 each
hour (cablecar); daily 7:00-19:00 during summer season
only (fishing); Sat-Sun 12:00-20:00 during summer
season only (rowing) €4 (cablecar - return ticket);
€10 per day (fishing); €3 per 30 min (rowing)
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/38 bratislava: AROUND THE CITY
Železná studienka (Iron Spring)
area, near the Kramáre district, is
a meandering valley popular in the
summer with picnickers centred on
a chain of linked man-made lakes.
Passing under the red steel railway
bridge,visitors are greeted by
a large playground, including fields
for football,volleyball, basketball,
pétanque and table tennis. It’s easy
to spot people sitting on the banks,
rowing and fishing. Surrounding
the lakes are paths and parks
that are immensely popular
with families on the weekends.
The valley also provides jungle
gyms for kids and several outdoor
refreshment stands.A cableway
connects Železná studienka with
area close to the Kamzík TVTower.
85 Kamzík (TVTower)
Cesta na Kamzík 6.1 km (12 min)
u Koliba v 44, 203 Å +421 (0)2 4425-6946 ä
www.altitude.sk (Restaurant) a ä Mon-Sun
11:00-22:00; Cablecar Železná studnička -
Kamzík Thu-Sun 10:00-17:45 (each hour)
Cablecar €4 (return ticket) ä WC
The 194-metre Kamzík television
tower,built in 1975,is the tallest
structure in Bratislava and is often
the first building seen byvisitors to
the city,visible from almost all of the
access roads.During goodweather,
views from the top stretch into the
Czech Republic,Austria,Hungary
and even over the snow-capped peaks
of theAlps.The tower is located on
Kamzík hill (“Chamois hill”),about
15 minutes from citycentre bybus,
followed bya 20 minutewalk.The
tower is made of reinforced concrete
and steel columns and its unique
pyramidal shape helps to overcome
the horizontal load.
A gourmet restaurant 70 metres
up the tower offers panoramic views
of Bratislava,with a rotating floor
that provides 360° views from the
table.
Despite advancements in
broadcasting technology,Kamzík
continues to be used as a television
transmission tower.It has 15 plat-
forms from the uppermost labelled
“A” to the lowest floor “O”.On plat-
form “J” there is a 24-hour central
monitoring system station,which
controls the quality of all television
transmitters in Slovakia.
86Atlantis Science
Centre pages 84-85
87 Zimný štadión
Ondreja Nepelu
(Ondrej Nepela Arena)
Odbojárov 9 3 km (8 min) u Zimný štadión
v 39, 53, 61, 63, 74, 78, 204, 205, 212 Å +421
(0)2 4910-3202 ¯ www.nepela-arena.eu a for
performances/hockey games from €10 åé WC
The main hockey stadium in
Bratislava,officially named after
Ondrej Nepela (1951-1989),a Slovak
Olympic gold medallist and three-
time world champion figure skater,
was extensively rebuilt prior to the
Ice HockeyWorld Championships
hosted by Bratislava and Košice in
2011.Sometimes called the Slovnaft
Arena,after the sponsors of the
Slovak hockey team,the main arena
covers an area of more than 10,000
square metres and can hold nearly
10,000 spectators.The stadium’s
tenants,HC Slovan Bratislava,used
to play in the KHL (Kontinental
Hockey League),the European sister
of the NHL.The stadium has also
hosted concerts by such stars as
Beyoncé,Sting,BryanAdams and
José Carreras.
88 NationalTenis
Centre page 105
89 Kuchajda
(lake) pages 72-73
90 Zlaté Piesky (lake)
Zlaté Piesky 10 km (19 min) u Zlaté
piesky v 4, 53, 56, 57, 65 Å +421 (0)2 4425-7018
non-stop €2 (admission fee only during summer
season Jun 22 - Sep 1 Mon-Sun 9:00-19:00) WC
It costs €2 to access thiswell-known
Bratislava lake,close to the airport,
but is open long hours (9am-6pm
during the summer season) and
iswell served byrestaurants and
refreshment counters.It is possible
to rent a paddle boat orwater bikes or
to playtennis here. The lake is easily
accessible bypublic transport: take
tram 4 to the end of the line,turn
right,cross the street,andyou are
there.The nearbyShopping Palace
mall provides further shopping and
dining opportunities.Zlaté Piesky
also offerswater-skiing aswell as
free access to an unofficial nudists’
bathing beach on the eastern shore.
91 Letisko
M.R.Štefánika
(M. R. Štefánik Airport)
Ivánska cesta 2 10 km (20 min); distance to
Vienna Airport: 50 km (50 min) u Letisko Milana
Rastislava Štefánika v 61, 96 Å +421 (0)2 3303-3353
www.bts.aero
BratislavaAirport,named after
the prominent Slovak politician,
diplomat,and astronomer Milan
Rastislav Štefánik,is the biggest
international airport in the
country,located about 20 minutes
from Bratislava city centre.It
was originally opened in 1951,
but has undergone extensive
reconstructions and refurbishment
since.Two new terminals were
completed in 2012,which increased
its annual capacity to five million
people.
The main departure terminal is
decorated by the only existing life-
size replica of the biplane Caproni
Ca 33,on which Štefánik was killed
when it crashed on May 4,1919.
92 DivadloAréna (the-
atre) Viedenská cesta 10 Å +421(2) 6720-
2557 ® www.divadloarena.ska for performances
93 Petržalka
map A 4–F 4 www.petrzalka.sk; www.divadloarena.sk;
www.aupark-bratislava.sk; www.bunker.bs8.sk;
www.zavodisko.sk; www.mpo.sk
Bratislava’s – and Slovakia’s – largest
high-rise suburb houses some
100,000 people,almost a quarter of
the inhabitants of the city.It may
be hard to believe,but before the
1970s Petržalkawas a picturesque
village full of gardens and fruit
orchards.Todayit is a combination
of modern architecture (mostlybuilt
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: AROUND THE CITY 39
along the highwayand Panónska
Street) and ‘paneláks’,pre-fabricated
concrete blocks of flats in housing
projects that have been criticised by
both inhabitants and architectural
experts for their run-down condition
and flawed design.Manytraditional
paneláks have alreadyundergone
reconstruction,duringwhich they
have given thermal insulation
beneath colourful exterior paint-
jobs,turning the one-time grey
suburb into a palette of primary
colours.
The suburb extends along the
south bank of the Danube,an area
that also boasts Sad Janka Kráľa park,
containing theArenaTheatre,aswell
as several restaurants,boat bars and
theAupark shopping centre.Bratis-
lava’s racecourse is also here,aswell
as several militarybunkers,built in
the 1930s bythe then-Czechoslovak
government as part of a defence
system along its borders.Originally
intended to repel a Nazi invasion,
theylater became part of the Iron
Curtain dividing the capitalistWest
from the communist East.
94 B-S 8 Hřbitov
(museum) pages 60-61
95Veľký Draždiak
(lake) pages 72-73)
96 Gerulata
Gerulatská 69, Rusovce 13 km (14 min) u
Gerulata v 91, 191, 801 (regional bus to Rajka, HU)
Å +421 (0)2 6285-9332 www.muzeum.bratislava.sk
a Apr-Oct Tue-Sun 10:00-16:45 €2.30 e WC
Gerulatawas once a Roman
militarycamp,located inwhat
is nowRusovce.It formed part of
the so-called “Limes Romanus”,
the 3,000km-long border defence
system of the ancient Roman
Empire and,as such,was part
of a unique European chain of
fortifications.Other sites of the
Limes Romanus are included
on the UNESCOWorld Heritage
List,and some in Slovakia hope
the privilege can be extended to
Gerulata.
The camp dates from between
the 2nd-4th centuriesAD but its
remains were only uncovered in
the 1960s,when some industrial
workers noticed the remnants of
some stone pillars.There are some
records of a camp here from the
16th century,but otherwise little is
known about the site.
Present dayvisitors can see
the foundations of the ancient
buildings as well as other archaeo-
logical findings,including stone
altars and some monuments
with rich figural and herbal
decoration.There are also some
other artefacts discovered on the
site displayed in the exhibition
showroom.
97 Kaštieľ Rusovce
(Rusovce Manor House)
Balkánska, Rusovce 13.2 km (15 min) u
Kaštieľ Rusovce v 91, 191 a exterior views only
The neo-classical manor house
in Rusovce,built in the so-called
“Windsor” style amid an English
park,is currently only a shadow
of its former self,mired in
arguments over ownership and
refurbishment that have kept
it doors closed to the public.
Historical documents suggest that
a castle stood on this site since
the 13th century,then a manor
house from 1521,even though
the current design is a result
of renovations in the mid-19th
century.It was owned for the
first part of the 20th century by
the Hungarian Prince Elemér
Lónyay,who bequeathed it to
the Benedictine Order on his
death in 1946.It latterly fell into
the hands of the state and into
stasis.Conservationists now list
the house among the 10 most
endangered historical sites in
Slovakia.
98 Divokávoda
(rafting) pages 68-69
99 Danubiana
Múzeum moderného
umenia (Danubiana
Meulensteen Art
Museum) W
Čunovo 18.5 km (20 min)
u Areál vodných športov Čunovo v 90
Å +421 (0)2 6252-8501 www.danubiana.sk
a May-Sep Tue-Sun 11:00-19:00; Oct-Apr
Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00 €8 e é WC
The Danubiana MeulensteenArt
Museum,situated on a man-made
peninsula on the Danube near the
village of Čunovo,was founded by
a Dutch entrepreneur,collector
and patron of art named Gerard
H.Meulensteen,and the Slovak
gallerist Vincent Polakovič.Itwas
built in the shape of a Roman galley
to the design bythe architect Peter
Žalman.Since 2000 it has held
dozens of exhibitions of modern art,
including internationallyrenowned
artists,and has beenvisited bythe
Spanish King Juan Carlos I,Queen
Beatrix of the Netherlands and the
French actress Catherine Deneuve,
among others.
Danubiana added a number
of exhibition spaces during
reconstruction that ended
September 2014,which transform
it into the largest modern art
museum in Slovakia.The new
spaces contain permanent
exhibitions of the Meulensteen
and Danubiana’s collections.
Photo: Courtesy of Danubiana
Photo: Courtesy of Danubiana
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/BRATISLAVA ACCESSIBILITY | INNOVATION | EXECUTION
Surveys of Meetings and Events
Professionalsconstantlyrankacces-
sibility as the No. 1 criteria for desti-
nation selection and, in this regard,
Bratislava is surprisingly close.
You can get to Slovakia’s capital in
40 minutes from Vienna airport,
or in 20 minutes from Bratislava
airport to the city center.
And when you’re there you’ll
find yourself in a safe, easy-to-
getaround, buzzy, compact city
where old town beauty and modern
urbanity sit side by side.
Bratislava is also an exceptional-
ly smart city with a bourgeoning
start-up eco-system and a stellar
global reputation as an innova-
tion hub. Bratislava based ESET is
a world leader in anti-virus soft-
ware while Pixel Federation,
founded in the city in 2007, de-
velops online games played in over
200 countries in the world. Re-
nowned as an automotive hub,
Bratislava has also spawned Aer-
omobil, the makers of the world’s
first flying car. But Bratislava is also
an innovator in the Meetings and
Events industry. Sli.do, the ground
breaking audience engagement
platform, was born and raised in
this exceptionally smart city.
Meeting professionals know the
importance of exceptional exe-
cution. Strategies and plans are
always essential but without great
execution, they’re useless. Without
precision, attention to detail and
total focus, great strategies go
awry and brilliant plans come to
nothing. Many global automotive
leaders have chosen to locate sev-
eral massive plants in and around
the city, because for them excep-
tional execution based on skilled
and well-educated human resourc-
es is a non-negotiable prerequisite.
The Bratislava production plant of
Volkswagen, for example, is con-
sidered one of the most modern
such facilities in the world in terms
of automation and use of robotics.
About Bratislava
Convention Bureau
The Bratislava Convention Bureau,
as a department of our official Des-
tination Marketing Organization,
the Bratislava Tourist Board, is
a one-stop-shop for planners of
meetings, incentives, congresses
and events who are considering
Bratislava as a destination. Pro-
viding a full range of services for
buyers of MICE, BTB also co-ordi-
nates, initiates and manages all as-
pects concerning the development
of MICE and Business Events in our
destination.
We provide the following services:
initial event planning - hotel and
venue recommendations
advisory, local expertise and
consultancy for MICE organizers
active networking platform
arrangements of site-inspec-
tions based on customer
requirements
promotional materials and dig-
ital imagery
ACCESSIBILITY | INNOVATION | EXECUTION
SURPRISINGLY CLOSE | EXCEPTIONALLY SMART
Bratislava Convention
Bureau departmet
Bratislava Tourist Board
Šafárikovo námestie 3, 811 02
Bratislava, SLOVAKIA
www.bratislavacvb.sk
BRATISLAVA
Surveys of Meetings and Events
Professionals constantly rank
accessibility as the No.1 criteria for
destination selection and,in this
regard,Bratislava is surprisingly
close.You can get to Slovakia’s
capital in
40 minutes from Vienna airport,
or in 20 minutes from Bratislava
airport to the city center.
And when you’re there you’ll
find yourself in a safe,easy-to-
getaround,buzzy,compact city
where old town beauty and modern
urbanity sit side by side.
Bratislava is also an
exceptionally smart citywith a
bourgeoning start-up eco-system
and a stellar global reputation as an
innovation hub.Bratislava based
ESET is a world leader in anti-virus
software while Pixel Federation,
founded in the city in 2007,develops
online games played in over
200 countries in the world.
Renowned as an automotive
hub,Bratislava has also spawned
Aeromobil,the makers of the world’s
first flying car.But Bratislava is also
an innovator in the Meetings and
Events industry.Sli.do,the ground
breaking audience engagement
platform,was born and raised in
this exceptionally smart city.
Meeting professionals know
the importance of exceptional
execution.Strategies and plans are
always essential but without great
execution,they’re useless.Without
precision,attention to detail and
total focus,great strategies go
awry and brilliant plans come to
nothing.Many global automotive
leaders have chosen to locate several
massive plants in and around the
city,because for them exceptional
execution based on skilled and
well-educated human resources
is a non-negotiable prerequisite.
The Bratislava production plant
of Volkswagen,for example,is
considered one of the most modern
such facilities in the world in terms
of automation and use of robotics.
About brAtislAvA
Convention bureAu
The Bratislava Convention
Bureau,as a department of our
official Destination Marketing
Organization,the Bratislava
Tourist Board,is a one-stop-
shop for planners of meetings,
incentives,congresses and events
who are considering Bratislava as a
destination.Providing a full range
of services for buyers of MICE,BTB
also co-ordinates,initiates and
manages all aspects concerning the
development of MICE and Business
Events in our destination.
We providethe
folloWing serviCes:
n initial event planning - hotel
and venue recommendations
n advisory,local expertise and
consultancy for MICE organizers
n active networking platform
n arrangements of site-inspections
based on customer
n requirements
n promotional materials
and digital imagery
BRATISLAVA ACCESSIBILITY | INNOVATION | EXECUTION
bratislava Convention
bureau departmet
BratislavaTourist Board
Šafárikovo námestie 3,811 02
Bratislava,SLOVAKIA
www.bratislavacvb.sk
BRATISLAVA
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: changes 41
When strolling through
Hviezdoslavovo Námestie,it is easy
to be swept awayin the square’s
tranquil atmosphere and lovely
historical buildings.The tree-
lined,cobblestoned promenade is
irresistible,while the castle in the
distance beckons from its majestic
hilltop setting.But suddenly,the
square ends andyou are standing
at the side of a busyfreeway.To the
left,a suspension bridge crossing
the Danube is capped bysomething
resembling a flying saucer from a
1950s sci-fi film.Directlybelowthe
road is a noisy,graffiti-encrusted
bus depot.Looking over the traffic
to the right,you startwondering
howyou’re supposed to reach
the castle on the other side.You
wouldn’t be the first to stand at this
odd collision of old and new,and
wonder,“What the hell happened
here?”
It is clear to anyonewho has
spent time in Bratislava that
the ancient citystraddling the
Danube possesses manycharms.
Yet Bratislava sometimes gets brief
and ambivalentwrite-ups in major
travel guides,and tourists rarely
visit the cityfor more than a day.
One explanation for this apparent
neglect is that the communists
reallyworked Bratislava over,using
it as a testing-ground for creating a
model,modernised communist city.
Unfortunately,thiswas donewith a
pathological disregard for the city’s
rich history,and large swaths of
Bratislava’s historical sectionswere
demolished and redeveloped as the
communists sawfit.
It has been said that Bratislava
suffered more damage under com-
munism than during SecondWorld
War,and that a third of its historical
centrewas destroyed.Manytra-
vellers come to Europe to revel in its
stunning oldworld charm,but sadly
find much of Bratislava either ruined
or absent entirely.
Roughlya quarter of
Bratislava’s Staré Mesto (OldTown)
was bulldozed in the late 1960s
for a single project: the Most SNP
(SNP Bridge known also as the
NovýMost – New– Bridge),and the
short stretch of freewayconnected
to it,called Staromestská.Dubbed
the “UFO Bridge” for its obvious
sci-fi aesthetic,it is a major artery,
bringing traffic across the Danube,
in and out of the Staré Mesto,while
Staromestská links the bridgewith
the busyintersection just north of
the historical centre.
To make space for this
development,much of the city’s
centuries-old,historical Jewish
quarterwas razed,including the
19th-centuryMoorish-styled
Neolog Synagogue.The freeway
itself ploughed a deep scar through
thewestern edge of the historical
centre,and nowruns less than
four metres from the façade of St
Martin’s Cathedral,Bratislava’s
largest,most historicallysignificant
church.“If [the freeway]were any
closer,itwould go through the
nave,” noted the travelwriter Rick
Steves.
Although the Most SNP could
be seen as practical planning,it is
difficult to denythe devastating
effect it had on the Staré Mesto’s
historyand urban fabric.The
bridge and freewayclashwith
their centuries old historical
surroundings,and an estimated
230 buildingswere demolished.
The freewayisolates Bratislava
Castle from the original medieval
centre,and it claimed half of the
once bustling Rybné Námestie and
nearlyall of its buildings,which
The changing face of Bratislava
Bratislava‘s most visible historical landmark: then and today
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/42 bratislava: changes
were as striking as anyin the
Staré Mesto today.Adding insult to
injury,the cathedral’s foundations
had to be restored to protect them
from thevibrations of the traffic
that rumbles constantlyby.
From its inception in 1599,the
Jewish quarter evolved around
Židovská Street.This strip of land
between the castle and thewalled
medieval centrewas the only
place Jews in Bratislava could
legallylive until 1848.All of the
buildings along Židovská’s eastern
sidewere demolished to make
room for the freeway,while most
of the buildings along itswestern
sidewere replaced bymodern
residential structures.One of the
neighbourhood’s fewsurviving
historical buildings currently
houses the Museum of Jewish
Culture.
Aside from the museum,the
onlything to indicate that a Jewish
neighbourhood thrived here for
centuries is a monument to Jews
who perished in the holocaust,
erected inwhat remains of Rybné
Námestiewhere the synagogue
stood,alongwith an engraving of
the synagogue on an adjacent black
marble slab.
So,howdid the communists
justifydemolishing a historically
significant Jewish quarter?As in
much of central Europe,Slovakia
was a dreadful place for Jews
during the SecondWorldWar.
Roughlythree quarters of the
pre-war Jewish populationwere
killed,and manyof the 30,000
who survived emigrated to the
US,Israel,and elsewhere.By
thewar’s end,Jewish boroughs
throughout Slovakiawere largely
deserted.When the communists
seized power in 1948,the regime’s
hostilitytowards Jews dealt a
further blowto the dwindling
population.Manyof the deserted
Jewish neighbourhoods fell
into disrepair.In some towns
one can still see old abandoned
synagogues,either boarded up and
languishing or re-purposed into
storerooms,workshops or even
art galleries.Bratislava’s Jewish
quarterwas similarlyderelict,
leaving it morevulnerable to the
wrecking ball.
While manylocalswere not
keen on flattening the Jewish
quarter,the repressive regime
choked off anydissent.“People
were unable to protest,” saysViera
Kamenická from the Museum of
Jewish Culture.“Their handswere
tied.” Besides,the communists
preferred creating their own
monuments over saving older ones
that conflictedwith their ideology,
Kamenická added.
The communists didn’t
stop with Židovská.In 1961,a
towering orthodox synagogue
behind the castle on Zámocká
Street was levelled and replaced
by nondescript retail and office
spaces.A hulking,aesthetically
incongruous extension was
erected over the front of the Slovak
National Gallery’s Water Barracks
building,masking its arcaded
19th century façade and tree-lined
courtyard.Bratislava’s main
train station was hidden behind
a characterless 1980s add-on.The
list goes on.
Even in the pre-communist
1940s,the city flirted with a plan
to demolish the castle,Bratislava’s
most iconic historical landmark.
A fire in 1811 had left it a hollowed
out ruin for more than a century,
but eventually planners opted for
reconstruction instead.
However,maintaining
old structures requires active
preservation and money.Several
church-owned buildings at one
end of historical Kapitulská Street
appear on the verge of collapse,
with sagging roofs and crumbling,
graffiti-covered fasçades.These
buildings,like most church-owned
property,were seized by the state
Židovská Street, the heart of the Jewish quarter
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: changes 43
during communism,and neglected
for 40 years.Although the buildings
barely survived the regime,they
may not survive the elements if
the neglect continues.The church
reportedly lacks the money to
restore them,but seems reluctant
to sell the property to developers.
While saving these buildings
could prove prohibitively costly,
is it right to let them deteriorate?
One suspects there would be no
shortage of bids for this prime real
estate.
Obviously,urban renewal is
not exclusive to Bratislava.From
Baron Haussmann carving grand
boulevards out of Paris’ narrow
mediaeval lanes,toAmerican cities
demolishing countless beaux-arts
and art deco cinemas to make way
for parking garages and strip malls,
urban areas have always been
reshaped and updated to serve
the needs of growing populations.
Unfortunately,this has often
come at the expense of unique and
irreplaceable historical structures.
In Europe,however,there is
growing interest in preserving
historical areas,partly because they
attract droves of money-spending
tourists,eager to step back in time
and escape the mundane settings
of their own lives.An ever-growing
list of protected UNESCO world
heritage sites is proof of this.
But while today many
people agree on the importance
of preserving what remains of
Bratislava’s historical centre,
battles are currently being waged
to prevent post-war communist-era
landmarks,once objects of ridicule,
from being torn down.One such
landmark,the 1970s-era Hotel
Kyjev andTesco’s My Bratislava
(formerly Prior) complex,is now
considered a jewel of modern
communist architecture,with its
sleek,travertine marble exterior
and stylish,retro-modern interior.
However,when the UK-based
Lordship Developers purchased
the complex in 2006,they unveiled
plans to demolish the hotel and
adjacent buildings to make way
for a vast complex of hotels,
offices and retail shops.The plans
were met with protests from the
architectural community and
general public,who pleaded with
the city to preserve the hotel.But
firm plans have still not been
released.The hotel closed in
November 2011 and the developers
are apparently still locked in
discussions with the city and
monuments board over zoning
regulations.
When contacted by Spectacular
Slovakia in 2016,Lordship released
a statement that read: “In our
optimal vision the new site built
in more phases should unify
all buildings at the Kamenné
Námestie – the Kyjev Hotel,the
shopping centre as well as new
buildings.”
Whether the company’s
“optimal vision” will preserve the
hotel’s retro-futuristic aesthetic
remains to be seen,but any
unification with the existingTesco
store could result in a modern
Eurovea-style shopping centre in
this area.It is difficult to determine
where Hotel Kyjevwill fit,
particularly in its current form.
Maik Novotny,a Vienna-
based architect and co-author
of Eastmodern,maintains there
are “several other buildings that
have been and still are at risk
of demolition or insensitive
reconstruction.In some cases,
[they] are difficult to adapt and
expensive to maintain”.And
although “appreciation of these
buildings seems to have improved
slightly,” given Slovakia’s economic
climate,the risk still persists.
In light of this,one has to
wonder whether anyone has
learned from the mistakes that
scarred the city in the past.With
new office high rises and shopping
centres sprouting like weeds,
this remains a valid concern.It
would be a shame for Hotel Kyjev
to exist only as an engraving on a
plaque near where it used to stand.
Unless the city can welcome new
development without sacrificing
the old,the cycle of destruction will
continue. - Jeff Whiteaker -
The construction of UFO bridge (most SNP) in 1960-70s had a major impact on the historical city and Jewish circle
Photo: Courtesy of Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/44 bratislava: coronation city
Bratislava’s advantageous location
on the banks of the Danube, and
its close proximity to Vienna and
Budapest has made it one of the
most important cities in central
Europe for hundreds of years,
especially during the period of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Indeed, the single most
significant period in Bratislava’s
history was from 1563-1830, when
it became the coronation city of
the Hungarian Kingdom.
At the time, Bratislava was
a well-developed, multilingual
city, with a population
comprised of majority of
Germans and solid minorities
of Hungarians and Slovaks.
Society was divided into several
classes: the upper aristocratic
class provided the secular and
ecclesiastical authorities, but
the middle and lower classes
remained strong, comprised
as they were by the craftsmen
and merchants crucial to the
city’s business development,
as well as servants and manual
labourers.There were many
job opportunities in Bratislava,
and in local vineyards, and it
attracted workers from far and
wide.
Capital
of the empire
Bratislava’s fame rapidly grew
after the Battle of Mohács in
1526, when Sultan Suleiman I
defeated King Louis II of Hungary.
In the aftermath of the battle,
the Ottoman army occupied the
Hungarian capital Buda as well
as the primary coronation city
of the Empire, Székesfehérvár.
In 1543, the displaced rulers of a
newly-founded empire turned to
Bratislava to be its capital. It was
besieged by Ottomans, but never
conquered.
In 1563, the new King
Maximilian II became the
first Hungarian monarch to be
crowned in St Martin’s Cathedral
in Bratislava, and the church
would continue to serve the same
function for almost 300 years.
Even today, it still has a 300kg
gilded copy of St Stephen’s crown
(the Holy Crown of Hungary) at
the top of its cathedral tower.
After the era of coronations
in Bratislava ended, the crown
jewels were moved from the city.
At the moment, the original
crown is in Hungary, while
Bratislava has only a copy.
The gothic cathedral is now
one of the most popular sights
on the Bratislava tourist trail and
contains numerous fascinating
artefacts in its main building and
catacombs.
There is a permanent
exhibition of relics and liturgical
objects that were once used in
the coronation ceremonies, as
well as a list on the cathedral
wall of the 19 monarchs – ten
kings, one queen and eight
consorts – who were crowned
here.
Maria Theresa
The only queen on the list
is, of course, Maria Theresa,
who was crowned in 1741 and
The centre of the Empire
Crowds always packed the Bratislava streets for the coronation procession
Small golden crowns mark the route of coronation
march in Bratislava
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: coronation city 45
would become one of the most
significant figures in central
European history. Maria
Theresa acceded to the throne
after the death of her father,
Charles III, and only after he
had successfully campaigned
for what became known as the
Pragmatic Sanction of 1713,
which allowed a female to
inherit the possessions of the
Habsburgs.
Although Maria Theresa
took charge of the empire
when it was still recovering
from the plague epidemic
of 1712, and her rule was
blighted by conflicts in the
region, including the war of
Austrian Succession (1740-48)
and the Seven Years’
War (1756-63), her
influence over the
empire was largely
positive. Bratislava,
in particular,
underwent a
period of significant
economic
and social
improvement.
“Maria Theresa
is interesting
for being an
enlightened
ruler; she made
several appealing
changes,” said
the historian
Pavel Dvořák.
“For example,
she introduced
compulsory
school
attendance and
forbade torture.”
Journeyto history
These days, the royal history of
Bratislava is best remembered
by the annual coronation march
through the city, which remains
as close as possible to the
route taken by the Hungarian
monarchs on their coronation
day. The new monarch would
have led a parade on foot through
the streets, via the Main Square
and past Maximilian’s fountain,
which was placed there in 1572.
The tour continued into the
Franciscan Church, where the
king or queen would confer
on selected noblemen the
prestigious Order of the
Golden Spur.
The procession would then
proceed along Michalská Street
towards Michael’s Gate, where
the monarch would climb aboard
a waiting charger and gallop to
the coronation mound on the
banks of the Danube. He would
wave his sword to the north,
east, south and west, promising
to defend his kingdom from all
directions.
In those days, the route
would have been covered by
red canvas, which was torn
down by citizens after the
celebration.
Today’s residents of
Bratislava get to enjoy the
festivities every year, in
June, when actors play the
parts of the courtiers and
monarchs, dressed in
period costume.
“I think it is good that
Bratislava remembers its
history,” said Dvořák.
“A lot of buildings
from that era
have been
demolished,
such as the
towns’ gates,
and old buildings
have been replaced
by new ones. There
were even plans to
bring down Bratislava
Castle during the first
republic [1918-1939].
This is why it is
very important
to recall the
glorious times
of Bratislava.”
- Carmen
Virágová -
Monarchs crowned in Bratislava
1563 – King Maximilian II and his wife, Mary of Spain
1572 – Rudolf II
1608 – Matthias II
1613 - Anne of Tirol, wife of Matthias II
1618 – Ferdinand II
1622 - Eleonora Gonzaga of Spain, second wife of
Ferdinand II
1638 – Maria Anna of Spain, first wife of Ferdinand III
1647 – Ferdinand IV Habsburg
1655 – Maria Eleonora Gonzaga, third wife of
Ferdinand III
1655 – Leopold I
1687 – Joseph I
1712 – Charles III
1714 – Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel,
wife of Charles III
1741 – Maria Theresa
1790 – Leopold II
1808 – Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este, third wife
of Francis II
1825 – Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, fourth wife of
Francis II
1830 – Ferdinand V
Obchodná
17 min
Primaciálne
nám.
Zámocká
Zelená
Hurbanovo
nám.
Klariská
Michalská
Prepoštolská
Františ.nám.
Farská
Riečna
Gorkého
Zámočnícka
Jesenského
Paulínyho
Vajanského nábrežie
Kúpeľná
Uršulínska
Štúrova
Škarniclova
Klobučnícka
Zochova
Palisády
Sedlárska
Veterná
Bradlianska
Svoradova Kamenné
nám.
Panská
Strakova
Nám. SNP
Rybné nám.
Panská
Ventúrska
Kozia
Hviezdoslavovonámestie
Rudnayovo
nám.
Fajnorovo nábr.
Rigeleho
Heydukova
Františkánska
Navŕšku
Kapitulská
Biela
Most SNP
Kolárska
Poštová
Staromestská
Jedlíkova
Rybárskabr.
Dvořákovo nábrežie Rázusovo nábrežie
Palackého
Laurinská
Mostová
Tobrucká
Drevená
Hlavné
nám. Radničná
Baštová
Nedbalova
Župné nám.
Medená
Staromestská
Staromestská
Medená
Nedbalova
Zámocká
Podjavorinskej
Vodnývrch
Žižkova
Pilárikova
Židovská
Židovská
Mikulášska
Beblavého
Konventná
Suché mýto
19min
Coronation
mound
The route taken by monarchs on their coronation day
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/46 bratislava: personalities
Power to the people: investigating
Bratislava’s personalities
For most foreign tourists,a trip to
Bratislava means a stroll through
the historical centre,a visit to some
museums,and a walk up to Castle Hill.
But it is also rewarding while in the city
to delve into its human history,and to
remember some of the personalities that
have either lived or visited throughout
the years.
The city has hosted monarchs,
musicians,sportsmen and scientists,
who have been crowned,performed and
made remarkable discoveries here.Franz
Liszt played one of his first concerts in
Bratislava.MariaTheresa was crowned
Queen of Hungary here.And Jaroslav
Halák stopped his first goal-bound shot
in Bratislava before starring in the NHL.
What else is a city if not a mosaic of
human acts and stories?
City’s diversity
“I love this city,” wrote
the Danish author Hans
ChristianAndersen in
his diarywhile visiting
Bratislava in the mid 19th
century.Andersen would
have encountered a very
different Bratislava to the
way it is today,when
numerous religions
and cultures lived
side-by-side.
“It was a much more
tolerant city than nowadays,”
says the historian Vladimír
Tomčík.“The Christian St
Martin’s Cathedral,an orthodox
church,the neological synagogue,an
orthodox yeshiva and even a Muslim
house of prayer stood next to each other
in one street.”
Tomčík added that the city’s
diversitywas probably also one of the
reasons that Bratislava came to be
visited by so many famous people from
different fields and different countries,
and why people from here have achieved
success abroad. “And they came here
also because of good wine and food as
well,” addedTomčík with a smile.
Rich history of
classical music
When walking through the OldTown,
visitors will no doubt notice a series
of memorial plaques on the walls of
the various palaces,often displaying
Bratislava’s links to a rich history of
classical music.Some of history’s most
significant composers are known to have
played their sonatas at the homes of
Bratislava’s noble families.A 6-year-old
WolfgangAmadeus Mozart is believed to
have given a concert on Ventúrska Street
in 1762.In 1820,a 9-year-old Franz Liszt
performed in what is now the University
Library.Both visited Bratislava at the
beginning of their illustrious careers and
dazzled the local audience.Liszt became
a regular visitor to Bratislava.
During the 18th century,theAustrian
classicist composer Joseph Haydn
worked as a Kapellmeister (in charge of
music) for Prince Nikolaus I Esterházy in
one of Esterházy’s palaces on Kapitulská
Street.(The ruins of the palace still
stand.) In 1772,Haydn conducted the
wedding ball of Queen MariaTheresa’s
daughter in Grassalkovich Palace,today’s
seat of the Slovak President.
Esterházy also hosted Haydn and
Mozart’s student,
Ludwig van
Beethoven,
who visited
Bratislava
several times
and had many friends
here.It is also rumoured
that Johann Strauss composed
the first melodies of his famous
waltz The Blue Danube in Bratislava
in 1852,although the story cannot be
confirmed.
Bratislava also boasts its own
home-grown talent to match
this group of successful visiting
musicians: Johann Nepomuk
Hummel,who was born in 1778
in Nedbalova Street in Bratislava,
where you can find his museum today.
Hummel was a pupil of Mozart and
at the time was equallywell-known
as his teacher and Beethoven.
Forty-eight years after Hummel’s
BRATISLAVA’S SONS AND
DAUGHTERS
Famous people who were born
in Bratislava
1704 – 1777 Johann Segner,
scientist
1725 – 1793 Karl Gottlieb von
Windisch, Hungarian-German
writer
1778 – 1837 Johann Nepomuk
Hummel, composer and
virtuoso pianist
1734 – 1804 Wolfgang von Kempe-
len, inventor and technician
1804 – 1849 Stephan L. Endlicher,
botanist and director of
Botanical Garden of Vienna
1807 – 1849 Lajos Batthyány, first
Prime Minister of Hungary
1819 – 1886 Jakub Palugyay,
baron, winemaker
1844 – 1896 Viktor Oskar Tilgner,
neo-baroque sculptor and
portraitist
1862 – 1947 Philipp Lenard,
physicist and winner of the
Nobel Prize for Physics
1897 – 1967 Schőner Náci,
renowned character of
Bratislava’s street
1951 – 1989 Ondrej Nepela,
Olympic gold and three-time
World champion figure skater
1956 - Peter Šťastný, ice hockey
player and politician
1985 - Jaroslav Halák, ice hockey
goaltender, currently playing for
St. Louis Blues of the NHL
Franz Xaver Messerschmidt -
Character head 3 (Photo: Courtesy
of SNG)
During the mid-20th century, one of
the best loved characters in Brati-
slava’s Old Town was Ignác Lamár,
better known as Schőner Náci
Maria Theresa, who was crowned the Hungarian queen in St
Martin’s Cathedral in 1741, is depicted here with Bratislava
Castle in the background
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: personalities 47
The piano of Johann Nepomuk
Hummel is exhibited in his
former home
Famous people who lived part of
their lives in Bratislava
Maria Theresa (1717 – 1780), the
most famous empress coronated
in Bratislava
Chatam Sófer (Moses Schreiber)
(1762 – 1839), world-renowned
orthodox-Jewish rabbi
Georg Rafael Donner
(1693 – 1741), Austrian sculptor,
pioneer of baroque classicism
Béla Bartók (1881 – 1945),
composer and pianist
Franz Xaver Messerschmidt
(1736 – 1783)
German-Austrian sculptor, most
famous for his „character heads“
death,the Russian pianist and composer
Anton Rubinstein played a memorable
concert in Bratislava to collect money for
Hummel’s memorial.
researchand
invention
Inadditiontothemusicians,numerous
highly-reputedscientistshavewalkedthe
streetsofBratislava,includingThomas
EdisonandAlbertEinstein,whocarriedout
researchinthecity.Nearly200yearsear-
lier,however,theinventorWolfgangvon
Kempelenwasbornherein1734andwor-
kedmuchofhisprolificcareerinthecity.
VonKempelendesignedpumpstocarry
watertoBratislava’scastleandconstructed
fountainsinSchőnbrunninVienna.He
builtapontoonbridge
overtheDanubeand
inventedatype-writerfor
blindpeople.
His two most popu-
lar inventions even made
it to several royal courts
in Europe.He invented
a machine called “the
Turk”which could
reputedlyplaychess and
defeated number of great
chess players across the
world,including Napo-
leon Bonaparte,among
others.The originalwas
destroyed bya fire in a
museum in Philadelphia
and its mechanism
remains unknown,
leading to speculation
over the past fewyears that itwas most
likelyonlya trick cabinet that contained
a chess-playing human-being.However,
Kempelen’s Speaking Machinewas no
such fraud: itwas the first fullyfunctional
speech synthesis machine,which used be-
llows,a set of lungs and bagpipe to imitate
human’s speech.
Face ofthe city
But not onlyfamous people shaped the
face of the city.During the mid-20th
century,one of the best loved
characters in Bratislava’s
OldTownwas Ignác Lamár,
better known as Schőner
Náci. Lamár grew
up in a poor family
andworked as
confectioner’s
apprentice and
shoemaker,
amongnumerous
manual jobs.But
he dreamed of
becoming a clown
in the circus,and began to
wear a
white tie and
a pair of patent
leather shoes that
had been given to
his father bya rich
lady.In this elegant
garb,with top hat
and cane,hewalked
the streets of the Old
Town from Michael’s
Gate to the Danube
embankment,
greetingwomen
with thewords “I
kissyour hand” in
three languages:
Slovak,German and
Hungarian.Schőner
Náci also used to
sing his own songs
to ladies in the cafés,where theyoften
offered him coffee for free. Although this
unforgettable Bratislava character died
in 1967,you can still meet him today on
the streets of the OldTown.His silver
statue still greets tourists a few metres
from the Main Square,next to his
beloved Café Mayer. - Lukáš Onderčanin -
A card from Ludwig van Beethoven’s concert in Bratislava
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
Photo: Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy
Franz Liszt (left) and Géza Zichy
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/48 bratislava: legends
The home of myths
and legends
Michael’s Gate, the last remaining
gate in the mediaeval fortificati-
on, and location for the legend
of Peter and the plague.
Today it is a home to a
museum of arms.
The lives of people around
the world are forever
intertwined with the
legends,myths and
ghost stories that
permeate their land.
Every city has
its mysterious
places,its
age-old yarns
and its historical
characters,
whose stories
have been
twisted and
embellished
into tales
to tell the
grandchildren
or to liven up a
trip around
the city
streets.
The capital of Slovakia is no
exception. Indeed, seemingly every
building, square or street in Bratislava
has its own long and unlikely tale. Few
stand up to much historical scrutiny;
fewer still are proven.
And there are variations on every
theme. But each adds to the unique
flavour of this vibrant city, and so here
is a quick primer to Bratislava’s myths
and legends.
The Giant’sTable
We start with the symbol of Bratislava:
its castle,whose appearance resembles
a table turned upside-down,its four
towers like legs in each of its corners.
That,if you believe the myth,is exactly
what once happened to the castle,in the
dim and distant past.
One night, the residents of the
castle awoke from tormented sleep.All
the castle’s paintings were on the floor
and the lamps were destroyed. Nobody
knew what had happened during the
night and the queen was furious.
She called for an old witch to tell
her what had happened, and the witch
pointed the finger at Klingsor, a giant
wizard,who lived in Transylvania.
Klingsor sometimes travelled to
Germany and passed close by the castle.
One night, he had picked it up and
turned it upside down to use as a table
so he could rest.
The queen instructed the witch to
tell Klingsor never to use the castle as a
table again.As yet,he has not returned.
But who knows what may happen in
the future...
MICHAEL’S GATE
One of the most visited places in the
Old Town is Michael’s Gate below
Michael’s Tower, the last remaining
gate into the city from the mediaeval
fortifications.
At least three popular myths and
legends are centred here,but the most
interesting story is about the guardian
of the gate.
It was 4:00 and the people in the
citywere sleeping.Only the guardian
of the gate,whose name was Peter,was
awake.Suddenly two men came to the
gate,one of them carrying a scythe,and
told Peter to open up.He refused and
said it was too early.But they told him
they had very important work to do for
the lord.
The two men gave one golden ducat
to Peter and finally he was persuaded
to open the gate.But as soon as they
entered the city,the men began a
murder spree,killing Peter first.They
were the carriers of the plague that then
swept through Bratislava.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: legends 49
Roland’s Song
The fountain in Bratislava’s main square
is officially named after Maximilian II,
the Hungarian king of the 16th century.
But it is commonly known as the Roland
Fountain after a knight who features in
another popular Bratislava legend.
Roland was a brave knight,who had
a wonderful sword named Durandal.
But he grew to be best known in the city
not for his heroic exploits on the field of
battle,but for a love-song he sang while
sitting in the square,dedicated to his
love Olifanta.
The children of the city loved
Roland’s song,but the knight was
summoned back to France,taking
his wonderful singing with him.The
children found they could not sleep
without the song,so the mayor of the
city built a fountain with Roland’s
statue at its centre,and whose
trickling water would sound like the
song and lull the children to sleep.
Legend has it that the fountain is
magic,and that on December 31
everyyear,the statue of Roland
turns his head to the town hall
and bows to the lords who fought
for the city.The knight also
comes to life on Good Friday,
when he waves his sword to all
four sides of the world.
However,the only person
that can witness the miracle is
the one born in Bratislava but
who has never hurt anyone.
Napoleon’straces
in Bratislava
Legend has it that a young
French soldier named Johann
Evangelist Hubert from
Champagne when recovering
from wounds he had
suffered during the failed
Napoleon’s expedition
to Russia in Pressburg that is called
Bratislava today fell in love with and
married the pretty nurse Paulína.As
he knew secrets how to produce the
famous champagne wine and saw
excellent local wines,he established
here a sparkling wine factory in 1825.
The legend closes that at that time
it was the first factory in Europe
outside of France that manufactured
champagne using the original French
recipe.The reality is that the first
factory in Europe outside of France
where sparkling wine was produced
following the original French recipe
was really founded in Bratislava,but
not by Johann Evangelist Hubert,but
by local burghers Johann Fischer and
Michael Schönbauer.The Hubert family
entered the business only later,giving
it its name.
But the sparking wine
production,even thought it has
moved outside Bratislava to
Sereď,it is not the only trace,
legendary or real,Napoleon
left in Bratislava.Each year in
May or June fans of military
history re-enact fights from a
famous battle of 1809 during
which Napoleon failed to
conquer Bratislava at the
same place at which it took
place,the Sad Janka Kráľa city
park on the Petržalka bank of
the Danube River under the
title Ubránili Sme Sa! Or We
Managed to Defend Ourselves!
A cannon ball in the wall of
the OldTown Hall’s tower
as well as the nearby
sculpture of a Napoleonic
soldier leaning on a
bench,a popular photo-op
for tourists,recall the
Napoleonic siege,too.
- Karolína Kučerová -
Each year in May or June fans
of military history re-enact fights
from a famous battle of 1809
during which Napoleon failed to
conquer Bratislava
The Roland fountain, officially
named after Maximilian II, is cen-
tral to a story about the sleepless
children of Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/50 bratislava: MUSEUMS, GALLERIES AND THEATRES
Bratislava is not only the administrative
capital of Slovakia,it is also the centre
of the country’s cultural life.If you are
an incurable museumgoer or gallery
lover,Bratislava,with plentiful such
institutions and a busy event schedule,
will suit you verywell.
Galleries in Bratislava are mostly
situated in ex-palaces of noblemen,so
the historical experience mixes with
art,both old and modern.Since there
are so many of these palaces here,there
are many art galleries too,the best of
which are the Slovak National Gallery,
the Nedbalka Gallery,Danubiana and
Bratislava City Gallery.
National gallery
The biggest and most important
gallery is,unsurprisingly,the Slovak
National Gallery in downtown Bratislava.
Though currently under reconstruc-
tion,many of its exhibitions are still
accessible,albeit in closer quarters of
Esterházy palace,coffee-house Berlinka
and bookshop Ex Libris.In Esterházy
palace,works come from the mediaeval,
Gothic and Baroque periods,as well as
more contemporary art.The first floor
is dedicated to temporary exhibitions
usuallywith some interactive parts for
visitors.There are many regular events,
some of them dedicated to foreigners in-
cluding commented expositions Sunday
Rest and Open Studio projects of Ilona
Nemeth from FineArtsAcademy.
City gallery
In the centre of the OldTown,the
Bratislava City Gallery occupies Pálffy
Palace as well as Mirbach Palace.It hosts
a rich collection of older works plus an
array of contemporary pieces.
A permanent exhibition
entitled “Stories and
Phenomena: 20th Century
Slovak FineArt II” offers a
glimpse of modern art.It
comprises two installations:
“Passage” by Matej Krén and
“Villa of Mysteries” byAlex
Mlynárčik,both intriguing.
“Passage” is essentially
a pathway through an
installation of mirrors and
books,which create an
illusion of an infinite space
around the visitor,who is
invited to walk along it.“Villa
of Mysteries” is made also
of mirrors and paintings
that together create a maze,
bathed in red.It is unlike
anything else in the gallery.
Galleries:
3Slovak National Gallery
page: 12
18Nedbalka Gallery
page: 15
26Mirbach Palace
(Bratislava City Gallery)
page: 20
35Pálffy Palace
(Bratislava City Gallery)
page: 22
99Danubiana Meulensteen
Art Museum
page: 39
CKunsthalle Bratislava
Námestie SNP 12
www.kunsthallebratislava.sk
Wed 12:00-20:00,
Thu-Sun 12:00-19:00 free
Museums
2Natural History Museum
(Slovak National Museum)
page: 12
14Bratislava City Museum;
Museum of Viticulture; Museum
of Historical Interiors
all museums are located
in the Old Town Hall complex
page: 16
27Museum of Weapons
(Michael’s Gate)
page: 20
28Museum of Pharmacy
(Red Crayfish Pharmacy)
page: 20
Culture everywhere you look
The Nedbalka Gallery, which opened in 2012 and houses 20th century Slovak art, is referred to as Bratislava’s Guggenheim
3
2
4
8
14
C1
C
C2
26
28
27
43
45
42
47
35
18
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: MUSEUMS, GALLERIES AND THEATRES 51
Museums
42Historical Museum
(Bratislava Castle) page: 26
43MuseumofJewishCulture
Židovská 17; map B 4
0.8km(10min)
Å+421(0)22049-0101
G www.snm.sk
Mon-Fri11:00-16:30,Sun
11:00-16:30€7eéWC
45Museum of Clocks
(House of the Good Shepherd)
page: 28
47Archaeological Museum; Music
Museum; Museum of Carpathian
German Culture; Museum of
Hungarian Culture in Slovakia
all museums are located in
Zuckermandel page: 28
C1Johann Nepomuk
Hummel Museum
Klobučnícka 2; map C 3
(c 4) 0.16 km (2 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-3888
G www.muzeum.bratislava.sk
Tue-Fri 10:00-17:00, Sat-Sun
11:00-18:00 €3.3
In addition to these installations,
there are also permanent exhibitions
showcasing Central European Painting
and Sculpture 1800–1918,the Celtic mint
in Bratislava,Tapestries from England,
and a Picture Gallery.Combined they
create an incredibly diverse collection
- and they are not restricted only to the
city centre.
Nedbalka
“It reminds me of the Guggenheim
gallery in NewYork,where I was sitting
in front of Manet’s Before the Mirror
for more than 30 minutes,” said Jana
Meňušová,an enthusiastic traveller,
sitting in the café of the Gallery
Nedbalka,surrounded by books about
Slovak painters.“It is much smaller but
also much cheaper.”
The gallery opened in 2012, tucked
away in an anonymous building on
Nedbalova Street in the Old Town.
Its riches only become apparent
after paying a €4 entrance fee and
proceeding to the first floor,when you
are suddenly in a circular open-plan
gallery surrounded by paintings and
sculptures of Slovak artists mostly
from the 20th century.The top floor
is given over to the work of Ladislav
Medňanský, from which you can peer
over another three levels of galleries
including the work of Ján Fulla, Ladislav
Guderna or the Galanda group, among
others.The entrance hall is used for
temporary exhibitions.The gallery is
fully accessible to disabled visitors via a
lift to each floor.
Danubiana
On the northern corner of a windy,
artificial island in the middle of
the Danube,15 km from downtown
Bratislava,is the Danubiana
MeulensteenArt Museum.This nest of
modern art is accessible via car or the No.
91 bus from the SNP Bridge to Čunovo -
followed by a 4-km walk along the dam.
On Sundays during the summer season
it is also possible to take a boat trip from
Bratislava city centre directly to the
island,with fares including the gallery
entrance fee.
The reward is a magnificent view of
the Danube accompanied by the statues
in Danubiana Park,plus a large,airy
exhibition hall,featuring a constantly
changing roster of contemporary art.
Museums
Numerous museums dotted across
Slovakia are governed by the central
Slovak National Museum organisation,
and eight of them are in Bratislava.
These include the Natural History
Museum,permanently exhibiting a huge
number of objects of living and non-
living nature,alongside other different
temporary exhibitions.It is located on
the embankment,close to the port and
tiny park.
The Town Hall Museum focuses on
the history of the city harum
Danubiana is Slovakia’s island of
modern art
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/52 bratislava: MUSEUMS, GALLERIES AND THEATRES
Museums
C2Arthur Fleischmann Museum
Biela6;mapC3(c4)
0.13 km (2 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5413-1211 (museum)
G www.muzeum.bratislava.sk
Tue-Fri 10:00-16:30, Sat-Sun
11:00-17:30 €3.3 å eWC
C2Museum of Trade
Biela6;mapC3(c4)
0.13 km (2 min) G
www.muzeumobchoduba.sk
Tue-Fri 9:00-17:00,
Sat-Sun 10:00-17:00 €3 e
76Museum of Transport
Šancova 1; map C 1
1.5 km (20 min) 3.6
km (9 min) u SAV v 21,
25, 32, 34, 63, 64, 83, 84, 93,
141, 184, 204, 206, 209, 212
Å +421 (0)2 5244-4163
G www.muzeumdopravy.com
Tue-Sun 10:00-16:30
€3.3e é WC
81Devín Castle page: 37
96Gerulata page: 39
Museum of Croatian Culture
in Slovakia Istrijská 68;
map F 4 16 km (17 min)
u Novoveská v 20, 21, 28
Å +421 (0)2 2049-3101
G www.snm.sk
Tue-Fri 11:00-16:30 Sat-Sun
12:00-16:30 €2 WC
Classical Music
4Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra
(Reduta) page: 12
8Historical building SND
page: 13
57New building SND
page: 30
92Aréna Theatre
page: 38
Žižkova Street, right under castle
hill, is a home to four museums: the
Archaeological Museum, the Music
Museum and two others focused on
the lives of Hungarian and Carpathian
German minorities.There are also
museums of Jewish and Croatian
cultures in other parts of the city, also
reflecting the life of ethnic minorities in
Slovakia. Bratislava Castle is also part
of the Slovak National Museum family,
and houses temporary and permanent
exhibitions that tell the story both of
the fortress itself and the history of
the territory known today as Slovakia.
A tour inside concludes with a trip
up the Crown Tower, which affords
magnificent views over the city.
The Museum ofTransport,next to
the main railway station,hosts a variety
of vehicles and accessories,such as old
steam locomotives,snowploughs and
other railway machines.Old warehouses
are also stocked with cars,both old
and modern,classics and prototypes,
as well as motorbikes and bicycles.In
short,everything that a transport or
engineering nut might desire.
TheTown Hall museums in the Old
Town Hall focus on the history of the city
as well as offering exhibits of wine and
furniture in the nearbyApponyi Palace,
where in cellars several winetasting
programme are available.Weapons
are presented in Michael’s Gate which
is close to the Museum of Pharmacy
located in the yellow building behind
the gate.Closer to the castle is the
picturesque House of the Good Shepherd
which houses the Museum of Clocks.
Two other museums in the historical
centre are devoted to musician Johann
Nepomuk Hummel and sculptorArthur
Fleischmann,both of whom were born
in Bratislava.The city is also in charge of
managing Devín Castle and the ruined
foundations of a Roman military camp
called Gerulata in Rusovce.
Musicandtheatre
Cultural life is also rich in Bratislava as
far as concerts, festivals and exhibitions
are concerned. During the summer
months, a programme called Cultural
Summer includes variety of concerts
and happenings all over the Old Town.
The highlight of every season is the re-
enactment of coronations of Hungarian
kings and queens.The Bratislava
Jazz Days festival also draws the best
jazzmen to Slovakia from all over the
world.
Year round, the Slovak National
Theatre is the jewel in Bratislava’s
theatrical crown. It is housed in two
buildings: the ornate, historical one
on Hviezdoslavovo námestie (square)
and a modern,well-appointed new
construction next to Eurovea. Opera
and ballets admirers from abroad
come to Bratislava to see unforgettable
performances, such as Don Giovanni,
Nabucco or Swan Lake.The home of
the Slovak Philharmonic orchestra
also re-opened in 2012 after extensive
reconstruction. It offers a varied
programme during a season that lasts
from September to June.
- Sanela Kurtek, Ivan Belko, Ján Pallo -
Bratislava Castle offers both a magnificent view and exhibitions
that tell the story of the territory known today as Slovakia
Photo: Courtesy of SND
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: BEST DEALS 53
FOOD
a Alotofrestaurantshavea
fixeddailymenu(typicallysoup
andamaindish)foraround€4
aTheall-you-can-eatplaceswhich
areclosetothehistoricalcentreinBra-
tislava:Chineserestaurant,Laurinská
3;all-you-can-eatMon-Fri11:00-15:00
(€6.5);GaneshUtsav,Vysoká2/A
(Mon-Fri11:00-16:00(€5.5),
Sat-Sun11:00-16:00(€6));
Sajado,Pribinova8(Eurovea,
pricefrom€10.8); Asianrestaurant,
Einsteinova18(AuparkShopping
Park,pricefrom€6.89)
aThe food courts in Eurovea,
Aupark and Central shopping
centres, which are close to the
historical centre, offer many different
meals and fast foods
aGood,cheapChinesefoodcanbe
foundinrestaurantsonObchodná,
ŠpitálskaandLaurinskáStreets
aLacinka–Palacinka,atŠancová18
(closetothetrainstation),isasociali-
sticstyleplacethatoffersthebestand
cheapestpancakesinthecity.Aplain
pancakecosts€0.5(openMon-Fri
11:00-21:00,Sun14:00-21:00)
aGrocerystorestendtoopen
from9:00to21:00,buttheTesco
hypermarketsinPetržalkaandZlaté
Pieskyareopen24-hours,aswell
asasmallersupermarketHviezda
atNámestie1.Mája(mapC2).
Anotheroptionistoorderyourfood
onlineatpotravinydomov.itesco.sk
GENERAL
aTheBratislavatouristofficeoffers
adiscountcard,calledBratislavaCity
Card,whichallowsvisitorsfreetravel
bypublictransportanddiscountsfrom
5percentupwardsatparticipating
museums,galleries,andrestaurants.
Thecardisvalidforuptothreedays
andcosts€16.Thecardalsoincludes
aguidedtouraroundthecity,which
startseverydayat14:00.Bookingis
necessary(+421(0)25935-6651,
www.visitbratislava.com).
aFreetourstotheOldTownand
beyondleavetwicedaily(11:00and
15:00)frombesidethestatueof
HviezdoslavinHviezdoslavovoSquare
(www.befreetours.com).
aThefirstSundayofthemonth-
statemuseumsandgalleriesarefree
toenter.TheseincludetheSlovak
NationalGallery,theMuseumof
Transport,aswellastensitesofthe
SlovakNationalMuseumacrossthe
region,whichincludeBratislavaand
ČervenýKameňcastlesor theNatural
HistoryMuseum.Thankstosponsors
oftheSlovakNationalGalleryentrance
isfreeyear-round.
aThereareafewfreeWiFizones
acrossthecity:Primaciálnenámestie,
MedickáGarden,Rázusovoand
Fajnorovowaterfront.Youcanalsoget
onlineinbusesdisplayingaWiFisign.
Seealso:www.wificafespots.com.
aFormorediscounttipsvisitwww.
zlavadna.sk,www.morezliav.sk,
www.zlavomat.skorothershopping
websites.Althoughthesesitesarein
Slovak,youwillbewelladvisedtofind
anativespeakertohelpasafteryou
makeanonlinepayment,youwill
receiveavoucherofferingdiscountsat
avarietyofrestaurantsorfitnessand
wellnesscentres.
aBratislavaprevšetkých(Bratislava
forEveryone)launches,inthesecond
halfofApril,the touristseason,special
entertainmentprogrammesandfree
entrytoselectedvenues.
TRANSPORT
ANDACCOMMODATION
aCheaperticketsareavailableonBrati-
slava’spublictransportsystemifyoubuy
foralongerperiodinadvance.Bratislava
citycardholderscanridethecity’spublic
transportforfree.
aForvisitorswhowanttoseethecityfrom
tram,theycantakenumber5fromthetram
stopPoštová(atObchodnáStreet)tothe
stopnamedParkkultúry(PKO),outsidethe
modernRiverParkcomplexandthentake
tramnumber4or6backtothecitycentre.
(www.dpb.sk).
aHostelsclosetothecitycentreinclude:
DowntownBackpacker’sHostel
(www.backpackers.sk),HostelBlues
(www.hostelblues.sk),HostelPatio
(www.patiohostel.com),HostelPossonium
(www.possonium.sk),HostelSvoradov
(www.hostelbratislavasvoradov.sk),Hostel
Mansard(www.hostelmansard.com),City
Hostel(www.cityhostel.sk),HydePark
Hostel(www.hyde-park.sk),A1Hostel
(www.a1hostelbratislava.hostel.com).
aThereareseveralwaystovisitVienna
fromBratislava,including:byboat(€29fora
returnticket),bytrain(€14return),orbybus
(€8return).Returnticketsarecheaperthan
twosingles.
a Ryanair is the cheapest carrier flying
to Bratislava’s international airport, but
also check out other low-cost airlines’
flights to Vienna. It is less than an
hour away from Bratislava,with good
transport links.
a Rail transport within Slovakia is free
of charge for all students and pensioners
from the EU.It is required to obtain a card
from the cash desk at the station and then
obtain a free ticket for each ride.
SUMMER SEASON
aInthesummeryoucanswimforfreein
variouslakes:Kuchajda,VeľkýDraždiak,
andRusovce.
aEverySaturdayandSundayat13:30boat
visitsČunovo,homeoftheDanubianaMeu-
lensteenArtMuseum.Theboatreturnfare
(€12)alsoincludesentrancetothegallery.
Best deals and discounts in Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/54 bratislava: FOR 100 EUROS
14Old Town Hall
page: 16
17Tourist Information Centre
Klobučnícka 2; map C 3
(c 4) 0.16 km (2 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5441-9410
www.visitbratislava.com
42Bratislava Castle
page: 26
56Eurovea shopping centre
page: 30
58Blue Church
page: 31
65Presidential Palace
page: 33
71Medická záhrada (garden)
Ul. 29. augusta/Špitálska; map
D, E 2 1.2 km (14 min)
2.1 km (5 min)
u Mariánska v 4, 9
Apr-Sep 7:00-21:00,
Oct-Mar 10:00-18:00 free
77Slavín page: 34
Bungee jump from the
Lafranconi Bridge
Lafranconi Bridge 5.7 km
(7 min) u Lafranconi v 4, 5,
6, 9, 28, 29, 30, 31, 37, 39, 131,
133 Å +421 (0)2 6252-8077
www.actionzazitky.sk €11
Many foreigners come to Slovakia for a
weekend to have fun, enjoy the summer
days and to try a taste of a new country.
And they also hope to do so without
breaking the bank. Bratislava is ideal
for bargain travel, and with a few tips
from the locals or fellow travellers,
you can find accommodation, food and
entertainment for little more than €100
for the weekend.
“Bratislava is a cheap city,” said a
Polish tourist named Mateusz,visiting
Bratislavawith his girlfriend Gabriela.
“You can drink a beer in a restaurant
here for €1.5,which is cheaper than in
Krakow.”
Youwill,of course,need a place to
stayand there are several hostels not far
from the citycentre.Onlythree or four
minutes byfoot from the train station
is Hostel Possonium on Šancová Street
(beds from €8.5),which offers quick and
easyaccess to all the main sights and a
free dailywalking tour to the citycentre,
15 minutes away.
Even closer to the OldTown are
Hostel Blues and Hostel Patio on Špitálska
Street,where a bed in a dorm roomwill
cost from €12.9 (Blues) or €12 (Patio).The
Downtown Backpacker’s Hostel
on Panenská Street
has
beds from €10.Hostel Mansard (beds
from €15),CityHostel (beds from €13.75)
and Hyde Park Hostel (beds from €14) are
located on Obchodná Street.
Getting around Bratislava is relatively
simple.It is a small and manageable size
and a lot of attractions are inwalking
distance from one another.However,if
you prefer to use public transport,then
the €12 Bratislava citycard (www.visit-
bratislava.com) is a good choice.It offers
unlimited use of the buses and trams,as
well as discounts for several cityattrac-
tions.The best time to come to Bratislava
is probablyaweekendwhich includes
the first Sundayof everymonth,when
all state museums and state galleries in
the cityoffer free admission.But even at
other times,a lot ofwhatyou’ll find here
is inexpensive.
day ONE - Saturday
A new day can bring new excitement,
and daredevils might like to try a
bungee jump off the Lafranconi Bridge,
for only €11 (www.actionzazitky.sk), if
booked through discount companies.
The adrenaline boost will give you
the energy to last the next few days.
Perhaps to slow down and relax a bit
you can take tram number 4 or 9 to the
Mariánska stop and visit the Medická
záhrada (garden) and historical
Ondrejský cintorín (cemetery) both on
29. augusta Street (pull-out map E 3,4).
This site offers a pleasant walk through
the gardens and the cemetery as well as
a free WiFi zone and an opportunity to
share new experiences online.
The Blue Church at Bezručova
Street, only a 10-minute walk from the
cemetery in the direction of the river
and the Eurovea shopping centre, of-
fers an interesting photo opportunity
and takes travellers to a neighbour-
hood with plenty of options for lunch,
including Pizza Mizza and the Secondi
Pasta Bar which serves excellent pan-
cakes stuffed with whipped cream for
only about €3.
Bratislava on a budget:
Aweekend for €100
The “Magio Beach”, which
provides a free summer cinema
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: FOR 100 EUROS 55
Magio Beach
Tyršovo nábrežie; map C 4
2 km (24 min) u Aupark
v 80, 83, 84, 88, 91, 93, 94,
191a May-Sep å WC
Divný Janko Restaurant
Jozefská 2; map C 2
Restaurant Bratislavský
Meštiansky Pivovar
Dunajská 21; map D 3
www.mestianskypivovar.sk
Restaurant Kláštorný Pivovar
Nám. SNP 8; map C 3 (c 2)
Alternatively, you can bring a
picnic to enjoy on a huge green area by
the river, where you will also find some
free exercise machines to work off the
calories. It is an attractive spot, and
totally free, just to laze around.
Bratislava city card holders
have the opportunity to join a free
daily walking tour around the city
centre, starting at 14:00 in front of
the main Tourist Information Centre
at Klobučnícka Street, and lasting an
hour. You can also pick up countless
leaflets and guides to attractions in the
office. (You will need to make a reserva-
tion for the tour, either by e-mail to
citycard@visitbratislava.com or in
person, at least two hours in advance.)
Alternatively, www.befreetours.com
also offers a free city walking tour.
Several museums are scattered
through the OldTown,and €6 will get
you a bulk ticket to three of the best: the
OldTown tower,the OldTown Hall and
theApponyi Palace at Main Square.The
last entrance is at 14:30 on weekdays and
an hour later at weekends.
After a day of explorations,head to
Kláštorný pivovar,a micro-brew pub,at
8 Nám.SNP (square),about five minutes
walk fromTesco.You can get a good local
meal for €8 and a signature beer for
about €1.9,then head down to the Old
Bridge or SNP Bridge to watch the sun
set over the Danube and take a riverside
stroll.
There are other options for food in
this area.If you wander to the other
side of the Old Bridge you’ll find “Magio
Beach”,where there are stands selling
food and drinks.The prices are slightly
higher than average,but there’s nothing
stopping you from bringing your own
refreshment and watching a film at the
“summer cinema”,which is free.
“You’ll need to come before the film
begins,so you can find seats,but if the
weather is good,it’s a perfect place to
watch a film with friends,” said Peter,
from Stropkov.
dayTWO - Sunday
There are plenty of places to visit that
do not demand any entrance fee.For
instance,a walk up to the Slavín war
memorial and military cemetery costs
nothing,yet it affords a splendid view
over the city and is an excellent place to
start a tour to get your bearings.
On the way back to the city centre,
you can pop into the grounds of Brati-
slava Castle.You will need to pay to go
inside and visit the historical exhibitions
(except on that first Sunday of the
month) but you can explore the sur-
roundings for nothing,and again survey
the city and the Danube from on high.
Awalk (or trolleybus ride) down from
the castle can pass through Hodžovo
námestie (square),where you can see
the Presidential Palace,guarded by the
distinctive sentries.At 13:00,you can
watch the changing of the guard.Close
by,is the Divný Janko restaurant at
Jozefská Street,which offers good cheap
food (even if the service can be erratic).
Remember that a lot of restaurants
offer a two-course lunchtime menu for
about €4.
Before you start to pack your luggage
for home,why not take an afternoon
boat trip to Čunovo,which includes a
visit to the Danubiana gallery of modern
art.The boat leaves at 13:30 every Sat-
urday and Sunday during the summer
season from a jetty outside Eurovea.A
return ticket costs €12 (€10 for conces-
sions) and includes entrance to the
gallery. City card holders can enjoy a
further 15 percent discount.
If modern art is not your thing,you
can take a boat in the other direction to
explore the ruins of Devín Castle. Catch
the 29 bus back to the city centre.All in
all, that’s two days’ accommodation,
sustenance and entertainment with
change from €100. Save up again, and
there’s plenty more to see next time.
- Martina Raábová -
Ondrejský cintorín is a historical
cemetery, national cultural
monument and final resting place
of several significant Slovak
personalities
Boat trips can be a nice addition to
a weekend in Bratislava
Photo: Courtesy of Bratislava Region Tourism
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/56 bratislava: NIGHT LIFE
Everycityhas a club,but not everycity
has a Subclub.Deep in a former bunker
beneath Bratislava Castle is one of the
city’s most unusual night spots,which
has been the alma mater of Slovak
nightclubs for two generations.It is
a place known across Europe for its
deep,loud and steadyrumble,where
the founding fathers of avibrant
underground culture dust off theirvinyl
to play.
Diversityof genres
Subclub is onlyone out of hundreds of
places to spend a buzzing night in Brati-
slava,a citythat has often been dubbed
Party-Slava for itsvast arrayof bars and
clubs.You can spend nights quietlysi-
pping drymartini,or rockingwildlyinto
tomorrow.Bratislava maybe charming
and tranquil during the day,but Party-
-Slava is a different place entirely.
Subclub,formerlyknown also as U
Club,started out as avenue for alternative
rock concerts,where the audience sat on
emptybeer crates.However,more and
more DJswere invited to playsets here
and the cornerstone of the Slovak techno,
house,drum ‘n’ bass and
jungle music scenewas
laid in place.
“Subclub was the
first post-communist
club in Slovakia with a
completely differ-
ent music style than
anywhere else,” said
Branislav Kŕč,who was
one of the club’s owners
for six years and is its
current music manager.
“English DJs all came
over here,just so they
could play unorthodox
techno,which they
simply couldn’t play in
England.”
Today the range of performances
and genres in Subclub stretches from
indie to rock‘n’roll, through reggae and
both traditional and progressive bass
music, as well as good old-fashioned
techno.
“The best thing about this club is
definitely the diversity of genres,” said
Juraj Šimkovič,who visits regularly.
“I’ve experienced different kinds of
fantastic concerts here and today I’m
here because it’s on fire even though it’s
the middle of the week.”
Multicultural
Back in the city, a multicultural hub is
emerging on Karpatská Street,which
is now home to about half a dozen bars
and clubs in which congregate a variety
of subcultures.Arguably the wildest and
most famous venue over the past couple
of decades has been Randal Club,which
offers rock‘n’roll, punk and metal music
in front of a large and loyal audience.
“On regular nights it is to be avoided
unlessyouwish to spendyour time in
the companyof underagewannabes,”
said Zuzana Hircová,a student from
Bratislava,dressed all in black.“However
if a trulyexceptional artist is to perform
here allyour negativitysuddenlyunites
with the others andvanishes to produce a
contagious and revolutionaryenergythat
is beyondwords and makesyou realise
that punk and metal are not genres of
music butways of life.”
Slightlymore peaceful,but no less
interesting,is the a4 – nultýpriestor,also
on Karpatská Street.It is an established
culture project that moved into these
premises in 2012.a4 constantlyexpands
the boundaries of contemporaryculture,
with artists of anyvocation given the
opportunityto present their talents.It has
hosted theatrical performances,concerts,
exhibitions,parties,lectures and a Sunday
communitymarket.
Clubs mentioned
in the article
23Kultúrne centrum Dunaj
www.kcdunaj.sk; Nedbalova 3, map
C 3 (c 2); culture and music centre
46Subclub; www.subclub.sk;
Nábrežie arm. gen. L. Svobodu; map
A 3; music club
74A4; www.a4.sk; Karpatská 2,
map D 1; culture and music centre
74Majestic Music Club
www.majestic.sk; Karpatská 2
map D 1; music club
74Randal club
www.randalclub.eu; Karpatská 2
map D 1; rock music
Y1The Club; Hotel Park Inn
Rybné nám. 1, map C 4; disco club
Other clubs
in the historical centre
Y2Rio Grande Restaurant
www.medusagroup.sk; Hviezdosla-
vovo námestie 15, map C 4; night
bar, live DJs
Y3Lemon Tree; www.lemontree.
sk; Hviezdoslavovo námestie 7
map C 4; Rum Club, Sky Bar
Y4Le Club; www.medusagroup.
sk; Hviezdoslavovo námestie 25,
map C 4; night bar, live DJs
Y5Trafo Music Bar
www.medusagroup.sk;
Erdödy Palace, Ventúrska 1,
map C 3 (c 3); music bar
Y6Masquerade Club
www.masqueradeclub.sk
Ventúrska 16, map C 3 (c 3)
lounge bar and club
Y7The Dubliner Irish Pub
www.irish-pub.sk; Sedlárska 6,
map C 3 (c 3); live music
Y8Barrock
www.medusagroup.sk
Sedlárska 1, map C 3 (c 3); rock
Y9Kabaret Cats Night Club;
www.kabaretbratislava.sk;
Michalská 2 (Old City Hotel
passage), map C 3 (c 3)
strip club
Sleepy Bratislava by day;
raucous Party-Slava by night
Dunaj cultural centre offers a wide variety of events including club nights, literary readings, visual art exhibitions and discussions
Y11
Y9
Y8
Y7
Y6
Y5 Y4
Y3
Y2
Y10
Y12
Y15
Y14
23
46
Y13
Y1
Photo: František Halás
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: NIGHT LIFE 57
Y10U Dežmára;
Klariská 1, map C 3 (c 3);
music club
Y11Infiniti Rock Cafe;
www.musicbar.sk; Michalská 9,
map C 3 (c 3); rock
Y12Primi; www.primi.sk/
Michalska; Michalská19-21,
map C 3 (c 1); disco, live DJs
Y13Havana Café;
www.havanacafe.sk; Michalská 26,
map C 3 (c 1); Cuban music
Y14Music bar Priatelia;
www.musicbarpriatelia.sk
Hurbanovo nám. 6
map C 3 (c 2); music bar
Y15Channels
Župné nám. 2,
map C 3 (c 1); disco club
Clubs - walking distance
from the historical centre
Ateliér Babylon;
www.babylonatelier.sk;
Námestie SNP 14, map D 3;
theatre & music club
British Rock Stars;
Nám 1. mája 14, map C 2
live music club
Klub Dole
www.klubdole.sk; Námestie SNP 30,
map C 3 (c 2); music club
Moulin Rouge;
www.stripdance.sk; Cintorínska 32,
map E 3; strip club
Nu Spirit Club; www.nuspirit.sk;
Pasáž Luxor - Štúrova 3,
map D 3; jazz, funk, soul
Pub u zeléneho stromu;
www.uzelenehostromu.sk;
Vysoká 26, map D 2; music club
Radosť Music Club;
www.mojaradost.sk;
Obchodná 48, map D 2; chill-out
Rock OK; www.rockok.sk;
Šafárikovo nám. 4,
map D 4; music bar
“I feel more thanwelcome to just
come in and enjoya fewdrinks in a lovely
bar that is open everydayof theweek and
has the friendliest and most stimulating
vibe in the city,” said Dominik Holíč,a
student from Bratislava,who alsoworks
in a music shop.
Asimilar place can be found on
Nedbalova Street,in the citycentre.The
cultural centre Dunaj serves a dailymul-
ticultural menu,including live concerts,
club nights,literature,visual arts,theatre
and discussionswith interesting person-
alities.There is also a bar and a terrace,
offering the bestviews of the OldTown.
Dance club
At the other end of the spectrum,The
Club,situated in the Park Inn Danube
Hotel,is one of the most luxurious,high-
-design and fashion-conscious dance
clubs in Bratislava.It is an elite Bratislava
night spot and celebrityhang-out,hosting
all the beautiful people and serving drinks
at eye-watering prices.
“It’s true that this place is quite
expensive,but it definitelyprovides the
best entertainment in Bratislava and so
it’sworth all the money,” said FilipTimár,
a student from Bratislava.
Thisexclusivenightspotoffersvarious
themeddiscosandthemeweekends,and
boastsfamousDJsfromBratislavaand
neighbouringcountries,butalsoacross
theworld,onitsdecks,suchasG-Unit,DJ
Antoine,LumideeorArminvanBuuren.
TheClubisalsooneofthefewnightspots
inEuropetouse3Dmappingprojection,
whichtransportsitsgueststhroughdiffer-
entperiodsoftimeandspace.
In short,it doesn’t mater ifyou are
a fan of reggae,dancehall,techno or old
school disco music:youwill find a place
to suityou in Bratislava.However,it is
back to Subclub ifyouwant to find it all
in one place.
“Just look around,there’s no place
like this,” said Michaela Žureková,a mu-
sic journalist from Bratislava.“The light-
ing,the intimate atmosphere,the bass...
This unique atmosphere captivatesyou
whatever eventyou attend and definitely
leavesyou gasping for more.”
Wilsonic festival
One of the founders of Subclub,Tibor
Holoda,is also behind theWilsonic
electronic music festival,held in
Bratislava in June.The festival,and its
spin-off club nights,are a showcase for
upcoming trends in electronic dance
music and present a fusion of genres
both old and new,mixing traditionwith
experimentation.The festival takes place
on one day.Its organisers have unveiled a
series of clever technological innovations
to make theWilsonic festival a massively
fulfilling experience.
-KristínaKrupčíková-
The best thing about Subclub is the diversity of music genres it offers, says a regular visitor
Photo: Gaspo Photography
Photo: Gaspo Photography
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/58 bratislava: SHOPPING
49 River Park
page: 29
56 Eurovea
page: 30
M1 Aupark Einsteinova 18
2.5 km (31 min) 3.4 km
(5 min) u Aupark v 50, 80, 83,
84, 88, 91, 93, 94, 191
www.aupark-bratislava.sk
a Mon-Fri 10:00-21:00,
Sat-Sun 9:00-21:00 (shops);
Mon-Sun 8:00-22:00 (supermarket);
Mon-Sun 10:30-22:30 (cinema) é
M2Central
Metodova 6; map F 1
2.4 km (30 min) 3.3 km (8
min) u Trnavské mýto v 2,
4, 8, 9, 31, 39, 51, 53, 61, 63,
64, 68, 74, 78, 201, 204, 209
www.central.sk
a Mon-Sun 10:00-21:00 (shops/
restaurants); Mon-Sat 7:00-21:00;
Sun 8:00-21:00 (supermarket) é
M3Polus City Center
Vajnorská 100 5 km (10
min) u Polus City Center
v 2, 4, 50, 51, 98
www.poluscitycenter.sk
a Mon-Sun 9:00-21:00 (shops);
Mon-Sun 8:00-21:00 (hypermarket);
Mon-Fri 13:30-22:00,
Sat-Sun 10:30-22:00 (cinema) é
M4Avion
Ivánska cesta 16 11.4 km
(10 min)
u Avion Shopping Park
v 61, 63, 65, 96
www.avion.sk
a Mon-Sun 10:00-21:00 (shops);
Mon-Sun 8:00-21:00 (hypermarket);
Mon-Sun 9:00-21:00 (IKEA) é
After Slovakia adopted a series of
economic reforms during the first decade
of this century,Bratislava has become
one of the fastest growing regions in
Europe and a construction boom has
started all over the city.Developments
have brought new life and spirit to
many locations and created new living,
business,shopping and leisure zones,
popular among locals and tourists alike.
Two shopping centres close to the
city centre - Eurovea andAupark - are
typical of these new developments.
They both combine shops,bars and
restaurants with entertainment facili-
ties in a pleasant indoor and outdoor
environment.
Eurovea,completed in 2010,is a
shiny,modern shopping facility,situated
on the bank of the Danube between Old
andApollo bridges.It represents a perfect
combination of shopping and relaxation
close to the city centre and features a
number of modern,medium-height
buildings that mark a clear contrast to
older houses in the area.
Although Eurovea is a single
landmark itself,it comprises a series
of smaller landmarks,including a low
tower at the entrance to the complex
which is reminiscent of London’s
“Gherkin”.Eurovea’s central square is an
ideal setting for cultural events,ranging
from concerts,Christmas markets and
the mass projection of sporting matches.
(The square lies in front of the new
building of the Slovak NationalTheatre
(SND) which it is not officially part of
Eurovea.)
On the opposite side of the square,
close to the embankment,stand two
glorious statues.One depicts Milan Ras-
tislav Štefánik,a scientist,astronomer,
diplomat,brigadier general and one of
the founders of the first independent
Czechoslovak Republic.He is conse-
quently one of the greatest and most
famous Slovaks.The other statue is of a
mighty lion holding the coat of arms of
the former Czechoslovakia,remember-
ing the common history of Slovakia and
the Czech Republic.Both statues face
Modern Bratislava
Eurovea, on the banks of the Danube, offers numerous shops, entertainment and food options
Zaha Hadid’s Bratislava project
Čulenova (next to the Eurovea
district) will bring apartments,
offices and public space (Photo:
Courtesy of Penta Investments /
Zaha Hadid Architects)
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: SHOPPING 59
the river Danube and Petržalka
district,in order to greet po-
tential incomers by boat.
The embankment also
offers a public park with
three piers protruding over
the lower paths with spec-
tacular views over Eurovea,
the Danube, bridges, and
Petržalka opposite.
Over on the
Petržalka side
of the river,
between park
Sad Janka
Kráľa and the
intersection
of the SNP
Bridge and
highway D1,
is Bratislava’s
other major shop-
ping complex:
Aupark.
“I likeAupark more,it’s our old
and good friend,” said Cristina Botan,
a student from Moldova.“It’s so great,
when you can get almost everything in
the same building.”
Aupark is similar to Eurovea, but
slightly older.A new part of the
complex was finished in 2007,
the controversial Aupark Tower,
which was said by some to
interfere with the favourite
panorama from Bratislava
castle, over the SNP Bridge
and Petržalka.The tower
went ahead and is already a
prestigious business address,
occupied by the headquarters of
various companies.
There was a similar
discussion concerning the
planning and building of River
Park, designed by the Dutch
architect Erick van Egeraat
in 2005.Although some
locals complained about the
development, which comprises
the five-star Grand Hotel River Park
as well as offices, luxury flats and
commercial premises about 10-15
minutes walk from the SNP Bridge,
it is already a popular spot in the city
and crowds often balloon onto the
river path.The J&T Banka café here
includes a “vertical garden” (literally,
a selection of mosses, vines, trees and
flowers that extends upwards in the
bar), while children are excellently
catered for by the Woow toy shop,
milk bar, interactive game console and
playgrounds both inside and out.
As Bratislava becomes increasingly
more modern,including a radically re-
building of the airport,its bus and train
stations are lagging well behind.
“I spend a lot of time at Bratislava’s
main station,and it can’t be compared
with any other European station,” said
Marek Soták,a student who frequently
commutes to Bratislava.“It’s too
small,filthy and is a repulsive gate
to the city.For foreigners,it must be
a shocking experience.”
Advocates hope that the
neglected place will soon be
totally rebuilt into a modern
transport hub combining
the existing Museum of
Transport with an under-
ground shopping centre
and maybe even a park with
greenery that will become
more welcoming entrance to
Bratislava.
There are similar feelings
about the unsightly central bus
station at Mlynské Nivy. “I think
that this place is really dirty and
neglected,” said Tomáš Vallo,who
commutes to bus station daily.
Local politicians and investors
plan to rebuild it into a modern
commercial centre with a new bus
terminal. - Ivan Belko -
River Park, designed by the Dutch architect Erick van Egeraat, has became a popular spot in the city.
M5Shopping Palace
Cesta na Senec 2 14 km
(16 min) u Cesta na Senec
v 4, 53, 56, 57, 65, 630
www.shoppingpalace.sk
a Mon-Sun 9:00-21:00; Mon-Sun
non-stop (Tesco hypermarket) é
M6Bory Mall
Lamač 6780; 14.4 km
(12 min) Bory Mall 21,
25, 92, 123
www.borymall.sk Mon-Fri
10:00-21:00, Sat-Sun 9:00-21:00
(shops); Mon-Sat 8:00-22:00, Sun
8:00-21:00 (supermarket)
Milan Rastislav Štefánik, a scientist,
astronomer, diplomat and brigadier
general, is one of the founders of
the first independent Czechoslovak
Republic and one of the greatest
and most famous Slovaks. His statue
is located in Eurovea.
M1
49 56
M2
M3
M5
M4
M6
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/60 bratislava: under communism
Post socialist Bratislava city tours
Meeting point: according to agre-
ement Å +421 (0)908 308-234
www.authenticslovakia.com
from €22
Guided ride along remains of the
Iron curtain
possibility to be picked up
anywhere in Bratislava
www.what-bratislava.sk
+421 (0)904 838 769
€20 per seat
BrainTeaseLava
Escape room with theme related to
communist-era secret police (ŠtB)
www.brainteaselava.sk
Obchodná 2, Bratislava
+421 (0)2 2102-5536
€49 (for team) booking
necessary
46Subclub, www.subclub.sk
Nábrežie arm. gen. L. Svobodu;
map B 4 Å +421 (0)903 776-633
for performances å é WC
51and 52Bridge of the Slovak
National Uprising page: 30
59Kamenné Square page: 31
67Námestie Slobody (Freedom
Square) page: 33
68Slovak Radio page: 34
73Tržnica (market place)
Trnavské mýto; map F 1 3.6
km (8 min) u Trnavské mýto v
31, 39, 68, 78 Mon-Fri 6:00-
18:00 Sat 6:00-14:00 å é WC
77Slavín page: 34
81Devín page: 37
93Petržalka page: 38
94B-S 8 Hřbitov
closetotheterminalstopofbus
80(nexttotheareaofpoplars);map
F46.7km(11min)uKopča-
nyv80Å+421(0)902961-164
GApr-OctMon-Fri15:00-19:00
Sat-Sun14:00-19:00;Nov-Mar:
Mon-Fri14:00-17:30,Sat-Sun
14:00-17:00voluntaryéWC
www.bunker.bs8.sk
S1Large dark hole
(subway station)
Panónska cesta (close to
the terminal stop of buses); map
F 4 7.2 km (8 min) u
Vozovňa Petržalka v 93, 95
www.mpba.sk
S2Two majestic lions
Špitálska 14 (close to the
Kamenné Square); map D 2
0.9 km (11min) u Mariánska
v 3, 4, 9 exterior views only
For all the massive political progress
of the past couple of decades, the city
of Bratislava still bears the scars of a
turbulent 20th century,when it endured
the horrors of two World Wars and then
a long period under communist rule.
In 2013 the city celebrates 20 years
since it became the capital of the
independent Slovak Republic but it is
worth remembering the more difficult
times. Several sites across Bratislava
offer the chance for visitors to look
back on the not-too-distant past, and
understand something of the life of
Bratislavans from the communist era.
Petržalka
All along the border withAustria are
more than 20 bunkers remaining from
the Second World War and these days
one of them,known as B-S 8 Hřbitov
in Petržalka,is a museum containing
military uniforms,documents and
photographs from the era.Another
example is Bunker B-S 4 run by
volunteers who provide for tourists also
a guided ride along remains of the Iron
curtain and pre-war bunker system in an
old-time russian vehicle used by border
guards during the communist era.But
Petržalka itself also stands as a vivid
reminder of the communist approach
to housing a nation’s population: it is
the biggest high-rise housing estate
in central Europe,home to more than
100,000 people,packed into in vast
“paneláks”,or pre-fabricated concrete
blocks of flats.
“Honestly,I have never seen a place
before where there are so many similar
buildings in such a huge space,” the Brit-
ish architect Jonathan Falkingham told
the Sme daily.
Attempts to link Petržalka to the
rest of Bratislava via a subway system
were abandoned in 1989,leaving today a
large,dark hole where the last stop was
intended to be.It is located near the final
stop of buses 93 and 95.
Slavín
Another enormous souvenir socialism
left in Bratislava is Slavín,the vast
monument to soldiers of the Soviet army
who died in the battle to liberate the city
at the end of the Second World War.The
monument sits atop a hill just outside
the city and offers one of the best views
over Bratislava.But its construction
came at a cost.
Slavín is only 500 metres away from
the Church of Our Lady of the Snows on
Calvary mount,and the communists
destroyed the church’s tower in 1960 as
they felt it threatened the dominance of
their new memorial.
Around
the city
Slavín and the tower-less
church are stopping
points on a unique tour
offered in Bratislava by
a man named Branislav
Chrenka,who ferries
tourists around the
various communist-
era landmarks in a
vintage Škoda car.
Other interesting
destinations include
the famous upside-
down pyramid
building of the
Slovak public service
radio on 1 Mýtna
When Bratislava shivered
behind the Iron Curtain
The first modern roofed marketpla-
ce ever to open in the city: Tržnica
on Trnavské mýto
Bunker B-S 4 run by volunteers (Photo: www.mpo.sk)
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: under communism 61
S3Museum of 17. November
Small museum with photos and
panels describing the time of the
Velvet revolution (a series of events
that brought about the collapse of
communism)
Nám. SNP 8, Bratislava (back
part of café of F.X. Messerschmidt)
+421 (0) 905 237-054
www.muzeumrevolucie.sk
Mon-Sun 8:30-21:00 (better to
call) free
S4Miletičova (market place)
Miletičova 9 3.6 km (8 min)
u Saleziáni v 8, 9, 68, 201,
205, 209, 212 Mon-Fri 6:00-
19:00 Sat 6:00-14:00 å é WC
S5KGB
Obchodná 52 (close to the
Freedom Square); map D 2
Å +421 (0)2 5273-1279
Mon-Wed 11:00-24:00 Thu
11:00-1:00 Fri 11:00-2:00
Sat 16:00-2:00 éWC
S6Lacinka–Palacinka
Šancová 18; map C 1
Å +421 (0)2 5249-7414
Mon-Fri 11:00-21:00, Sun
14:00-21:00 å é WC
S7Hotel Bôrik
Bôrik 15; 2.9 km (6 min)
u Jančova v 203, 207
Å +421 (0)2 5998-1000
www.hotelborik.gov.sk é WC
S8Museum B-S 4
Bunker close to the border
with Austria (Berg), from parking
area (almost on border) follow the
signs Bunker B-S 4, location is also
published on www.mpo.sk/en/
kontakt/ +421 (0)904 838-769
www.mpo.sk/en/museum/
Apr-Oct: Sat 11:00-18:00
(entrance every hour) Nov-Mar:
closed € voluntary
Street,the work of the architect Štefan
Svetko.He also designed the modernist
Hotel Bôrik,which was built in 1974 as
luxurious accommodation for visiting
diplomats.
Further along Mýtna Street is what
is now officially known as Námestie
slobody (Freedom Square).Locals may,
however,refer to it as “Gottko” recalling
its name under the previous regime:
Gottwaldovo,after Klement Gottwald,
the fifth president of Czechoslovakia.The
statue of Gottwald is long gone,leaving
the biggest fountain in Bratislava,but
which has been out of order since 2007,to
dominate the square.
Evidence of the communist regime’s
presence in Bratislava can also be less
obvious.At 12 Špitálska Street,near
the OldTown and Kamenné námestie
(square),for example,visitorswill notice
two majestic lions either side of an
impressive entrance.Thiswas one of
the first homes of the ŠtB state security
service,before the organisation moved to
its better-known headquarters Februárka,
at 45 Račianska Street
(nowa police HQ).
According to František
Neupauer,who is
behind an initiative
to open a Museum of
Crimes andVictims
of Communism in
Bratislava,many
opponents of the
previous regimewere
interrogated in this
building.
Thesocialist
atmosphereisstillvery
muchpresentinthe
marketplaceon
Miletičova,which
isthebiggestinBratislava,
andatthefirstmodernroofedmarket
placeevertoopeninthecity:Tržnicaon
Trnavskémýto.
The construction of SNP Bridge in
the 1960-70s had a major impact on the
city. A significant part of the historical
centre was destroyed during the
construction including almost all of the
Jewish quarter. Today,what was once
a bomb shelter near the bridge houses
Subclub nightclub (see page 56).
SECRET POLICE
It is also possible to recall the previous
era at escape room Brainteaselava
located on Obchodná street. Courageous
visitors can travel back a couple of
decades when the communist-era
secret police ŠtB monitored the regime
enemies.The game is based on escaping
from the apartment of a police officer
but only with a forgotten passport
of a local dissident who cannot leave
the country without it.A great deal
of short but demanding tasks linked
to historical events of Bratislava
supplement contemporary facilities in
rooms including massive
furniture, old technical
apparatuses and portraits
of the communist leaders
Lenin and Stalin. “It is
a great challenge with a
nice atmosphere and the
rooms represented the
communist era very good,”
said Alexandra Klein who
came from Austria. Foreign
tourists comprise half of
all visitors and commonly
discover the game online
on Tripadvisor or similar
websites.
Devín
Arguably one part of Bratislava in
which the communist presence was
most keenly felt was Devín, only a
stone’s throw across the Morava river
into Austria - tantalisingly close to
freedom.The area beneath the castle
was among the narrowest stretches
of the Iron Curtain, the largely
impenetrable border
between the Soviet
nations and the
West. It meant that
the region became
a popular spot for
would-be deserters to
attempt their escapes.
According to
Ľubomír Morbacher,
former employee of
the Nation’s Memory
Institute, more than
100,000 people fled the
Eastern Bloc. Some of
these people seeking
freedom fled
through Devín.The
number includes
departures during times “when leaving
the country was still possible”, then
“when it was very difficult to depart” as
well as the emigration wave in 1968-69,
Morbacher said.
It also meant the Devín area was
under permanent guard with residents
living side-by-side with troops.
Of course, not every escape
attempt was successful and a poignant
monument, riddled with symbolic
bullet holes, sits at the foot of the castle
and remembers those killed during
their bids for freedom.
- Michaela Džomeková -
81
S1
94
S8
93
51
46 S2
73
S6
S5
77
S7
S4
S3
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/62 bratislava: religion
Sunday services in
foreign languages
Roman Catholic Church
21 Church of the Merciful
Brothers
11:30 (Italian) page: 18
29 Church of St John of Matha
9:00 (Latin) page: 20
38 St Martin’s Cathedral
7:45 (GER), 9:00 (Latin)
page: 24
60 Church of St Ladislaus
11.00 (ENG) page: 32
OTHER CHRISTIAN CHURCHES
Malý evanjelický kostol
(Small Evangelical Church)
Panenská Street (entrance
from Lýcejná Street), map C 2
8:15 (GER), 9:30 (ENG)
bratislavainternationalchurch.org
Citylight Church
Nám. 1.mája 1, map C 2; 10:00
(ENG); www.citylightbratislava.com
Bratislava International Fellowship
Sreznevského 2; 10:00 (ENG)
www.bif.sk
International Baptist Church
Súľovská 2; 10:00 (ENG)
www.ibcb.baptist.sk
Jewish service
62Jewish Synagogue
Friday evening (before
twilight), Saturday morning
(usually at 9:00), and during
feasts. Services held in Hebrew.
page: 32
For some contemporaryvisitors,
Bratislava is merely Party-Slava,home of
nightclubs and bars.But that view of the
city is only a modern one: for hundreds
of years the dominant presence here has
been religion,and Bratislava remains
a wonderful place in which to sit in
the cool shadows of ancient walls and
statues of saints,or to contemplate in
silence while basking in the sunlight
reflected through the majestic coloured
windows of its spectacular
places of worship.
Since as long as records
go back,Bratislava has
been the destination
for pilgrims who have
come to engage
with the city’s
rich spiritual
history.There
are five sites in
Bratislava that
are of particular
relevance and
to which pilgrims
continue to come to pay
homage.
Johnthe
Almoner
One of the first
places most
tourists will visit
in Bratislava is St
Martin’s Cathedral,
one of the greatest
monuments of the city
and significant as the
coronation church
of the Hungarian
Kingdom.It is also a
specific pilgrimage
destination.In the
Chapel of St John the
Almoner (Kaplnka sv.
JánaAlmužníka) on the
left side of the church,are the mortal
remains of John the Merciful.
John,also known as John
the Merciful,was the patriarch of
Alexandria,born in Cyprus in the
seventh century.His body took a
circuitous route to Slovakia,via Istanbul
(which was then Constantinople) and
Venice,before arriving in Slovakia,
probably in the mid 16th century.His
remains are now stored in a glazed silver
shrine above the altar in the chapel that
bears his name.
Chatam Sófer
Bratislava has also always
been an important
centre of Jewish
culture,despite
suffering long
periods of
persecution
common
across Europe,
as well as a series
of construction
projects that
have devastated
former Jewish
neighbourhoods.
Nevertheless,one
crucial site in the city
has remained intact
and is nowvisited by
Jews from across the
world.
The old Jewish
cemetery,at the bottom
of the castle hill,dates
from the 17th century
and at one time
contained around
6,000 graves.Much
of it was destroyed
in 1942-43 when
a tram tunnel
was built under
the castle,exiting
through the cemetery.
Latterly,the rest of the former Jewish
quarter was razed during construction of
the SNP Bridge in 1969.
However, one of the tombs that was
saved and is now preserved in a tiny
underground room is the final resting
place of Chatam Sófer, the orthodox
scholar born Moshe Schreiber in 1762
and who died in 1839. Sófer became
Chief Rabbi of Pressburg in 1806 and
also headed the yeshiva (rabbinical
school) in the city. He was a strictly
Orthodox rabbi. Somehow his tomb
was saved despite the massive societal
upheavals and the scarring of the
landscape. Most visitors now come in
September, on the anniversary of his
death, to pay their respects.
“This town was always tolerant,”
said Viera Kamenická, from the
Museum of Jewish Culture in
Bratislava, part of the Slovak National
Museum.
They come from far and wide
St Martin’s Cathedral, the
coronation church of monarchs,
is one of the greatest monuments
of the city. Pilgrims often visit the
cathedral to see mortal remains of
John the Merciful
The final resting place of Chatam
Sófer (on the photo), the Chief
Rabbi of Pressburg, whose tomb
was saved despite the scarring of
the landscape
Photo: Viera Kamenická
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: religion 63
38St Martin’s Cathedral
page: 24
48Chatam Sófer
page: 29
78Lourdes cave
Pod Kalváriou, map B 1; The
cave is located close to the Church
of Our Lady of the Snows an
approximate 20-minute walk along
Hlboká Street from the bus stop
SAV; map B, C 1 2.3 km (26
min) 3.9 km (8 min) u SAV
v 21, 25, 32, 34, 63, 64, 83, 84,
93, 141, 184, 204, 206, 209, 212
R6Marianka (Marian Valley)
Marianka (to visit the
pilgrimage site - follow the street
Námestie 4. apríla and descend to
located The Marian Way and The
Way of the Cross sacred journey
featured by many landmarks as
The Church of the Nativity of the
Virgin Mary) 18 km (19 min)
v 28 min (www.cp.sk) Å+421
(0)2 6593-5226 (parish office)
7:45-19:00, summer season
7:45-20:00 U Mon-Sat 8:00,
18:00 Sun 8:00, 9:15, 10:30,
18:30 voluntary e WC
R2 Malacky (Holy Stairs)
Kláštorné námestie 3,
Malacky 37 km (29 min)
v 38 min (www.cp.sk) Å+421
(0)34 772-2189 temporarily
closed (Holy Stairs) U Mon-Sat
7:00, 18:30 Sun 7:00, 9:00,
11:30, 18:30 e é WC
Calvary
There was once also a Calvary in the
hills of Bratislava, close to the Church
of Our Lady of the Snows. But 13 of its
14 stops were destroyed during the
previous regime, as well as the tower of
the church, leaving only the peaceful
Lourdes cave. It contains a statue of the
Virgin Mary, surrounded by hundreds of
marble plaques offering thanks.
Although plans for redevelop-
ment of the whole Calvary are often
discussed, priorities tend to be with
the reconstruction of existing monu-
ments rather than building from new,
and there are no fixed dates for the
construction.
Holy stairs
One last special, but almost forgotten,
pilgrimage destination is in the town
of Malacky, about 40 kilometres from
Bratislava. Contained in a chapel to the
right of the main Franciscan church is
a copy of the Holy Stairs (Scala sancta)
from Rome,which Christ climbed to
meet Pontius Pilate during his trial.
The staircase is considered to be
one of the most faithful copies existing
anywhere in the world, but is visited
by only a few hundred pilgrims per
year.The stairs are currently under
reconstruction.
Marian valley
Another of the most visited and most
important pilgrimage sites in Slovakia
is the Marian Valley and the village
of Marianka, the oldest Catholic
pilgrimage destination in Slovakia
and one of the oldest in the whole of
central Europe.As the name suggests,
the whole area is devoted to the Virgin
Mary and includes numerous holy sites,
drawing pilgrims from across the region
for several centuries.
The most significant sites are the
Pilgrimage Church of the Nativity of
Virgin Mary (Kostol Narodenia Panny
Márie), a shrine to the Virgin Mary that
has come to be known as the Lourdes
cave, the Chapel of the Holy Well, and
the Way of the Cross,which has 14
stopping points.
Many legends have grown up
concerning the healing powers of a
visit to the area, and to be gained from
praying to a statue of the Virgin Mary
believed to date from 1030.Two years
ago, the Marian Valley also gained the
privileges of a basilica minor,which
means visitors can obtain indulgence
here.
The Marian Valley is visited by
200–300 pilgrims on the first Saturday
of every month, increasing to 500–1,000
during good weather. Regardless of the
conditions, the Feast of the HolyTrinity,
in spring (May or June), and the Feast
of Nativity of Our Lady, in September,
usually attract 5,000–6,000 pilgrims
annually.
- Dušan Dudík -
The Marian Valley has nurtured
many legends about the healing
power of the area
A copy of the Holy Stairs from Rome in Malacky, considered
one of the most faithful copies in the world
R6
48
78
38
R2
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/64 bratislava: nations
Bratislava has always been a
multicultural city,the result of its
location on the crossing of trade routes
and close to several national borders.Its
traditional composition of inhabitants
has typically depended on the current
ruling nation and the political situation
in central Europe,which has been in
flux for many hundreds of years.
Indeed,Bratislavahasevenchanged
itsnamenumeroustimes,withprevious
generationsoflocalsreferringtoitas
Pressburg,PozsonyorPrešporkand
evenaperiodspentas“Wilson’s
Town”aftertheAmericanpresident
WoodrowWilson.Representa-
tivesofeverynationhaveleft
evenmorepermanenttraces
ontheSlovakcapital,and
itisoftenpossibletotrace
thesevariousoccupationsat
numeroussitesinthecity.
Hungary
andAustria
Alongwith the former
federationwith
the Czech Republic
(Czechoslovakia)
Bratislava is most
commonlyassociated
withAustria and
Hungarywhich border
Slovakia to thewest
(Austria) and to the south
(Hungary).Bratislava
spent nearly300years as the coronation
cityand capital of the Hungarian
Kingdom,and in addition to the shared
history,there are numerous examples
ofAustrian and Hungarian styled
architecture from the period.
Manyof these date specifically
from era of Queen MariaTheresa,who
reigned between 1740-80 and oversawa
prodigious period of construction.Several
governmental buildings,newpalaces and
waterworkswere all built during these
40years as thewhole town became the
centre of social and political life for the
empire.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire was
composed of several nations, including
the countries of central Europe and
some of today’s Balkan states. It
meant that Germans, Czechs and
Croatians have also made their home
in Bratislava, as well as a
Jewish population whose
numbers predictably –
and dreadfully – declined
during the mid 20th
century.
Spain,
Denmark
and France
Spainalsohaslinksto
Bratislava.In1631Mariana
ofSpain,theyoungest
daughterofSpanish
KingFelipeIIIand
MargaritaofAustria,
marriedFerdinandIII,
theheiroftheHungarian
crown.Shewascrowned,
togetherwithher
husband,inStMartin’s
Cathedralin1638.
There are several
sculptures and plaques
in the cityto commemorate thevisit of
numerous famous historical figures or
to mark significant events.The Danish
fairytalewriter Hans ChristianAndersen
has his statue on Hviezdoslavovo Square;
the Czechoslovak presidentTomáš
Garrigue Masaryk stands in front of the
Slovak National Museum; and there is a
sculpture of the Hungarian poet Sándor
Petőfi in Medická Garden.
Astatue depicting a Napoleonic
soldier leans on a bench in the Main
Square and the French presence in
Bratislava is also commemorated on a
plaque in the Primate’s Palace,recalling
the signing of theTreatyof Pressburg in
1805.Diplomats from France andAustria
signed it after the battle ofAusterlitz,
whichwaswon byNapoleon.
Poland,Indiaand Italy
PopeJohnPaulIIvisitedBratislavaseve-
raltimesaftertheVelvetRevolutionand
thereisastatueofhiminNámestieJána
PavlainPetržalka,commemoratinga1995
trip,andabronzereliefintheUrsuline
ChurchandConventinthecitycentre.
In 1938, Bratislava also welcomed
Indian dignitaries. One of the plaques
oposite to the McDonald’s at Hviezdo-
slavovo Square recalls the visit of Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru,with his daughter
Indira Gandhi, the leaders of the Indian
freedom movement against British rule.
SEVERAL NATIONS
N1Presidential Alley
28 trees planted in the
Presidential Garden by official
visitors to the country
page: 72-73
Euroarboretum
Partizánska Lúka in the Železná
studienka area page: 37
AUSTRIA
Several sites related to the
Austro-Hungarian empire
BRAZIL Bratislava is the name of a
small town in the south of Brazil
BULGARIA
Memorial to the victims on board
the Bulgarian “Tabso” plane that
crashed here. Sakrakopec
(between Bratislava-Rača district
and Svätý Jur)
CROATIA
Museum of Croatian Culture
in Slovakia page: 50-52
65 Grassalkovich Palace
(Presidential Palace)
Grassalkovich Palace is named
after the Croatian aristocrat Antun
Grassalkovich page: 33
A city of a hundred nations
A bronze circle inlaid in the
path beneath Michael’s Gate, in
Bratislava’s Old Town
Bratislava experienced a “golden age”
under the rule of Maria Theresa
N2
62
N1
65
2
N4
N5
N6
38
43
N3
35
4
42
29
24
47
13
16
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: nations 65
THE CZECH REPUBLIC
Several sites related to the
former Czechoslovakia
2Statue of Tomáš Garrigue
Masaryk Statue in front of the
Slovak National Museum
page: 12
57Czech lion
Statue at Nábr. M. R. Štefánika
on the square in Eurovea
DENMARK
N4Statue of Hans Christian
Andersen Hviezdoslavovo nám.
13; map C 4
FRANCE
13Statue of a Napoleonic soldier
page: 15
16Primate’s Palace
Plaque recalling the signing of
the Treaty of Pressburg in 1805
(after Napoleon’s victory in the
Battle of Austerlitz) page: 17
GERMANY
Spuren deutscher Kultur in Bratislava
Free iPhone app prepared by
Goethe Institute, which examines
German heritage in Bratislava.
Download at www.goethe.de
47Museum of Carpathian
Germans Culture located in
Zuckermandel page: 28
Stollwerck factory
Račianska 44; Former chocolate
factory of the Stollwerck-family
(buildings currently belong to
Mondeléz Slovakia)
N2Home of Segner family
Michalská 7, map C 3 (c 1);
The German family Segner moved
to Bratislava at the turn of the 16th
and 17th centuries. Andreas Regner
served as Bratislava’s mayor in the
17th century. His great-grand son
Johann Andreas Segner (1704 Brati-
slava – 1777 Halle) was a university
professor and his sculpture is located
at the Nábr. arm. gen. L. Svobodu.
Cintorín Vrakuňa
(cemetery) Popradská;
Around 1,000 German soldiers are
buried in the cemetery u Cintorín
Vrakuňa v65, 75, 201, 202
HUNGARY
Several sites related to the
Austro-Hungarian empire
Sculpture of Sándor Petőfi
In Medická záhrada
(garden) page: 72-73
47Museum of Hungarian Culture
in Slovakia located in Zuckermandel
page: 28
The Italian presence in the cityis
best represented through the artworks in
PálffyPalace and Bratislava Castle.There
are manyItalian paintings from the 16th
century,which “always attract the curios-
ityofvisitors since theywitness cultural
ties dating back for hundreds ofyears
between our two countries,” said Roberto
Rizzo,deputyhead of mission of the Ital-
ian Embassyin Bratislava.Moreover,the
Church of St John of Matha has frescoes
of the Italian baroque painterA.Galli Bibi-
ena,while the mirrors in the Mirror Hall
of the Primate’s Palace come fromVenice,
Rizzo added.
Jewish sites
The Jewish population of Bratislava
is small these days, but there have
previously been vibrant communities in
the city, living mostly in the residential
area around the castle.The Jewish
burial shrine that includes the tomb of
Chatam Sófer and the graves of some
other prominent rabbis and scholars
is all that remains of what was once
a much larger Jewish cemetery. But
Renáta Cáková, the press manager
of the Israeli Embassy in Bratislava,
also pointed to a handful of buildings
that have survived elsewhere: the
only remaining synagogue in the
Slovak capital on Heydukova Street;
the Holocaust memorial on Rybné
Square and the old Jewish quarters:
Zámocká and Židovská Streets.There
is also the Museum of Jewish Culture
located on Židovská Street,which was
opened in 1994 as part of the Slovak
National Museum. Other traditional
minorities living in Bratislava have
their own museums showcasing
their cultures: Croatians have
one in Devínska Nová Ves,
Hungarians and Carpathian
Germans both have museums
on Žižkova Street.All of them
operate under the Slovak
National Museum.
The Hungarian
minority is the
biggest minority
in Slovakia and
represents
8.5 percent
of all
inhabitants.
Slovenia,Russia,
Bulgariaand United
Kingdom
Bratislava also has a reputed connection
with Slovenia,specifically at Devín
Castle.Many Slovenians believe that
the castle is connected with the Italian
town of Duino,nearTrieste,whose
Slovene name is Devín and which has a
large Slovenian population.Duino is also
the setting for a popular Slovenian folk
legend “Lepa Vida”.
The former Soviet Union has,of
course,also had a significant impact
on Bratislava,and there are numerous
sites that recall the era of the mid-20th
century.None is more obvious than the
Slavín monument,which remembers
the lives of the 6,845 Soviet soldiers who
died during the liberation of Bratislava
inApril 1945,many of whom are buried
in six mass and 278 individual graves.
The monument is surrounded by a park
containing trees from various parts of
the former Soviet Union.
It is not the only military cemetery
in the city.There is another near
Kopčianska Street in Petržalka (open
daily in the afternoons betweenApril-
October) with 331 graves of soldiers from
Hungary,Austria,Germany,Romania,
Poland,Russia and Italy.Čunovo,just
outside of Bratislava,is where British
visitors head to pay respects to the
crew of a British aircraft shot down
there while fighting the Nazis in the
Second World War.Many Slovaks fought
alongside the British during the conflict.
Slovakia’s main connectionwith
Bulgaria is similarlytragic.In
November 1966 a Bulgarian “Tabso”
plane crashed in Sakrakopec,near
Rača,
killing
The decoration of the dome of the Church of St John of Matha
is a masterpiece by A. Galli Bibiena
A statue of the Hungarian
poet Sándor Petőfi, located
in the Medická záhrada
(garden)
A popular photo point beside a statue of a Napoleonic soldier
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/66 bratislava: nations
all 82 of its passengers.Among thevictims
was the Bulgarian opera singer Jekaterina
Popova and thewriter RamonAmador
from Honduras.Itwas theworst plane
tragedyin the former Czechoslovakia
and is commemorated by82 birch trees
planted near the crash site.Amemorial
with stone cross and plaquewas added in
May2010,aswell as an inscription
on one of the trees.
Germany
In June 2013, the Goethe Institute
launched an internet-based
application called “Spuren”
(“Traces”),which examines the
German heritage in Bratislava.
Historians have identified several
locations in and around the city
that are linked in some way to
famous personalities of German
descent or can be associated to
important events.Visitors can
take a walk through Bratislava
following the traces of its German
past on their smart-phones.
Among these are a few sites that are
largely unknown to the general public,
including the former chocolate factory
of the Stollwerck-family, the home of
Segner family and the war cemetery
which is part of Cintorín Vrakuňa
(cemetery),where around 1,000 German
soldiers,who died in the battles in and
around Bratislava towards the end of the
Second World War, are buried.
BraZIL and USA
Many Slovaks have, of course, often
gone in the opposite direction to the
many immigrants who have made their
home in Bratislava.There are pieces
of the capital city scattered around
the world. For instance, Bratislava is
still the name of a small town in the
south of Brazil established by Slovak
emigrants many decades ago.Though
you will not find any “pure” Slovaks
there nowadays, some central European
blood still runs through the veins of
the town’s inhabitants. Many have blue
eyes, according to Luiz Francisco Pandia
Braconnot, the minister-counsellor at
the Brazilian Embassy in Bratislava.
Many Slovak nationals and their
descendants also live in the United
States, particularly those displaced
during the Second World War.An
increasing number now return to
Bratislava to investigate their
family history.
“While there are not specific
sites in Bratislava that attract
visitors from the United States,
manyAmericans trace their
family roots to Slovakia,” said
Matthew Miller from the US
Embassy in Bratislava. “In
addition, manyAmericans
are drawn to the rich history
and culture of Bratislava and
the beauty of the surrounding
countryside.”
Croatia,Norway
and other nations
Bratislava’s multicultural status
is nowhere more apparent than along
the so-called Presidential Alley in the
gardens of the Presidential Palace,whe-
re every visiting foreign head of state
is invited to plant a small tree. Rudolf
Schuster started the tradition in 1999
and today there are 28 trees represen-
ting official visitors to the country. (The
palace itself actually bears the name of
a foreign national: Grassalkovich Palace
is named after the Croatian aristocrat
Antun Grassalkovich, according to
Petra Sabin Wenzlová from the Croatian
Embassy in Bratislava.)
Euroarboretum on Partizánska
Lúka, in the popular Železná studienka
area, follows a similar theme.When it is
finished, it will include a representative
tree from each nation in the European
Union, along with an information panel
about forestation there.
In addition, there are some streets
in Bratislava bearing the names of
nations: Česká (Czech), Vietnamská
(Vietnamese), Bulharská (Bulgarian),
Poľská (Polish), Bieloruská (Bielorus),
Estónska (Estonian), Lotyšská
(Latvian). It is difficult, however,
to trace the reason behind these
names. One exception, however, is
the street named after the Norwegian
writer Björnstjerne Björnson who
was an advocate of Slovak national
language and identity. Björnson’s
Street (Björnsonova) near the so-called
pyramid building of the Slovak Radio
carries a small memorial plaque. There
is also a courtyard named for him at the
Slovak Philharmonic building which
was reconstructed partly with funds
from Norway. “Do you want me to tell
a fairy tale about Bratislava? But the
town itself is a tale,” said Björnson and
Slovaks remember his positive attitude
toward their country with gratitude.
- Radka Minarechová, Ján Pallo -
INDIA
N3Plaque Rybárska brána 8
map C 3 (c 4); Plaque near a
restaurant recalling the visit of
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru
ITALY
16Primate’s Palace Mirrors from
Venice in the Mirror Hall of the
Primate’s Palace page: 17
29Frescoes
Frescoes by the Italian baroque
painter A. Galli Bibiena in the Church
of St John of Matha page: 20
35Artworks in Pálffy Palace
page: 22
42Artworks in Bratislava Castle
page: 26
JEWISH SITES
43Museum of Jewish Culture
page: 50-52
48Chatam Sófer page: 29
62Synagogue page: 32
N5Holocaust memorial
Rybné Square; map C 4
N6Jewish quarters Zámocká
and Židovská streets;
map B,C 3 (c 3)
NORWAY
Memorial plaque to
Björnstjerne Björnson
Björnsonova Street; map D 1
4Reduta Courtyard named after
Björnstjerne Björnson at the Slovak
Philharmonic building (reconstructed
partly with funds from Norway)
page: 12
POLAND
Statue John Paul II A statue of
Pope John Paul II stands in a square
named after him in Petržalka
24The Ursuline Church
Bronze relief of Pope John Paul II in
the Ursuline Church page: 19
RUSSIA
77Slavín page: 34
SLOVENIA
81Devín Castle page: 37
SPAIN
38St Martin’s Cathedral
Mariana of Spain was crowned in
the cathedral in 1638 page: 24
UNITED KINGDOM
Čunovo A monument to five British
airmen killed when their plane
was shot down here in 1944
16Primate’s Palace
The so-called Mortlake Tapestries in
the Primate’s Palace were woven
in the UK in 1635 page: 17
USA
Forashortperiodin1919,Bratislava
wasknownasWilsonovomesto
(Wilson‘sCity)afterWoodrow Wilson. TreesinthePresidentialAlley,whichwereplantedbyvisitingVIPs
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: bird‘s - eye view 67
Helicopter tour
www.flight.sk
Čulenova 5 (office);
Å +421 (0)905 329-217
€69.42 (start of a tour
based on agreement)
Balloon Flights
www.balony.sk
Pluhová 2 (office)
Å +421 (0)911 225-577
from €172/person
(min. 4 persons; start of a
tour based on agreement)
14Old Town Hall Tower
page: 16
27St Michael’s Gate
page: 20
42Bratislava Castle
page: 26
51SNP Bridge
page: 30
77Slavín
page: 34
85TV Tower Kamzík
page: 38
Sky bar restaurant
Hviezdoslavovo nám. 7
map C 4 Å +421 (0)5441-
1244 www.skybar.sk
Outlook Bar & Lounge
Lindner Hotel Gallery Central,
Metodova 4; map F 1 Å +421
(0)2 3993-0000 www.lindner.de
Bratislava possesses many places of
interest,some of which can make
visitors and locals alike stop and stare
in awe - even if it is just to consider the
feat of engineering or architecture they
are looking at.Many of these places even
allowvisitors inside them,offering the
opportunity to admire the monuments
themselves from the outside,or the city
below from within.
For those who enjoywatching the
chaos of an anthill,the best choice in
Bratislava (apart from a helicopter tour)
is the observation deck of the SNP Bridge,
which spans the Danube and provides
the vital link between the city centre and
Petržalka.The bridge has an observation
deck and restaurant on the top of its only
pylon,95 metres above the ground.It
combines luxury dining with spectacular
views over an area of about 100 km.
Less than a kilometre to the east
once stood a steel bridge called Starý
Most (Old Bridge),which was the first to
link both banks of the river. Destroyed
during the Second World War and
rebuilt by the Soviet army, nowadays
it is closed for road traffic. However
pedestrians can enjoy a view of two of
Bratislava’s iconic sights: the SNP bridge
and the castle.
Other options exist for views over
the OldTown,including from the Old
Town HallTower at the Main Square
and Michael’s Gate at Michalská Street.
Another option is the Sky bar restaurant
at Hviezdoslavovo Square,next to the US
embassy.It has a terrace on the top of
the building with a glass roof.Be sure to
make a reservation.
Bratislava Castle offers another
possibility to look on the city from
above.Its gardens offer an excellent
view,free of charge,over the city and the
Danube.Another possibility is to visit
the castle and climb its CrownTower,
which apart from being one of the oldest
parts of the castle offers a 360° view into
four countries in case of good weather:
Slovakia,Hungary,Austria and the Czech
Republic.
Outside the centre,on one of the
hilltops above the city perches the Slavín
war memorial,dedicated to the fallen
soldiers of RedArmywho liberated
Bratislava in 1945.The park features a
magnificent view over the eastern part
of the city,in addition to the military
cemetery.In the middle is a 39.5 m
high column,topped with a statue of
a Soviet soldier erecting the flag above
the liberated Bratislava and crushing a
swastika under his feet.
The almightyTVTower,which can
be seen from every direction,also houses
Altitude restaurant on a rotating deck.
It offers a 360° panorama of Bratislava
and the surrounding region,including
a glimpse intoAustria,Hungary and the
Czech Republic.
Hotel Lindner,opened in May 2013,is
another possibility.It offers a view over
the city from its Outlook Bar & Lounge at
the 13th floor.
Unfortunately some of the city’s
other landmark towers are not open to
the public.The distinctive upside down
pyramid building is the home of Slovak
Radio,and one of the city’s highest
modern skyscrapers is owned by the
National Bank of Slovakia,Slovakia’s
central bank.Visitors will have to make
do with the other scenic overlooks noted
above.
- Ivan Belko -
Peering at Bratislava from above
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/68 bratislava: extreme sports
There are manyways to experience
Bratislava,and if you have sufficient
courage,you might want to try
to view the Slovak capital while
hanging from an elastic cord
over the Danube,or tumbling
down a hill in a giant plastic
balloon.
There’s plenty of
time to explore the city’s
historical monuments,
cultural sites and excep-
tional architecture,but if
you want to cut loose and do something
crazy on your trip to Bratislava,there is
also a world of extreme sports waiting
for you in the city.
Jumping
Are you afraid? You should be.
“I thought I was about to find my-
self in the Danube,” said Peter Kováč,
a 21-year-old student from Žiar nad
Hronom,who was brave enough to try a
bungee jump from Bratislava’s Lafran-
coni Bridge, a 25-metre-high plummet
towards the water. “In a split second of
a free-fall, I saw the oncoming water
and my heart was squeezed by fear.”
The only restrictions on willing
daredevils are that theyweigh less than
110kg and part with €28 (€11 if there is a
discount).Otherwise anyone is welcome
to throw themselves off the bridge,with
only the bungee keeping them safe.
“Everything underneath me
was moving away,” Kováč said.
“The pillars of the bridge were dis-
appearing, the trees and benches on
the shore were also becoming
smaller, the SNP Bridge and
even Bratislava Castle in
the distance were mov-
ing. Everything except
the river was in motion.”
Renáta Pospíšilová, a 20-year-old
student from Poprad, also jumped
from the Lafranconi Bridge. “People
passing by started encouraging me [to
jump]. I was standing there, staring
downwards, looking at those people
and I asked myself if it was all really
necessary. Originally I felt courageous,
but later on all these feelings were sup-
pressed by fear.That was the moment
my brain turned off and I had no choice
but simply to jump.”
OFF-ROAD
Another option for visitors to Bratislava
is a special drive with an electric car
or on an off-road course at carmaker
Volkswagen Slovakia, located in
Devínska Nová Ves. For the off-roading,
the company uses a specially modified
vehicle at a track which simulates
various rough terrains, from a wooden
roadway, through sand,water and
steps, to hills at various gradients.
Visitors can either ride as a passenger or
take a turn behind the wheel with the
help of an instructor. It does not matter
if you are afraid of heights, water or
80bVolkswagen (off-road)
page: 37
98Area Divoká voda
Rafting ride
Vodné Dielo – Čunovo; map F 4
21 km (22 min)
u MiÚ Čunovo v 91
Å +421 (0)2 6252-8002
www.divokavoda.sk
a Mon-Sun 9:00-19:00
€26 WC
Pendulous jump from
Lafranconi Bridge
Lafranconi Bridge; 5.7 km
(7 min) u Lafranconi v 4, 5,
6, 9, 28, 29, 30, 31, 37, 39, 131,
133 Å +421 (0)2 6252-8077
www.actionzazitky.sk
a Jan-Dec€11
Action Park
Zorbing-Rolling in a bubble
Schengenská – Čunovo
18.6 km (20 min) u MiÚ Čunovo
v 91Å +421 (0)904 223-333
www.actionpark.sk
a Mon-Fri booking necessary,
Sat-Sun 11:00-19:00
from €8 WC
The place offers several
extreme and unusual sports
Laser Arena (laser games)
Prešovská 45 4.7 km (11
min) Bajkalská 39, 53, 61,
63, 74, 75, 78, 98, 204, 205
+421 (0)903 914-386
www.laserarena.sk from €5
Mon-Fri 13:00-24:00,
Sat: 13:00-24:00, Sun 13:00-22:00
“I felt like Iwas in awashing machine”:
Welcome to Extreme Bratislava
Those brave enough can try
a bungee jump from Lafranconi
Bridge
The white-water Divoká voda
area in Čunovo offers rafting trip
under the guidance of experienced
instructors
Photo: Martin Janata
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: extreme sports 69
Escape games
€50 (for team), booking
necessary
Izba č. 13 (Room Thirteen)
www.izbacislo13.sk/ba
Cintorínska 7, Bratislava
+421 (0) 948 268 613
BrainTeaseLava
Escape room with theme related to
communist-era secret police (ŠtB)
pages: 60-61
EscapeRoom.sk
www.escaperoom.sk
Vajnorská 48, Bratislava
+421 (0)940 590-122
Paniq Room (www.paniqroom.sk)
Hattalova 12/B, Bratislava
+421 (0)904 380-790
Extreme rides on the river
speadboats, water scooters, water-
skiing, kneeboarding, towables...
www.prenajom-lodi.sk
start of a ride based on agree-
ment +421 (0)910 312-399
from €110 per hour
SpeedBoats.sk
www.speedboats.sk
+421 (0)903 610-716
start of a ride based on agree-
ment from €180 (for team)
Jump aréna
Ivánska cesta 30/D, Bratislava
9 km +421 (0)2 2086-2411
www.jumparena.sk €9.9 / hour
indoor karting
Kart One Arena (www.kartarena.sk)
Kopčianska 82 5 km (6
min) +421 (0)911 818-122;
Mon-Fri 14:00-24:00, Sat-Sun
10:00-24:00 €8 (10 min)
Max 60 (www.motokary.sk)
Vajnorská 127/A 5 km (11
min) +421 (0)907 606-060
Mon-Thu, Sun 11:00-24:00,
Fri-Sat 11:00-1:00 €8 / ride
Space World (laser games)
Račianska 22/A 3 km (7
min) Ursínyho 3, 5, 7, 11,
17, 515 +421 (0)918 235-433
www.spaceworld.sk
Mon 13:00-20:00, Tue-Fri
13:00-23:00, Sat 10:00-23:00, Sun
10:00-22:00 €5 (12 min)
Paintball
Mierová kolónia 7 km (14
min) u Vihorlatská v 58
Å +421 (0)902 347-315
www.bratislavapaintball.sk
a booking necessary €8
Orechová Potôň-Slovakia Ring
Car racing; page: 101
speed. You can scream as much as you
like as you enjoy the more extreme
view of Bratislava.
Rafting
Even though the jump will certainly
increase the adrenalin pumping around
your body,you won’t even get wet.The
same cannot be said of the experiences
on offer at Čunovo, Slovakia’s paradise
for water sports,where visitors are invi-
ted to paddle their way down a number
of courses of rapids.
The area known as Divoká Voda was
established in 1995 and since then it has
hosted numerous prestigious European
and world canoeing and kayaking
events. No other place in Slovakia offers
you a better rafting ride than Čunovo,
but newcomers are as welcome as the
experienced. One-hour raft trips are
available with five other people and an
instructor.
“It begins peacefully, but suddenly
water drags you in like a sink and there
is no way back,” said Slavo Mrug, a
23-year-old student from Stará Ľubovňa,
who experienced the power of waves in
Čunovo. “If somebody makes a mistake,
the raft starts turning around, it rolls
down the bank backwards and you do
not know whether you will bump into
a rock, or capsize or fall from the boat.
That’s why you have to follow the direc-
tions of the instructor and paddle the
way he navigates you.” Rafting demands
humility from its participants and
respect for all the safety rules.
“Every instructor takes responsibility
for his crew and therefore it is essential
that everyone follows the instructions,”
said Martin Janata, 19, a student at
the Business Academy in Bratislava,
who also works as a rafting instruc-
tor. “Sometimes there are visitors who
ignore the rules, thinking that nothing
can happen to them. But they soon
realise how important it is when they
are hit by the first wave.They not only
see but also feel the strength of the
water’s flow.”
Onthe river
“For waterskiing,water scooters,
kneeboarding and other extreme rides
we take tourists from Eurovea or several
different places on the Danube river,”
said Jaromír Minařík from Hot Chilli
lode company,who owns several boats
and other equipment he uses for water
attractions in Bratislava. Speedboat
rides are one of the most popular excur-
sions. During the trip visitors can enjoy
the view from the river of Devín Castle,
the historical centre, bridges as well as
quiet areas with houseboats which are
among visitors the most popular even
though the ride is slower there. “Dur-
ing the trip we usually stop in Marina
café where we can stay in touch with
water,” Minařík said.Water attractions
are available in Čilistov.The group
usually pay for the speedboat rental and
all other equipments well as special neo-
prene clothing and life jackets. “Part of
the group has a drink on the terrace of
the restaurant while watching friends ,”
Minárik added.
Ina bubble
Not far from Divoká Voda is another
centre of extreme and unusual sports:
Action Park, which offers the visitors
also the chance to try “zorbing”–
roughly the equivalent of standing in a
giant bubble and running down a hill.
“I got into the ball and was strapped
in and was suddenly overwhelmed by
fear,” said Veronika Bugajová, a 19-year-
old student from Martin. “But I realised
that there was no way to back down.
The ball was pushed and rolled down
the hill and I felt like I was in a washing
machine… I came out with my feet sore,
like after a long night partying. But I
still had a smile on my face.”
Escape games
For brave spirits it may be interesting
to play interactive “escape” games
in which small teams must solve
thematic tasks in order to get out. One
of the most known games, mainly in
Japan, China and the United States, is
Izba č. 13 (Room Thirteen), situated in
a crime scene with lots of brain-teasers
and logical story lines. “One third
of our customers are coming from
abroad,” Lucia Pšenicová from Izba č.
13 said.
In addition, visitors can enjoy
themselves with similar escape games
such as BrainTeaseLava with theme
of the communist ŠtB secret service,
funny EscapeRoom.sk rooms and Paniq
Room’s Secrets of Da Vinci focused on
finding sangreal. - Karina Miartanová -
Zorbing gives you the feeling of
being in a washing machine
Photo:CourtesyofActionPark
Photo: Courtesy of Action Park
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/70 bratislava: THE danube
1 Prístav (Port)
Fajnorovo nábrežie 2; map D 4
1.6 km (19 min)
2.1 km (3 min) u Nám. Ľ.
Štúra v 11, 13, 14 Å +421 (0)2
5293-2226 www.twincityliner.com,
www.lod.sk aMon-Sun
9:00-12:00, 12:30-16:00
Regular cruises by hydrofoil
express boats (Bratislava – Vienna);
Sightseeing Cruises: (Devín Castle,
Bratislava Round Trip, Čunovo Dam,
Danubiana Muelensteen Art Museum
in Čunovo) €20 (regular
cruises), from €6 (sightseeing
cruises) åWC
49River Park
New development with several
restaurants directly on river bank
page: 29
51UFO restaurant page: 30
56Eurovea New development with
several restaurants directly on river
bank page: 30
D1Botel Marina
www.botelmarina.sk
Nábrežie arm. gen. L. Svobodu;
map B 4 Å +421 (0)2 5464-1805
D2Botel Gracia
www.botelgracia.sk
Rázusovo nábrežie; map C 4
Å +421 (0)2 5443-2132
D3River’s Club
www.riversclub.sk
Tyršovo nábrežie; map C 4
Å+421 (0)911 277-377
D4Au Cafe, www.au-cafe.sk
Tyršovo nábrežie; map C 4
Å +421 (0)2 6252-0355
D5Magio Beach
Tyršovo nábrežie; map C 4
2km (24 min) u Aupark
v 80, 83, 84, 88, 91, 93, 94,
191a May-Sep å WC
D6LOĎ - Divadlo v podpalubí
(Theatre) Tyršovonábrežie;map
C4®Å+421(0)903449-650
WCwww.lodteatro.sk
“MoonaftermoonrollsthethunderingDanube,
arigidcastlestandingonatallrockglowsupon
thewater...”
Crush Him by Samo Chalupka
Every child in Slovakia has to
memorise the words of one of the most
famous national poems,and every
tourist who has ever seen Bratislava
knows the words to be a perfect
description of Slovakia’s capital and its
majestic river view.
The Danube is not an ordinary
river: its power has become a symbol
for Slovakia and its influence stretches
across Europe.It is the only river
in the world to connect four capital
cities: Vienna,Bratislava,Budapest
and Belgrade,and it has formed the
border between countries many times
throughout history.
The Danube was first used as a
border in the 1st century,as part of the
Limes Romanus protecting the Roman
Empire from barbaric Germanic tribes.
Nowadays it divides nation from nation:
Romania from Bulgaria; Croatia from
Serbia.It also creates a firm,natural
border between Slovakia and Hungary,
where the areas surrounding its banks
have typically been fraught with
nationalistic tensions.However,the river
itself,in its strength and beauty,is more
a source for harmony than tension.
“I am a very introverted person,
but when I sit near the Danube,I think
of everything but me and wonder
how peaceful it is when civilisation
meets nature,” said LucyWright,22,a
university student from Brighton,who
has made a spot near the Danube her
favourite place in the city.
Civilisation has met the river a
few times in the past,but what may be
a whole lifetime for a human is but a
slight moment for the Danube.Its deep
waters hide countless secrets,where
measurements are made on a different
scale.
For half a million years,the largest
river island in Europe,Žitný Ostrov,
has been entirely consumed within the
river’s breadth,a direct legacy of the sea
that once covered this area.There is also
an invisible process happening all the
time under the island,which stretches
more than 80km from Bratislava to the
area of Komárno.
Faces of the Danube:
both pleasing and scary
A view of the city from the Old Bridge during flooding in June 2013
49
D1
51
D4
D2
D3
D5
D6
D7
56
1
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: THE danube 71
D7Dunajský pivovar
www.dunajskypivovar.sk
Tyršovo nábrežie; map D 4
+421 (0)948 418-934
98Divoká voda page: 68-69
99Danubiana Meulensteen Art
Museum page: 39
Mark Twain Pub
page:74Karloveskérameno
4.1km(6min)uBotanická
v1,4,5,9,12,17,29,32
asummerseason14:00-24:00
RIVER CRUISES
Hot Chilli Boats
www.prenajom-lodi.sk
start of a ride based on agree-
ment +421 (0)910 312-399
from €110 per hour
SpeedBoats.sk (www.speedboats.sk)
+421 (0)903 610 716
start of a ride based on agree-
ment from €180 (for team)
Extremerides page: 68-69
Malý Dunaj Inland waterway
www.maly-dunaj.skÅ +421(0)907
799-663from€8(renting
priceforcanoe)€1(paddle)
Bird watching
www.watching.sk Å+421 (0)948
495-111depending on program
Cycling page: 96-97
According to Peter Malík, the head
of the Department of Hydrogeology
and Geothermal Energy at the State
Geological Institute of Dionýz Štúr,
“the island is sinking, because of the
constant movement of the earth’s
crust.Therefore it is losing stability and
creates gaps,which the river fills up
with gravel.This process is actually loud
and if you decide to paddle in the river
and stay quiet for a while,you will hear
the stones rolling under the water”.
The river carries 100 kg of stones per
second under the island.There is 10 m
of gravel under the centre of Bratislava,
150 m under Čunovo and up to 500 m in
Gabčíkovo,which lies approximately
52 km from Bratislava. Gravel is a great
storage place for water.About 8,000
litres per second get lost under the
ground of Bratislava,which then flow
under the island and appear on the
surface again near the town of Kolárovo.
The underground river runs for 98km.
“If you dug deep enough anywhere
on Žitný Ostrov, you would find
drinking water,” Malík said.
The island is the largest reservoir
of water around the Danube: 25,000
litres of drinking water per second
circulate underground, with only 4,500
litres ever used.
But the Danube is not onlya
salvation; it can also be a threat.Under
the rule of MariaTheresa,in the
18th century,engineers changed
the river’s course,building dams
and embankments and attempting
to push Europe’s largest inland river
delta underground.In the past,the
river started to divide in Hainburg,
but there are onlya fewof the
branches left today.It means that
the pressure of 10,000 litres of
water remains under the island,
occasionallyrising dramatically
to the surface.
Many of the significant floods
caused by the Danube can be attributed
to its deep underwater life.The most
famous came in 1850 when the whole
of Bratislava was flooded by water and
ice floes.An attentive visitor will no
doubt notice the signs on some old city
buildings, which indicate how high
the water rose on the precise date of
February 5, 1850.The most prominent
can be found on the corner of the
Primate’s Palace or on the Old Town
Hall.
The Danube not only provides
drinking water to the people of
Bratislava, but it also offers residents
many leisure-time opportunities. Very
popular are romantic rides on boats
with special views of the city, bridges
or even Devín Castle.The majority
of people living near the river make
good use of its beaches, which are, of
course, not white sanded and massed
with tourists, but intimate, secluded
and enjoyable.These tranquil spots can
be found along the river’s length, and
its banks also provide cycling paths,
great fishing opportunities
and hiking routes. It is also
possible to explore the river
or one of its branches (the
most popular is Malý
Dunaj) either in small
kayaks or canoes. Less active
visitors may also appreciate the
possibilities to hop on a bigger
boat and head off for Vienna. You
can see the Slovak and Austrian
capitals while never leaving the
beautiful surrounds of the Danube
itself. - Timea Becková -
The Danube can be also dangerous – the line shows how high
its waters rose in Bratislava on Feb 5, 1850
Paddling down the Malý Dunaj
Danubiana is located on a man-made
peninsula on the Danube
Photo: Courtesy of Danubiana
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/72 bratislava: PARKS, GARDENS AND LAKES
Gardens:
65Prezidentská
(Grasalkovičova) záhrada
Štefánikova/Banskobystrická;
map C 2 1 km (12 min)
u Hodžovo námestie v 32, 83,
84, 93, 147, 184, 203, 206, 207,
208, 212 aOct-Mar:Mon-Sun
10:00-19:00;Apr-May:Mon-Sun
10:00-20:00;Jun-Sep:Mon-Sun
8:00-22:00free
71Medická záhrada
Ul. 29. augusta/Špitálska; map
D, E 2 1.2 km (14 min)
2.1 km (5 min) u Mariánska
v 4, 9 a Apr-Sep 7:00-21:00,
Oct-Mar 10:00-18:00free
82Botanical Garden
Botanická 9 (near Student
dormitory Družba); map F 4
4.1 km (6 min)
u Botanická záhrada
v 4, 5, 6, 9, 28, 29, 32
Å +421 (0)2 6542-1311
a Apr-Oct 9:00-17:30
€3 åWC
Parks:
53Sad Janka Kráľa
Viedenská cesta/Einsteinova;
map C 4 1.4 km (17
min) 3.5 km (4 min)
u Sad Janka Kráľa v 82
a non-stopfreeå
79Horský park
Bohúňova/Búdková cesta
map A,B 1 2.4 km (34 min)
2.6 km (5 min)
u Horský park v 207
a non-stopfreeå
84Železná studienka
page: 37
Bratislava has suffered at the hands of
ruthless investors and developers over
the years - not least the communist
government - who not only changed
the face of the city by modifying and
constructing buildings,but also ruined
playgrounds and removed greenery.It
is remarkable,therefore,that so many
of Bratislava’s parks and woods have
been preserved to this day.Some visitors
are still suprised that the city has also a
cablecar which operates between Koliba
and Železná Studienka areas.
There are still numerous choices
of whether to spend free time in an
oasis of peace and quiet situated in city
centre or completely surrounded by
the forests,lakes and streams outside
the metropolis.According to official
city sources,4,000 hectares of the city’s
total area is green.And if that is still not
enough,there’s always the white-water
canal too.
Gardens
Inside the city centre,only about 500m
from Kamenné Square,is the well-kept
Medická záhrada (garden),a popular
place among young Bratislavans,who
flock there when the sun shines.Some
just sit on benches or on the ground;
others play football,badminton or
frisbee.The other main garden in the city
centre is Prezidentská záhrada (garden),
a park just behind the Grassalkovich
Palace,home of Slovakia’s president.
The trees lining the eastern fence were
all planted by foreign politicians during
their stays in Bratislava.The garden
features benches,statues and a fountain,
while the lawns can be used for sports (if
the keeper is in a good mood).
The Botanical Garden of Comenius
University provides a similar refuge from
hurried city life.Visitors can admire a
huge variety of plant species in outside
landscapes,as well as in greenhouses.
The garden used to be primarily a
research centre for Comenius University,
but in the course of time it has become a
park to be enjoyed by the general public
too.
Parks
The Sad Janka Kráľa,established in
1774-76 as one of the first public parks
in central Europe,is located just across
the Danube from Bratislava’s historical
centre.Manyvisitors of the nearby
Aupark Shopping Centre stop to relax
there.One interesting attraction is the
surviving part of a gothic tower.It was
moved here from the Franciscan Church,
located in the historical centre,which
was partly destroyed by an earthquake in
1897.The park runs all the way to a river
bank area calledTyršovo nábrežie where
several bars and restaurants are located
Let’s take a break in the city
Having fun in the Prezidentská záhrada (garden)
Bratislava offers several green places
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: PARKS, GARDENS AND LAKES 73
85TV Tower Kamzík
page: 38
Lakes and swimming:
89Kuchajda
Vajnorská/Tomášikova;
map F 4 5.8 km (12 min)
u Polus City Center v 2, 4,
50, 51, 98a Apr 7:30-21:30;
May-Sep 6:00-22:30; Oct-Mar
7:00-20:30free å
90Zlaté Piesky (lake)
page: 38
95Veľký Draždiak (lake)
Tematínska/Antolská;
map F 4 7.3 km (12 min)
u Šintavská v 68, 83,
92, 94, 95, 99, 192
a non-stopfreeå
The Sad Janka Kráľa was the first
public park in central Europe
A cableway connects TV Tower
Kamzík with the lower-down
former hotel, Snežienka in Železná
Studienka area
Horský park holds an open-air gallery
Zlaté Piesky (lake) offers bathing, water-skiing and other water attractions
including a couple that are actually on
boats.
Between May and September,the
popular Magio Beach offers fun,
playgrounds and more bars.
An even more peaceful option is
Horský park, a piece of unspoilt nature
on a hill that separates the Old Town
from the western districts. Horský Park,
which can be translated as “Mountain
Park”, has its very own atmosphere.
Despite its proximity to the city,visitors
can breathe clean air, get lost in the
forest or relax on numerous wooden
benches that are spread all over the
area.There is an open-air gallery and
a cosy café beside the main entrance,
which are popular meeting places.
The park is an approximate
30-minute walk along Hlboká Street
(map B, C 1) from the city centre, close
to the Slavín memorial. On the way
down, it is possible to explore the
streets around Slavín,which are among
the most prestigious addresses in the
city.
“I like that there are forests right
around the city and it is really easy to
get up in to the woods and get away
from the city life here,” said Paul Mc-
Cullough, an American who moved to
Bratislava more than 20 years ago.
Koliba is an extremely popular
area,with several snack bars sat
atop a slope used for bobsleigh
in summer and skiing
in winter.The area
is dominated by the
highest structure
in Bratislava, the
TVTower,with an
observation deck and
restaurant. Paths and trails for hiking
and biking lead all over the area,while
a cableway connects upper Koliba with
the lower-down former hotel, Snežienka
in Železná Studienka area.
The western passage to the marvel-
lous area of the city’s forests is called
Železná Studienka. Passing under the
red steel railway bridge,visitors are
greeted by a big playground, including
fields for football,volleyball, basketball,
pétanque and table tennis.There is also
an old amphitheatre with a café and
toilets, offering another place to sit and
enjoy the beautiful scenery. However,
it would be pity not to go further into
the forest.The lakes and zigzagging
pathways with restaurants in recon-
structed old mills are just waiting to be
discovered.The trails lead deeper into
the forest, some connecting to nearby
Koliba. Popular is also the 4.5-hour hike
to the ruins of the castle Pajštún.
Lakes and swimming
Slovakia may be a landlocked country,
but its residents have learned to make
the most of its plentiful lakes,
even in the heart of the city.
Bratislava’s biggest lake
is Zlaté Piesky, near to
the airport,which
offers the chance to
water-ski and/or bathe
naked at an unofficial
nudists’ beach on the
eastern shore. (There is
a fee for entry to the lake.) The closest
lake to the city centre is Kuchajda, near
to the Polus City Centre,which also
offers various sporting activities and
water bikes.
Other options for swimmers
include Veľký Draždiak in Petržalka,
Vajnorské jazero in Vajnory and
Rusovské jazero in Rusovce.There are
also numerous wellness centres and
swimming pools open to the public,
including Hotel Nivy (www.hotelnivy.
sk), Golem Club and a wellness centre
in the Central Shopping Centre (www.
central.sk/en). - Ivan Belko -
53
95
79
82 65 71
89 90
84 85
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/74 bratislava: THE UNUSUAL
74YMCA
Karpatská 2; map D 1
1.8 km (22 min) 2.4 km
(6 min) u Karpatská v 34,
61, 64, 74, 201, 204, 209, 210
www.majestic.sk
80aSandberg
page: 37
95Veľký Draždiak (lake)
Tematínska 6 km (9 min)
u Strečnianska v 68, 83,
92, 94, 95, 192
Mark Twain Club
Botanická 9 (near Student
dormitory Družba) 4.1 km
(6 min) u Botanická záhrada
v 4, 5, 6, 9, 28, 29, 32
Marketplace on Žilinská Street
Žilinská; map D 1 1.6 km
(19 min) 2 km (5 min)
u Karpatská v 34, 61, 64, 74,
201, 204, 209, 210
a Mon-Sat 7:00-12:00
Palisády
Palisády/Kozia/Panenská/
Zochova; map C,B 2; B 3
0.9 km (5 min) å
Cemetery on Šulekova Street
(Cintorín Kozia brána)
Šulekova 1; map B 2
1.3 km (8 min) u Kozia
v 147, 203, 208a Oct-Feb
7:00-17:00; Mar-Sep 7:00-20:00
Kochova záhrada
Partizánska 27; map A 2; A 3
1.3 km (20 min) 1.4
km (4 min) u Partizánska v
203, 207a exterior views only
Statue of a UFO
Bieloruská, Medzijarky
12 km (15 min) u
Stavbárska v 78, 87, 178
How about you slow down and take a
look at Bratislava on a more authentic
level? You can eat fried fish at sunset
on the Danube or swim in a lake in the
middle of Petržalka’s tower blocks.You
can hang out with Bratislava’s answer to
Charles Bukowski,or join the aliens that
once landed in the city.You may think
you have seen all that this place has to
offer,but there is much,much more
than meets the eye.
Bratislava is full of strange little
wonders not listed in the tourist
guidebooks.Some of them are hard to
find,even for locals,but getting lost
in Bratislava can be one of the most
rewarding things to do.And with a few
special recommendations,even vegetar-
ians and those on a gluten-free diet can
find places to feast in the city.
Some may call this a guide to
“alternative Bratislava”,but for others,
this is the page that will keep them sane
and alive.
Closetothe river
Bratislavans love rivers and one of
the best places you can go to get close
enough to touch the Danube is the Mark
Twain Club,a charming old anchored
boat,like the one Huckleberry Finn mig-
ht sail down the Mississippi,which was
converted into a pub almost 19 years ago.
The MarkTwain is situated in a
small bay near the Canoe Club (Kanoi-
stický Klub Karlova Ves) and provides not
only a magical view,but also occasional
guitar players picking out the blues as
well a barbeque on which you can cook
delicacies of your choice.It is well off the
beaten track,but as rowers drift by,to
the soundtrack of singing birds,it is well
worth the trouble to seek it out.“It’s a
place out of time,” said Barbara Lamoot,
a 41-year-old artist.There is a slightly dif-
ferent water experience to be next to the
shipyard of Lodenica Vlčie hrdlo,where
there is a seafood canteen in the quiet,
industrial bay,surrounded by retired
houseboats and
old ferries.Although it may sound unap-
pealing,it is a remarkably popular and
unusual place to take a deep breath after
a hard working day.
When ordering food in the canteen,
you will be given a number,which will
be called by microphone when the food
is ready. It is the perfect motivation
to learn to count in Slovak,or else you
might end up hungry.(To find this place,
it’s not the time to be brave: take a taxi.)
Another perfect spot from which to
take a moment to admire the surround-
ings is at Sandberg (literally a sandy hill),
at the end of Slovinec Street in Devínska
Nová Ves.Years ago,this area,which is
now close to the Morava River and the
border withAustria,was all under water:
fossils have been found here dating from
14 million years ago,as well as fragments
of whale bone.Some parts of the area are
highly protected and entry is restricted,
but it is a charming place surrounded by
irises and colourful birds reminiscent
of parrots.
Alternative Bratislava
Tourist Information Centre offers Secret door to Bratislava
guide, with tips for hidden places in the capital
Mark Twain Club
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: THE UNUSUAL 75
Fresh Market
Rožňavská 1A 7 km (13
min) www.freshmarket.sk
aMon-Fri 7:00–19:00,
Sat 7:00–14:00, Sun: closed
u Trnavská, ŽST Nové Mesto or
Haburská
Kop Saloon Pub
Kollárovo námestie; map D 2
Bistro Vanesa Pub
Nedbalova; map C 3 (c 4)
Prašná bašta restaurant
Zámočnícka 11; map C 3 (c 1)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-4957
www.prasnabasta.sk
Verne restaurant
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 18
map C 4 Å +421 (0)2 5443-0514
VEGETARIAN
Beer Palace
Gorkého 5; map C 3 (c 4)
www.beerpalace.sk
Govinda
Obchodná 30; map C 3 (c 2)
www.govinda.sk
City Vegetarian
Obchodná 58; map C 3 (c 2)
Å +421 (0)2 5273-1381
Veg Life
Mickiewiczova 18; map D 2
www.veglife.sk
Veggie
Obchodná 66; map C 3 (c 2)
www.veggie.sk
RAW FOOD
Bemba
OD Slimák, Hálkova 1
www.restauraciabemba.sk
GLUTEN FREE
Sole Mio
Grösslingova 31; map D 3
www.solemiopizza.sk
Pizza Mizza
Tobrucká 5; map D 4
www.pizzamizza.sk
Funki Punki
Klariská 12; map C 3 (c 3)
Å +421 (0)2 2102-8881
Wandering
aroundthe city
Itisslightlymoreurbanintheareaof
Palisády.Youarefreeheretogetlostalong
thestreets,discoveringitsromantic
oldvillasandmorefunctionalmodern
buildings.Thereisalsoanoldcemeteryon
ŠulekovaStreetandthefamousKochova
záhrada(garden),whichhowevercanbe
admiredonlythroughafence.Ifyouthen
crosstheSNPBridgeonfoot,youwillbe
inthemiddleofPetržalka,thebiggest
housingprojectincentralEuropeand
hardlyaplacerenownedforitstourism
appeal.ButyoucanswimhereinDraždiak
lakeandknowthatyourexperiencesfrom
avisittoBratislavaareconsiderablymore
thantypical.
If,through all this,you still feel a
little out of place,then take a moment
to hang out with fellow alien beings:
there is a statue of a UFO in the middle of
Bieloruská Street in Medzijarky.Its some-
what run-down condition suggests what
might happen to any poor aliens landing
on this predatory planet.
Food foraliens
Even aliens have to eat sometimes,
however,and vegetarians or gluten-
-free eaters,behold! It is possible for
you to find suitable food in Bratislava.
The chef at the Beer Palace on Gorkého
Street comes from the famous vegetarian
restaurant Vegetka,the only Bratislava
restaurant at which people were willing
to queue for half an hour just to get
lunch.There are two other vegetarian
options on Obchodná Street–Govinda and
CityVegetarian restaurant–plus Veg Life
on nearby Mickiewicova Street.
Various gluten-free choices can be
also found in the pizza restaurants Sole
Mio and Pizza Mizza and,in case of emer-
gency,at fast food outlets in Mariánska
Street.You can also get a buckwheat
pancake at Funki Punki pancake house.
You can also find a tasty and affordable
dinner on the terrace of Prašná bašta
and at Verne restaurant,although it’s
not necessarily gluten free.If you are
luckyyou can join a seasonal vegan feast
on Nám.Slobody (square),where people
come and share their homemade vegan
food.
Alternatively,Fresh Market is an
interesting option.On two storeys,it
houses gastronomic premises (including
vegetarian ones),cafés,shops,a chil-
dren’s corner and stalls with local fresh
foodstuff,flowers,meat and baked goods.
Every Saturday morning you can buy
also fresh vegetables from local farmers
at the marketplace on Žilinská. There
is also the seasonal open-air market
Dobrý trh (Good Fair) in Panenská Street
or Jakubovo námestie,which offers a
mixture of bio food,designer products,
antiques and a street art programme.
Surprising places
Afternightfalls,Bratislavacomesaliveand
fewplacesofferasmuchdiversityasthe
oldYMCAbuildingonthecornerofŠan-
cováandKarpatskáStreets.Accordingto
PeterWilfling,34,anadvocacyandhuman
rightslawyer:“Itcontainssixpubsand
clubsmixingtogetherpunks,metallers,
hipstersandlostsouls…ItisBratislava,
BoulevardMontparnasseandCamden
Townallinone.”
Similar brave and lonesome hearts–
who may find themselves more at home
with Charles Bukowski than in posh,
soulless bars–can find in Bratislava the
kind of retro,low-cost pubs that feel as
though theywill collapse when their last
regular leaves for the night.
According to Wilfling,the Kop saloon
pub,on the corner of Kollárovo námestie
and Živnostenská street,is: “a small
bizzare place with walls covered by old
musical instruments,paintings of naked
lesbian vampires,communistic icons,
the armour of Roman legionnaires and
idyllic countryside drawings.”
Thereisalsoananatomicallyaccurate
statueofanakedfemaletorso,leaving
littletotheimagination,andairisthick
withcloudsofsmokefromtheoldbarflies,
allbehindasignreading“Módnysalón”,
or“fashionsalon”onthefrontwall.
MaybealsotryBistroVanesa,whichalso
hostssmallexhibitionsandoccasional
improvisedmusicalrecitals,allbeneathan
extraordinaryold-fashionedceiling.
“For me its a piece of old Bratislava,”
said Hela Boldišová,26,a coordinator of
a dance group,of Bistro Vanesa.“It is an
authentic pub with good quality beer,for
a good price,in the centre of the town
with a pleasantly severe barmaid and
underrated artists as guests.”
- Sandra Tordová -
The market place at Žilinská Street
DraždiakinPetržalkaoffersoneoftheunusualbathingopportunities
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/76 bratislava: dining
F0Liviano
Kutlíkova 17
Å +421 (0)2 6828-6688
www.liviano.sk
F1Fou Zoo
Ševčenkova 34
Å +421 (0)901 747-474
www.fouzoo.sk
F2Leberfinger
Viedenská cesta 257; map C 4
Å +421 (0)2 6231-7590
www.leberfinger.sk
F3UFO watch.taste.groove
Most SNP; map B 4
Å +421 (0)2 6252-0300
www.u-f-o.sk
F4Savoy Restaurant
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 3
(Hotel Carlton); map C 4
+421 (0)2 5939-0400
www.savoyrestaurant.sk
F5Verne
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 18;
map C 4 Å +421 (0)2 5443-0514
F6Bistro Soho
Dunajská 20; map D 3
+421 (0) 948 611-449
www.bistrosoho.sk
F7Bratislava Flag Ship
Námestie SNP 8; map C 3 (c 2)
Å +421 (0)917 927-673
www.bratislavskarestauracia.sk
F8Slovak Pub
Obchodná 62; map D 2
Å +421 (0)2 5292-6367
www.slovakpub.sk
F9Zelený Rodrigéz
Zámocká 36; map B 3
+421 (0)905 218-569
F10Restaurant of the Albrecht
Hotel
Mudroňova 82; map A 2
Å +421 (0)902 333-888
www.albrechtrestaurant.com
More information about
restaurants in Bratislava:
N page: 104
Thewide andvaried tastes of Bratislava
Although there are some varieties
of wine that can be called typical
to Bratislava, the same cannot
necessarily be said about the city’s
cuisine. But this is not cause for
regret. Instead, because of Bratislava’s
location close to borders and along
significant ancient trade routes, food
in the region displays influences
from across Hungary, the Czech
Republic and Austria as well
as more remote corners of
the world.This remains
true in modern times,
when Bratislava has not
escaped globalisation.
Nowadays all the
major fast food chains
can be found here, as well as
countless Italian, Greek, Chinese and
Indian restaurants, and some high-
end, swanky eateries too.
The fierce competition from global
brands has also prompted a reaction
among local foodies
keen to ensure Slovak
recipes continue
to be cooked in the
city.There are now
a number of history
books about local
cuisine by a writer
named Vladimír
Tomčík, plus cook
books containing
historical recipes,
including a popular
series by Silvia
Pilková.
Similarly a
few restaurants
in Bratislava have
elevated traditional,
local cooking to
top-end restaurant
standard.Try
Leberfinger on
the Petržalka bank of the Danube,
for instance,which dates from the
second half of the 18th century. Savoy
Restaurant, in Carlton hotel in the
city centre, is another favourite. It
focuses on modern gastronomy, but
draws an influence from Slovak and
central-European cuisine.There are
also a reliable smattering of cheaper
restaurants, popular with locals,
that offer a vibrant atmosphere
and good food.Try Verne, opposite
the US Embassy, or the Slovak
Pub, or Bratislava Flag Ship.
Fancy restaurants
As the richest city in Slovakia, it is
only to be expected that Bratislava
offers a number of fancy restaurants
that regularly top national lists for
both cuisine and service, compiled
by the economic weekly Trend.The
restaurant at the top of the SNP Bridge
over the Danube – UFO watch.taste.
groove, to give it its full (but very
infrequently used) name – is certainly
the restaurant with the most attractive
location in the city, and it also offers
acclaimed cuisine to complement its
spectacular 360° views over Bratislava.
However, Petržalka’s Fou Zoo,
which also rides high in the lists and
combines Asian and European cuisine,
is proof that location is not everything.
Likewise Liviano, a restaurant sitting
in the high-rise office building in
Petržalka, was recently named among
the 101 best restaurants in Europe.
Bistro Soho, Zelený Rodrigez
or Prašná Bašta have some of the
best rankings on TripAdvisor.The
restaurant of the Albrecht Hotel near
Slavín is also popular, especially now
that its chef Jaroslav Židek has become
famous thanks to his TV show Áno,
šéfe!, the Slovak version of Gordon
Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares.
F0
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6
F9
F7
F8
F10
The restaurant UFO watch.taste.groove has one of the most attractive locations in the city, with a 360 degree view over Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: dining 77
Bratislava traditional pastry
www.fantastico.biz
F. X. Messerschmidt Café N pg: 78
Zeppelin Café N page: 79
FOOD EVENTS
Winter Food Festival Bratislava
(Jan), www.zimnyfestivaljedla.sk
Days of asparagus (May)
Slovak Food Festival
at Bratislava Castle (May)
www.slovakfoodfestival.sk
Gurmán Fest Bratislava (Jun),
www.gurmanfestbratislava.sk
Goose feast in Slovenský Grob (All
year but restaurants hold an open-
door event in August or September)
Fyzulnačka, the competition in
cooking of the bean soup in Pezinok,
(Aug-Sep), www.pezinok.sk
Vegan festival Bratislava (Sep),
www.veganskehody.sk
Dni zelá (The Days of Cabbage) in
Stupava, (the first October weekend),
www.stupava.sk
SIX USEFUL TIPS FOR RESTAURANTS
1. When ordering drinks, remember
that Slovaks count beginning with
the thumb (1), then the thumb and
index finger (2), and so on. If you
raise your index finger to signify
one beer, you may end up with a
confused waiter bringing two.
2. ‘Na zdravie’ is equivalent to the
English ‘cheers’, literally meaning
‘to health’. Before the first round,
you are expected to clink glasses
(štrngnúť) – at which point
remember to make eye contact
with your fellow clinker, and don’t
cross the path of two other clinkers.
After the first round, it’s no longer
necessary to štrngnúť.
3. On weekdays between about
11:00 and 14:00 many restaurants
offer a daily menu (denné menu)
with two or three alternative dishes
(soup and main course). The price is
usually between €4 and €5.
4. If you’re a vegetarian be careful
what you order. Even apparently
innocuous dishes like cabbage soup
tend to come with chunks of pork
sausage bobbing around in them.
5. It’s not always service with a
smile. Don’t take offence if your
waiter or waitress fails to smile;
it’s not personal. Customer service
in many places in Slovakia hasn’t
reached the levels it has in top
tourist destinations.
6. There is no strict rule about
tipping in Slovakia. Some
Slovaks only round up the bill;
others calculate tips as 10
percent of the total.
Pivnica u Zlatej Husi
Pezinská 2, Slovenský Grob
Å +421 (0)905 525-417
www.zlatahus.sk
Bratislava pastry
In the inter-war period,Bratislava
used to have a strong café tradition,
which it has been gradually re-
gaining in the post-communist era.
The local speciality is Bratislavský
rožok,a fine,crescent-shaped
pastrywith filling made from
poppyseed or walnuts,which is the
perfect accompaniment to a cup
of coffee.After a five-year process
and negotiations with Hungary and
Austria (who were also part of the
Habsburg empire when Bratislavský
rožok was first baked) it earned its
“traditional speciality guaranteed”
(TSG) seal from the EU in 2012.
Pastries are available for example in
Zepellin or F.X.Messerschmidt cafés.
Company FantastiCo is one of the
best known producers.Austria and
Hungary have their own variations of
the pastry: the Pressburger Kipfel and
Pozsonyi kifli.
Goose fests
Back in the dayswhen Bratislava
was known as Pressburg,residents
of the citywould often find fish from
the Danube on their tables.But the
tradition has sadlynot survived.
Rejoice,then,for SlovenskýGrob,a
smallvillage just outside Bratislava,
inwhich a long tradition for roast
goose has endured andwhichwas not
interrupted even bythe communist
regime.During autumn goose is an
integral part of the seasonal menu.
Roast goose or husacina is served
with lokše (potato pancakes coveredwith
goose fat),and oftenwith goose liver as
an entrée.The tradition of goose roasting
in SlovenskýGrob dates back more than
100years and nowadays there are several
venues scattered in the tinyvillage.
Originallyroast goose could be eaten
onlyduring the traditional season lasting
from September until December,but now
husacina can be enjoyed throughout the
wholeyear – assumingyou can get a table.
These are mostlysmall familybusinesses
with limited space offering a cosy,casual
and rustic atmosphere.(One of the
exceptions is the larger and better known
Pivnica u Zlatej Husi.)
Gourmet festivals
During the summer,Bratislava and
the surrounding areas host various
food festivals,which are often worth
exploring for the combination of both
cuisine and culture.For instance,the
zabíjačka festival (which translated
literally means the “pig killing”) offers
some good traditional specialties.
Meanwhile,the best restaurants in the
region will often attend the gourmet
festival in Medická Záhrada or the Slovak
Food Festival in Bratislava Castle.
The Cabbage Festival (Dni zelá),
which is held during the first weekend
in October in Stupava only 19 kilometres
from Bratislava,is becoming more
popular.Even though cabbage is the
main theme there is a wide selection of
folk and cultural events linked to this
festival.
In the autumn,the wine-making
districts of Bratislava hold “vinobranie”,
the name given to festivities marking the
end of the grape harvest.These offer an
excellent opportunity to taste burčiak,
fermented grape juice,a specialty served
only in Slovakia,the Czech Republic and
Austria. - Jana Liptáková -
Bratislava hosts numerous food festivals throughout the year
The goose roasting tradition in Slovenský Grob dates back more than 100 years. Today numerous venues cook and sell the local specialty
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/78 bratislava: cafés
Cafés in the city centre
Axioma
Lazaretská 10; map D 3
Å +421 (0)2 5249-9925
Dobre&Dobré
Nedbalova 13; map C 3 (c 4)
+421 (0)905 136-110
www.facebook.com/cafedobre
Foxford (www.foxford.sk)
Obchodná 26; map C 3 (c 2)
+421 (0)905 914-739
F. X. Messerschmidt Café
Nám. SNP 8; map C3 (c 2)
+421 (0)905 237-054
www.messerschmidt.sk
Greentree (www.greentreecaffe.sk)
Ventúrska 20; map C 3 (c 3)
Štúrova 4; map D 3
Obchodná 29; map C 3 (c 2)
Kaffee Mayer
www.kaffeemayer.sk
Hlavné námestie 4; map C 3
(c 4) Å +421 (0)2 5441-1741
La Putika (www.laputika.sk)
Klobučnícka 4; map C 3 (c 4)
Å +421 (0)911 610-743
Panská 12; map C 3 (c 3)
Å +421 (0)901 709-079
Obývačka (www.obyvacka.net)
Dunajská 54; map D 3
Å +421 (0)948 255-924
A coffee revolution takes hold
The function suite of the Hotel Sheraton
seemed to be filled with nothing but
coffee.Its smell filled the air and it was
the subject of every conversation among
each of the groups of people,who were
holding samples named like “crèma
passion” in cardboard,“to-go” cups.
This was the first “Coffee
Fest” in Bratislava,where
organisers had expected a small
turnout of coffee afficionados
but were instead inundated
by hundreds of coffee fans,
who came in their droves to
enjoy professionally-prepared espresso,
cappuccino or latte,and to prove that
the global passion for the black stuff has
made it to Slovakia.
“Slovaks have cared for the coffee
quality much more since they started
to travel all around the world,” said
Slovakia’s leading coffee expert,Michal
Šturc.
They also enjoy it in great quantity,
at least if Coffee Fest was anything to
go by.
The coffee phenomenon
in Bratislava is best
represented by the increasing
number of coffee shops
opening up across the city.But
it is not only a modern thing as the city
has a long,coffee-centred tradition.
By 1918,Bratislava was considered by
many to resemble a suburb of Vienna,
from where it had acquired a trend
for cosy coffee-houses.According to
Imrich Sečanský’s book Memories and
Professions of a Doctor,after the First
World War,coffee houses became the
kind of place where business contracts
were signed,chess was played,artists
and journalists met to gossip and
exchange ideas.They moulded the soul
of the city.
Only the communists could end
the thriving sub-culture,and their
fears of the intellectual classes resulted
in the forced closure of all the famous
coffee houses.Sečanský feared that the
tradition would never return,but thanks
to the opening of Europe’s borders,
coffee started making a comeback in
Bratislava.
To help homeless people get back from the street to normal
life is the main goal of the project of the café Dobre&Dobré,
which resides in the Old Market Hall
Some of Bratislava’s cafés can also be found inside the bookshops
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: cafés 79
Cafés in the city centre
Štúr Café (www.sturcafe.sk)
Obchodná 17; map C 3 (c 2)
+421 (0)919 271-625
Štúrova 8; map D 3
+421 (0)919 271-854
Štefanovičova 6; map C 1
+421 (0)919 271-848
Urban House
Laurinská 14; map C 3 (c 4)
+421 (0)904 001-021
www.urbanhouse.sk
Zeppelin cafe
Sedlárska 10; map C 3 (c 3)
+421 (0)911 110-287
www.zeppelincafe.sk
BEST ICE CREAM
Koun
Panská 13; www.koun.sk
Luculus
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 25
café café Cremeria Milano
Eurovea Galleria, Pribinova 8
www.cafecafe-cremeriamilano.sk
Whereto go
These days,the city’s coffee shops offer
significantly more than just the core
product: they sell cakes,confectionery
and alcoholic drinks,and are meeting
places for students,tourists and office
workers.
One such place is Štúr Café,named
after 19th-century scholar Ľudovít
Štúr.They offer homemade cakes,
sandwiches and lemonades.The
characteristic feature of the café is that
it uses the Slovak language in the form
it was used during Štúr’s life.
To help homeless people
get back from the street
to normal life is the main
goal of the project of the
café Dobre&Dobré,which
resides in the Old Market
Hall.
Some of Bratislava’s cafés
can also be found inside the
bookshops.One such place is
Foxford located in the Martinus
store on Obchodná Street.The concept
comes from abroad where various big
as well as small networks of shops work
in this way.While there the shop and
café are more divided from one another,
Martinus tried to unite them into one
common space,said its e-shop manager
Martin Štrba.
Also the Gorila.sk bookshop
joined forces with the Urban Space
network and opened a mutual space in
downtown Bratislava.The idea came
from founder of the shop Ján Budaj,
and was inspired by similar concepts
in NewYork or London,Ján Laš of
Beyond Media companywhich runs
Gorila.sk said.Another small café can be
found on Kozia street,in the premises
ofArtforum bookstore.Axioma café
offers along with coffee,beer and
wine,used books,which decorate the
walls and give the place an intellectual
atmosphere.
La Putika is a similar chain of coffee
shops,but with a slightly different
character,drawing inspiration from
French-style bistros.
According to the supervisor Gabika
Horná,customers appreciate that the
coffee shop “has soul”.
The owners Patrik Holek and Dušan
Novota filled their shops with stylish
vintage furniture and decorations
connected with coffee from the whole
world.
“I like the whole atmosphere at La
Putika,” said a customer named Peter.
“You don’t have to be ashamed to get a
beer or wine even though it’s not a pub.”
Indeed,La Putika is renowned for
its selection of Belgian beers and wines
from Slovakia and Chile.Its chic interior
also appeals to students.
“I meet my schoolmates and
friends from drama groups here,” said
Dominika,a student at Comenius
University.“When people visit
Bratislava and have no idea where to go,
I definitely take them to Putika.”
Coffee beans
For some,the coffee itself is of
secondary importance,but for the real
connoisseurs,it is all that matters.
“Coffee houses are primarily about
coffee,” said Šturc.“And quality coffee
means 100 percentArabica espresso of
high-grade,professionally roasted and
prepared.”
Slovak taste-buds are gradually
being refined after years of
enforced abstinence
from the highest quality
flavours.During the
communist period,
Slovak people had no
idea of the differences
between types of
coffee and got used
to drinking a strong,
darkTurkish-style
coffee because it was the
only one available in the
Eastern Bloc.
According to Coffee Culture
Academy,there are two main species of
coffee beans: Robusta andArabica.But
most of Bratislava’s coffee shops offer
blend coffee,which is a mixture of both.
Štúr also offers their own fairtrade coffee
called “1843”,after the year in which Štúr
first codified the language.Meanwhile
La Putika serves Mauro coffee or Bristot.
- Kristína Hamárová -
La Putika drew inspiration from French style bistros and visitors appreciate its soulful appearance
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/80 bratislava: wine
BRATISLAVA
14Apponyi’s Palace
(Museum of Viticulture + wine
tasting) N page: 16
www.nsvsr.sk a booking required
from €4.99
Hotel Matyšák – wine restaurant
Pražská 15, Bratislava
www.hotelmatysak.sk
Villa Vino Rača
www.villavinoraca.sk
Andreja Hlinku 2, Bratislava
Å +421 (0)902 896-709
aMon-Thu 9:30-17:00 Fri 9:30-
18:00 Sat 9:00-12:00
Vinohradníctvo a vinárstvo
Miloš Máťuš (www.vinomatus.sk)
Detvianska 33, Bratislava
Å +421 (0)905 202-818
abooking required
R17The Small Carpathian
Wine Route (MVC)
N page: 90
R21Pezinok
N page: 90 21 km (27 min)
The Small Carpathian Museum
M. R. Štefánika 4, Pezinok
Å +421 (0)33 641-3347
G www.muzeumpezinok.sk
a Apr- Oct Tue-Fri 9:00-12:00,
13:00-17:00 Sat 10:00-17:00 Sun
14:00-17:00; wine tasting: booking
in advance required from €9
(including wine tasting) e WC
R22Šenkvice
28 km (35 min)
Karpatská Perla Šenkvice
www.karpatskaperla.sk
Nádražná 57, Šenkvice
Å +421 (0)33 649-6855
aTue-Fri 9:00-19:00
R25Modra N page: 90
27 km (34 min)
Villa Modur Modra
www.villamodur.sk Kalinčiakova
35, Modra Å +421 (0)948 252-264
booking required
R27Doľany
54 km (49 min)
JM vinárstvo Doľany
www.jmvinar.sk
Vinárstvo 445, Doľany
Å +421 (0)903 484-030aMon-Fri
8:00-17:00 Sat 9:00-13:00
Drowning in wine since
the 7th century BC
There’s a certain ironyin the fact that
Slovakia is considered among the so-
called “new”wine-producing countries
of theworld.Winemaking in these parts
has a proven historydating from the
6th–7th centuryBC.Yet the comparatively
lowawareness of Slovakwines abroad
is largelyowing to patterns of its
consumption: almost none makes it
beyond the keenwine-drinkers of Slovakia
itself.It means that ifyouwant to try
Slovakwine – andyou should –you’ll
need to come here to do so.
The reputation of Slovak
wines has improved markedly
in recentyears,as indicated
byresults in recent international
competitions.Slovakwineswon 12
gold and 27 silver medals at the
Viniales Internationales Paris
2015 competition.Slovakia also
boosted its image as awine-
producing countryin mid-May
2013when it hosted the 20th
Concours Mondial de Bruxelles
(CMB) 2013,a prestigious
internationalwine competition.
Thatyear itwon three grand gold,
19 gold and 38 silver medals.In
the 2015 event itwon 6 gold and
13 silver medals.
According to the CMB president
Baudouin Havaux,the tasters discovered
a region “which is maybe less known but
has [a lot] to offer”.
He added as he introduced the
competition: “I’mveryhappythat I’m
here,because this is not an accident: one
of the goals of the Concours Mondial de
Bruxelles is towatch the development
of thewine market aswell as new
trends,and it is obvious that in central
Europe,and especiallyin Slovakia,this
development isveryinteresting.”
Havaux lists Slovakia alongside
places like Chile,New Zealand and South
Africa as the emerging nations,separate
from countries with a tradition of wine
production such as Italy,Spain and
France.
“I think that the time for a newwave,
whichwill balance these two tendencies
between traditional countries and the
so-called newcountries,has arrived,” said
Havaux.“We see this development also in
central Europe.And Slovakia is a notable
example of this development,where the
qualityofwine is reallyon a high level
and keeps rising.”
Slovakia produces about 340,000
hectolitres (hl) ofwine (i.e.34 million
litres),ofwhich only100,000 hl is
exported.Whitewines make up 75
percent of local production.
The totalwine consumption in
Slovakia is about 650,000 hl,so
Slovakia imports about 400,000
hl annually.
“We here in Slovakia cannot
afford to produce cheap,low-
qualitywines,” said Jaroslava
Kaňúchová,executive director
of the Grape andWine
Producers of Slovakia (ZVHV).
“In this [area],bulk producers
beat us.
Kaňúchová highlights
the importance of new
varieties among Slovakwine
producers,which are
specificallycultivated to
exploit the full potential of
Slovakia’s climate and soil.The
result is a selection ofwines that cannot
be made anywhere else.
“You can taste Chardonnayalmost
everywhere in theworld,but the Devín,
Dunaj,and Míliavarietiesyou can taste
onlyhere in Slovakia,” said Kaňúchová.
“This is howwe can establish ourselves
in theworld.Devín and Dunaj arewines
that are also harvesting success inworld
competitions.”
White Devín and blue Dunaj are
the most popular Slovak grapevarieties
among Slovakwinegrowers.
“These twovarieties occur in
the portfolio of almost everySlovak
winemaker,” Ľudmila Miškovičová from
the Slovak National Collection ofWine
toldThe Slovak Spectator.She estimates
that in total Slovak grapevarieties make
up about 3 percent of the area cultivated
asvineyards in Slovakia,but that the
Slovak wine producers say that they cannot afford to produce cheap and low quality wines here, keeping standards high
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: wine 81
EVENTS
January:
Day of Svätý Jur cellars
Wine tasting for a fee
www.terroir.sk/sjvs
February:
Pezinok wine cellars
Wine producers in Pezinok open
their cellars for public; www.pvp.sk
April:
Vitis Aurera in Modra
International exhibition of wines
and wine tasting; www.vincur.sk
Exhibition of wines in Svätý Jur
and Rhine Riesling competition
Wine tasting for visitors
www.terroir.sk/sjvs
Day of Modra cellars
Winemakers in Modra open their
doors for wine tasting for a fee
www.vinovino.sk
Festival of Slovak wines in Brati-
slava; Tasting of the most popular
Slovak wines www.vinovino.sk
Wine Markets in Pezinok
Wine tasting and competition of
wine producers; www.zpvv.sk
May/June:
Festival of Frankovka in Bratislava
Wine tasting of Blaufränkisch or
Frankovka modrá traditional variety
of wine in Bratislava region;
www.visitbratislava.com
May, November:
Day of open cellars; Winemakers in
the Small Carpathian region
open their doors several
times a year for a day and
visitors can taste anything they
want for a fee; www.mvc.sk
September:
Vintage in several towns of the
region (Bratislava-Rača, Modra,
Pezinok, Svätý Jur) offers the
opportunity to taste burčiak
(young wine or immature wine
typical for the region)
October: Wines at the castle
Červený Kameň
Wine tasting in cellars of
the castle;
www.hradcervenykamen.sk
use of Slovakvarieties has been growing
significantlyin recentyears.
Miškovičová specified that thewhite
Devín grape,a cross between theTramín
červený(Gewürztraminer) andVeltlínske
červenobielevarieties,produces a green-
yellowwinewith a moderate spicyaroma,
leaning towards Muscat.Thisvariety,
crossed byDorota Pospíšilová and Ondrej
Korpás in 1958 in theWine Research
Institute in Bratislava,produces dry
wines aswell as naturallysweetwines.
“Theyenthralwith spiciness,fullness
and perfect harmony,” Miškovičová said,
adding that Devín,within its aroma and
taste,conceals hints of dried apricot,
dandelion honeyand bread.
The Dunajvarietywas created by
Pospíšilová in 1958,when she first crossed
Muškát Bouchetwith Oporto and then
with Svätovavrinecké (St.Laurent).With
its earlyripening it is averysuitable
varietyfor Slovak climatic conditions.It
also has good resistance to frost.
As the capital of the country,it is
onlyfitting that Bratislava’svineyards
also made the citythe first significant
viticultural andwine-making town
inwhat is nowSlovakia.However,the
commercial prosperityof the modern city,
and pressure from developers,has meant
the acreage ofvineyards in Bratislava has
decreased over theyears.
Bratislava and its surroundings
belong to the Small Carpathianwine-
growing area and the region’s changing
terrains mean that each of itswine-
growing districts is known for a different
variety.In Rača it is Blaufränkisch
or Frankovka modrá; inVajnoryit is
thewhite Leanka; and Devín is best
known for its currantwine,according to
Kaňúchová.
Over the last decades Devín has
revived its tradition of production of
qualitycurrantwine.Nowlocalwine
makerswant to drawattention to this
special kind ofwine and have organised
the first festival RíbezľovýDevín (Currant
Devín) to take place in July,2016.
During the festivalvisitorswill have
the opportunityto taste the traditional
currant Devínwine made from red and
black currants in the ratio 80:20,other
kinds of currantwine aswell as other
specialties made from currants.Their
ambition is to make from the festival an
annual tradition similar,for example,
to the apricot festival in theAustrian
Wachau.
Frankovka has a royal seal of
approval,bestowed byEmpress Maria
Theresa in 1767.Shewas reputedly
enchanted byits taste and qualityand
deemed it suitable to be served at the
imperial table.Two centuries later,
scientistswere able to give her opinion
some additional credencewhen they
discovered resveratrol,an ingredient
believed to have benefits to the heart,in
Frankovka.
According to Kaňúchová,the sunny
location of thevineyards in Rača accounts
for the qualityof Frankovka,a belief
echoed byMiloš Máťuš,a grape grower
andwine maker from the region,who
added that the area also enjoys specific
soil conditions.Máťuš,who is also one
of the organisers of the annual festival
of Frankovka in Bratislava,describes
Frankovka modráwine as soft,full of
concentrated bouquets of fruit and
berries,with a harmonic and round taste.
ManySlovakwine experts insist
thatwine should be tastedwhere it is
produced,and a lot ofwine makers have
thrown open their cellars to allowvisitors
the opportunityto do just that.Numerous
ancient cellars or brand newpremises are
open throughout theyear,manyclustered
along the so-called “wine roads” that
snake the country.
The Small Carpathian Wine Route
(MVC) is the oldest example in Slovakia
and it hosts several popular events
through the year,including the
annual autumn Day of Open Wine
Cellars and the annual spring St
Urban’s Day of Open Cellars.On
both occasions,many of the top
wine producers open up for
visitors to taste young and
vintage wines.
Meanwhile, the Slovak
National Collection of Wine
in Apponyi’s Palace on
Bratislava’s Main Square
offers a collection of the 100
best wines from Slovakia
to taste or buy year-round.
Booking is required.
-JanaLiptáková-
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/82 bratislava: luxury
LUXURY ACCOMMODATION
Albrecht Hotel
Mudroňova 82; map A 2
www.hotelalbrecht.com
Arcadia Hotel
Františkánska 3, map C 3 (c 2);
www.arcadia-hotel.sk
Grand Hotel River Park
Dvořákovo nábrežie 6; map A 3
www.grandriverpark.com
Marrol’s Boutique Hotel
Tobrucká 4; map D 4
www.hotelmarrols.sk
Sheraton Hotel
Pribinova 12; map E 4
www.sheratonbratislava.sk
Tulip House Hotel
Štúrova 10; map D 3
www.tuliphousehotel.com
51UFO restaurant
N page: 30
8Historical building SND
N page: 13
M·ONA fashion store
Laurinská 17; map D 3
0.3 km (3 min)
www.monafashion.sk
a Mon-Fri 10:00-20:00, Sat
10:00-18:00
I. Polo Klub Bratislava 1888
Schloss Niederweiden 1, Austria
24.9 km (25 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5292-3222
a Tue (individual training), Wed
(club chuckers), Thu-Fri (individual
training), Sat-Sun (club chuckers);
booking necessary €80 (a
polo lesson with an Argentine
professional polo player and a hired
"polo-pony"); €50 (a polo riding
lesson and dressage training for polo
with own horses) å WC
Small and Slovak,
but no less luxurious
Bratislava is often overlooked as a
destination for the high-end traveller.
The city’s reputation tends to be founded
on its modest,undiscovered qualities
and low prices.Yet Slovakia actually
has a remarkably modern capital,with
luxurious hotels on the banks of one
of Europe’s most spectacular rivers,as
well numerous glorious old buildings
containing exquisite restaurants,
boutiques and spas.Each is packed with
unique central European charm,but
with standards to match the best of the
west.It is possible here to take romantic
walks by the Danube,visit enchanting
little cafés in the OldTown,else relax in
spas and five-star hotels.The city boasts
delicious cuisine,beautiful golf courses
and even venues for polo matches.You
can experience extraordinaryviews
from hotel suites,without the noise and
crowds of many European cities.
As a bonus,everything is in walking
distance.Many of Bratislava’s finest
hotels,boutiques and galleries are in
the OldTown.But if you wish to stray
further,there are ample opportunities
to picnic by mediaeval castles,or play
sports in exceptionallywell appointed
facilities.You can return in the evening
for a spot of opera at one of Europe’s
most enchanting theatres.
Sleepand eattrendy
Bratislava Airport is situated only
ten minutes drive from the centre
of the Old Town, but if you take
a room at the Grand Hotel River
Park,you can take a ride from the
airport in a glamorous Rolls Royce
limousine.This is one of several
five-star establishments in
Bratislava, and, like the
Albrecht Hotel, situated
on the top of a hill close
to Bratislava Castle,
or Sheraton Hotel in
Eurovea district, is
appointed with the finest
modern designs. Other high-
end establishments, such
as Tulip House or Marrol’s
Boutique hotels, combine
historical appeal with
luxurious fittings.
Marrol’s was named
the best hotel in
the world by the
Expedia’s 2012
Insiders’ Select
ranking.
Similarly, the Arcadia Hotel in
the heart of the Old Town offers
stunning Renaissance arcades in
the hotel lobby.
The Danube offers a host of
possibilities for romance in the
Slovak capital, starting with dinner
in one of Bratislava’s landmarks:
the restaurant in the pod at the
top of the SNP Bridge, looming
85 metres over the river.As well
as serving wonderful seasonal
Mediterranean and Asian
cuisine, the UFO restaurant
offers a unique opportunity to
watch the captivating sunset
over the river and city.
Visitors can enjoy both the atmosphere of the spa as well as a view of Bratislava: Zion Spa
Photo: Courtesy of Hubert J.E. Sereď
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: luxury 83
Slávica
Laurinská 17; map D 3
0.3 km (3 min)
www.slavicadizajn.sk a Mon-Fri
11:00-20:00, Sat 11:00-17:00
Zion Spa
Dvořákovo nábrežie 6 (the
eleventh floor of the Grand Hotel
River Park); map A 3
1.8 km (22 min) 3.6 km
(8 min) Å +421 (0)2 3223-8451
www.zionspa.sk a Mon-Fri 6:30-
23:00, Sat-Sun 7:00-23:00; Mon-
-Sun 10:00-22:00 (spa procedures)
from €45 ä é WC
Spa in Arcadia Hotel
Františkánska 3; map C 3 (c 2)
0.18 km (2 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5949-0500
www.arcadia-hotel.sk a Mon-Sun
9:00-23:00 from €90
ä é WC
7Spa
Hlboká 7 1.5 km (21 min)
1.8 km (4 min) u SAV
v 21, 25, 32, 34, 63, 64, 83, 84,
93, 141, 184, 204, 206, 209, 212
Å +421 (0)2 2321-6244
www.7spa.sk from €9
a Mon-Sun 9:00-21:00
ä é WC
High-end
entertainment
Walking into the OldTown centre,
you will be greeted by the magnificent
historical building of the Slovak National
Theatre,which also serves as the
opera house.A full program of operatic
performances plays from September by
the end of June,including those from
travelling companies,and featuring
all the biggest hitters: Verdi,Mozart,
Rossini,etc.
Bratislava has always been a
thriving commercial hub, and there
are numerous glossy shopping centres
dotted around the city with hundreds
of stores and boutiques. But the best
work of local designers can be found in
the Old Town and, for example, in the
small M.ONA fashion store located on
Laurinská street.
The shop’s Czech owner Eva Příkaská
decided to support local designers by
giving them a space to present their
collections,and the stylish concept store
is now a showcase for the established and
up-and-coming alike.Zuzana,Zeman,
Marcel Holubec,Kateřina Geislerová and
Tatina Kovaříková,among others,have
their wares on sale here.Alternatively,
Slávica,owned by a Slovak model Ivica
Sláviková,located next to the M.ONA
fashion store,also stocks the best of
Slovak fashion and design.
Polo
While golf is gradually
beginning to take hold in
Slovakia,it is also possible to
go several steps further
up the ladder of elite
sports and sample
the refined world of polo.
“Polo is in fact like a golf on
a horse,” said Peter Godanyi,
a professional
polo player and a founder of Polo Klub
Bratislava,the only polo club in Slovakia
- even if their main facilities are 25km
away in Niederweiden,Austria.
Polo fields are four times as large as
a soccer pitch but are maintained like
golf courses.The tournament pitch in
Niederweiden is close to a wonderful
Schloss Hof castle and visitors cannot
onlywatch official tournaments,but can
also observe the team practice during
the season.
“Visitors don’t have to play polo
themselves,they can experience the
atmosphere as well,” said Godanyi.
“Visitors can organise picnics,have a
lovely daywith the horses and they can
see something they don’t see every day.”
Wellness
Afteralongdayeitherinoroutofthe
city,wearyvisitorscanbathetheirlimbs
inoneoftheexclusivewellnessandspa
facilitiesfoundinthebesthotels.Few
canmatchtheZionSpaintheGrand
HotelRiverPark,locatedonthe11th
floorandofferingamazingviewsover
theDanubeandBratislavathroughthe
glasswalls.Alternatively,thecellarofthe
ArcadiaHotel,whichnowservesasthe
wellnessarea,istheoldest
partofabuilding
listedonthe
National
Heritageof
Slovakialist.Ironically,the
areanowusedforpampering
andrelaxationwasusedas
atorturechamberinthe13th
century.
“We’vetravelledalot,all
overEurope,andthisisright
uptherewitheverywhereelse
–Paris,Vienna,Lubljana,”said
a54-year-oldAmericantourist
namedChris,marvellingatthe
buildingsinBratislava’smain
square.
Even though it maybe
smaller in scale,standards
are high here.Bratislava can
offer the same luxury as Paris,
London or NewYork –all with a
dose of a certain Slovak charm.
- Miroslava Germanová -
Polo is a relatively young sport in Slovakia
but it also draws from the sport’s tradition
among the Austrian-Hungarian monarchy.
The country currently has three official and
two unofficial clubs.
Photo: Christian Prandl
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/84 bratislava: family
2Children’s Museum
(Slovak National Museum)
Accessible via the entrance on
Muzejná Street. English-speaking
visitors should arrange their visit in
advance. €2 (children €3)
N page: 12
37Bibiana, International House
of Art for Children Panská 41
map C 4 0.45 km (6 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-4986
www.bibiana.sk a Tue-Sun 10:00-
18:00 from €1 é WC
42Bratislava Castle N page: 26
83Zoo Bratislava
Mlynská dolina; map F 4
5.4 km (11 min) u Zoo
v 30, 31, 32, 37, 39, 92, 192
Å +421 (0)2 6010-2111
www.zoobratislava.sk é WC
a Apr-Sept 9:00-18:00; Oct 10:00-
16:00; Nov-Feb 10:00-15:00; Mar
10:00-16:00 from €4 (children
from €3) ä e
86Atlantis Science Centre
Prievozská 18 6.7 km (8
min) u Prievozská v 70, 96,
201, 202, 208
Å +421 (0)917 237-454
G www.atlantiscenters.sk
a Mon-Fri 8:00-17:00, Sat-Sun
10:00-18:00 from €6 (children
from €5) å e WC
K1Swimming pool area, Hotel
Nivy Líščie nivy 3 4.7 km
(10 min) u Slovanet v 8, 9,
50, 66 Å +421 (0)2 5541-0390
www.hotelnivy.sk
from €5 (children from €2.5)
ä e é WC
K2Lanoland – Ropes course
Koliba-Kamzík 6.1 km (12
min) u Koliba v 44, 203
Å +421 (0)948 000-968
www.lanoland.sk
a Jul-Aug: Tue-Fri 15:00-19:00,
Sat-Sun 11:00-19:00; Apr-Jun,
Sep-Oct: Sat-Sun 11:00-18:00
€9 (children €5) ä WC
Ample fun for all the family
It is mid-afternoon in earlyApril and on
the banks of the Danube in the centre
of Bratislava there is a hive of joyful
activity.Children are running in and out
of what resembles a huge nose-shaped
play-house or busily searching the area
for other undiscovered exhibits.
Children’s
Museum
Six-year-old Nina
Sudovská and her
older brother Maťo are
visiting the Children’s
Museum,part of
the Slovak National
Museum (SNM),for
the first time.They
are enjoying one of
Bratislava’s unique
attractions designed specifically to
combine fun and education for the
younger visitor.
“I like it so much,” said Nina.“I
was in the mouth and in the nose,I
was everywhere.It was fun.Now I am
going to sing in the ear to destroy a bad
bacteria.” She promptly disappeared
inside a huge ear,which was part of
the previous museum’s exhibitions
entitled “Me and My Body”.The most
contemporary exhibitions focus on
the Earth,recycling,and the vital
importance of water.
The Children’s Museum is the only
one of its kind in Slovakia,and has
successfully managed to provide a safe
and enjoyable environment for children
and their parents to learn in a creative
way.Andrea Sudovská,Nina and Maťo’s
mother said: “It is very educative and
also very nice”.
Children are encouraged to interact
with the exhibits - they can touch
everything - and as a result begin a
positive relationship with museums,
that in the past have often repelled
them.
Bibiana
A few streets away,near to the SNP
Bridge,is Bibiana,the International
House ofArt for Children,whose stated
purpose is to develop a sense of arts
and culture in the young.The gallery
hosts interactive exhibitions,theatre
shows and creative
workshops,and is
packed with fantasy
and creativity
around every
corner.Its playfully-
painted entrance
hall leads to a
winter wonderland
on the ground
floor and upstairs
into a gallery
space filled with
games involving food.Families
are encouraged by the unusual
exhibitions to make ordinary things
interesting and amazing.
“It is nicely created for children;
in fact it is all about children,” said the
mother of 11-year-oldAlexandra,who
was excitedly trying on a costume of
Cleopatra.“Bibiana is a very good way to
spend time with children.I often visit
with my daughter.”
Bibiana is also behind the regular
83
2
42
37
86
K2
K1
K3
The Children’s Museum is specially designed to combine fun and education for youngsters
Bibiana’s mission is to hone a sense of the arts and culture
in children
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: family 85
Biennial of Illustrations,Biennial
ofAnimation and the Slovak IBBY
(International Board on Books for Young
People),a series of exhibitions and
festivals showcasing art and animation
specifically for children.
Science Centre
Children are also encouraged to visit the
Atlantis Science Centre,on Prievozská
street,in the Ružinov borough.This
unique experience centre allows children
and adults to enjoy learning about
various aspects of science.
On a recent visit,10-year-old Laura
bounded down the corridor,insisting:
“The bubbles are amazing,you have to
see those bubbles.” She was referring to
one of numerous exhibits at the centre,
which finds a fun way to teach scientific
principles to children as young as three.
TheAtlantis Centre also includes a
Pharaoh Museum where children are
invited to discover the mysteries of
the ancient Egyptians,including the
mummification process.
Playground
In the verdant forest of Koliba there
is the Lanoland Ropes Course.To get
there; follow the road or the hiking
path indicated by a green sign.It is an
adventure playground that has grown
in popularityyear on year and provides
entertainment for adults and children
alike.The ropes course consists of five
tracks through the trees – a combination
of bridges,zip lines and swings – that
vary in difficulty according to age and
ability of the visitors.There is a “ground”
track for the youngest children,then
a “blue” course,which means light
intensity and is one of the most popular
tracks here.The difficulty gradually
increases through the red,medium
intensity course,through a yellow
“team” track designed primarily for
couples and the most difficult “black”
track,recommended only for the most
proficient and athletic visitors.
Castles,swimming
andanimals
Children can also get a lot out of a
visit to some of the region’s most
notable historical sites,including the
recently-renovated Bratislava Castle,
which houses History Museum of
SNM.Similarly,the 13th century Red
Stone Castle (Červený Kameň),near to
the village of Častá is well known for
its historical festivals,with falconry
displays and actors in period dress.
Just across the borders withAustria
is the beautiful baroque castle Schloss
Hof,commissioned by Prince Eugene
of Savoy.Meanwhile,Roman times are
remembered at the historical exhibitions
in Gerulata,near Rusovce,and the
Archaeological Park Carnuntum,a few
kilometres further from the Slovak-
Austrian border.
When it all gets too much,you
maywish to take the children to one of
numerous spa and wellness complexes,
which allow adults to relax in the
healing waters while the kids can
enjoy pools,slides and wave machines.
Aquapark Senec,situated about 30km
from Bratislava,is one of the biggest
in the country,offering countless
attractions for everyone.Meanwhile in
Bratislava itself,Hotel Nivy
has a selection of pools
and saunas in its wellness
area,and you can also stay
overnight.
Finally,Bratislava Zoo,
in the Karlova Ves district
of the city,offers a decent
respite from the bustle,
despite its location beside a
motorway.Originally opened in
1960,it is by no means as bleak a
place as might be feared.Instead,
the animal species,including
white tigers,bears,giraffes
and the ever-amusing meerkats,
enjoy sizeable enclosures and a
remarkably clean environment.An
exhibition of dinosaurs among the
existent animals is slightly confusing,
but is an agreeable boon for the younger
generation of dino-lovers.
Outside the city,but still in the
region,children can experience direct
contact with domestic animals in
places such asAbeland near Lozorno
or Biofarma near Stupava.
- Natália Semianová -
K3Al Trivio (special restaurant for
families with children)
Metodova 6 (Central); map F 1
3.3 km (8 min) u Trnavské
mýto a Mon-Sun 9:00-22:00
www.altrivio.sk/central
Å +421 (0)2 2086-4600
Children playgrounds in
shopping centres
AvionShoppingPark(www.avion.sk)
Children playground; Playtime
Aupark (www.aupark-bratislava.sk)
Time Out
Bory Mall (www.borymall.sk)
Time Out
Central (www.central.sk)
Time Out
Eurovea (www.eurovea.sk)
Be cool Sport Kids Park
Polus City Center
Rodinné centrum (Family centre)
www.rodinnecentrumpolus.
webnode.sk
River Park
Woow Toys (www.woowtoys.sk)
outside the city
R3Lozorno-Abeland
Village of crafts, horse riding
www.abeland.sk N page: 92-93
R4Stupava-Biofarm
Bio farm www.biofarma.sk
N page: 92-93
R14Aquapark Senec
Slnečné jazerá, Senec 33
km (27 min); www.aquathermal.sk
Å +421 (0)2 4564-8021
a Mon-Sun 10:00-21:00
from €10 (children from €4)
ä é WC
R26Červený Kameň Castle
N page: 91
Schloss Hof
Castle N page: 100
Archaeological Park
Carnuntum
N page: 100
One of the biggest water parks in the country offers slides for
children and relaxation for adults
Photo: Courtesy of Lanoladn
Zoo
Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/86 bratislava: without barriers
Accessible sites
2Slovak National Museum
N page: 12
3Slovak National Gallery
N page: 12
4Reduta
Slovak Philharmonic N page: 12
8Slovak National Theatre -
Historical building
N page: 13
14Old Town Hall (museum)
Museum; (Old Town Hall Tower not
accessible) N page: 16
16Primate’s Palace (gallery)
Gallery and chapel N page: 17
18Nedbalka Gallery
N page: 15
24Ursuline Church and Convent
N page: 19
25Franciscan Church of Lord’s
Annunciation N page: 19
28Red Crayfish Pharmacy
(museum) N page: 20
30Church of St Stephen
N page: 21
31St Catherine’s Chapel
N page: 21
33Zichy Palace
Gallery N page: 22
38St Martin’s Cathedral
N page: 24
41Church of the Clarisses
N page: 23
42Bratislava Castle
Accessible upon request, excluding
Tower and Treasury N page: 26
43Museum of Jewish Culture
N page: 50-52
49River Park
River-front district N page: 30
52UFO restaurant
Accessible upon request; access only
to the Restaurant/Bar N page: 30
53Sad Janka Kráľa
Park N page: 72-73
56Eurovea
River-front district N page: 30
57Slovak National Theatre - New
building N page: 30
71Medical Garden
Garden N page: 72-73
73Tržnica
Market place N page: 60-61
76Museum of Transport
N page: 50-52
78Lourdes cave N page: 62-63
79Horský Park
Park N page: 72-73
81Devín Castle N page: 37
82Botanical Garden
N page: 72-73
83ZOO N page: 84-85
89Kuchajda
Lake N page: 72-73
90Zlaté Piesky
Lake N page: 38
94B-S 8 HřbitovN page: 60-61
95Veľký Draždiak
Lake N page: 72-73
99Danubiana Meulensteen Art
Museum N page: 39
Slow progress towards
an accessible Bratislava
Every tourist has a list of sites to see
on their trip to Bratislava: the Castle,
St Martin’s Cathedral,Mirbach Palace,
Devín,among others.Yet for disabled
people Bratislava’s palaces,as well as
many of its other famous monuments,
remain impregnable even in the 21st
century.They are guarded neither by
knights nor rivers nor cliffs.Rather
it’s simply that curbs are too high,
road-crossings have no audible beeps,or
elevators have not been installed.
The difficulties for handicapped
people can begin on arrival,particularly
if a visitor comes by train.The main city
station still awaits reconstruction
and has only a low-quality ramp
in the concourse.Furthermore,
only one platform is accessible
without traversing stairs.
The city also invested
in dozens of accessible
public transport
vehicles.,and the
situation improved
over recent years.
What is
accessible?
Many of Bratislava’s most prized assets
are its historical buildings,whose
ancient designs and precious fabric
inevitably make them difficult to access.
Unfortunately,unique historical
places can often not be touched in order
to preserve their value.Refurbishment
works at some museums have been
carried out with the special needs of
disabled people kept in mind.
The OldTown Hall (Stará Radnica)
and the Pharmacy Museum (U
Červeného raka) in the OldTown are
accessible,and Devín Castle is also
partially accessible.Better still,the
ancient Roman site Gerulata in Rusovce
has a “tactual” exhibition around which
visitors are guided by touch.
Many theatres in Bratislava are fully
accessible,including the Slovak National
Theatre,HeinekenTower Stage and
Theatre Wüstenrot.But some are not yet
prepared for disabled visitors.
“Astorka is not suitable at all,”
said Monika Vrábľová,the head of the
SlovakAssociation for Disabled People
(Slovenský zväz telesne
postihnutých - SZTP).
“The entry staircase
is steep and
accessible toilets
are missing.”
She added that
Nová Scéna is partly
suitable,the Puppet
Theatre is suitable,
as are the cinemas
in shopping centres.
It is positive that Bratislava is
now committed to improving the
conditions for handicapped people,
and is attempting to extend hospitality
to tourists regardless of their physical
abilities.But even though the situation
is slowly improving,and more and more
places are becoming accessible,it will
not be enough until there are no barriers
remaining in the city.
- Ján Beracka -
Not all places in Bratislava are accessible for wheelchairs, but the situation is improving
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Photo: TASR
Run for fun in Bratislava
Running enthusiasts have a plethora of
opportunities for running in Slovakia’s
capital,be it a daily run or a big running
event.
Joggers will quickly find that
Bratislava offers enough diverse
landscape to cater to anyone’s
preferences: there are long running
trails,parks,as well as hilly terrain.
Nature is basically just a 15-minute run
away from any spot in the city.
Miguel Rosa from Portugal
recommends the Eurovelo 6 cycle
road: “not polluted,close to the river,
surrounded by nature,with other
people running,cycling or on roller
blades.”Alan Mauldin,anAmerican
living in Bratislava,usually runs
along the Danube “from Eurovea
to Lafranconi and across the
bridge and through Sad Janka
Kráľa.” Diego Loyola,from
Mexico,recommends
Železná Studienka on the
hilly side of Bratislava:
“the scenery is incredible.”
The running community in
Bratislava is quite welcoming,says
Loyola,“from the waves or head
nods from other runners to the
cheers from the public that see you
at a race.”
The biggest event in the city
is the Bratislava Marathon,which
usually opens the season.
At the Devín to Bratislava run,the
most notable difference from races
in the US forAlan Mauldin was
the fact that some people were
drinking slivovica and beef before
the race,rather than afterward.
“Maybe I need to test this idea to see
if my time is better after a few shots of
slivovica,” he said.
The Devín to Bratislava run is among
the most popular running events in
Bratislava.The run has been organised
since 1921,with some breaks,and is the
oldest athletic event in Slovakia.
“The whole experience feels like an
enjoyable party,” Loyola said.He also
enjoys the fact that there is unusual
spontaneous public support for the
runners during the event.
“How many other races do you
have people setting up water and beer
drinking stations along the route of the
race?” he said.
Bratislava’s Night Run is
another definite on the to-
do list.The special feature
of this run,apart from
it taking place at night,
is that the route goes
through the long tram tunnel
under the castle hill,where
DJs stage their music and lights
for the event.People who took
part in the run talk about it as a
memorable experience.
“It allowed us to see a lot of
the city,” Nikki Uhure from the
UK said.
Runners also mentioned
the Color Run,during which
participants are covered in coloured
powder as they progress along the
route.In Bratislava it is a charity run,
similar to the Wings for Life run
that also has an edition in the
Slovak capital.
– Michaela Terenzani –
Plan your run
in Bratislava
Mar/Apr: ČSOB Bratislava
Marathon
www.bratislavamarathon.com
Apr: Devín - Bratislava
www.devin-bratislava.eu
May: Wings for Life
www.wingsforlifeworldrun.com/
sk/en/
May: Run in colors
www.runincolors.sk
May: Volkswagen Slovakia
Run & Fun
www.bratislavamarathon.com
Sep: dm Womens Run
www.bratislavamarathon.com
Sep: Telekom Night Run
www.bratislavamarathon.com
Oct: Bratislava’s Cross
www.starz.sk
Dec 31: Run across Bratislava’s
bridges
www.starz.sk
bratislava: running 87
Joel Mwangi has won the Devín-
-Bratislava Run several times. The
winner of this race runs with a
laurel wreath through the finish
line, which is given before the
finish by men or women dressed in
traditional costumes.
ČSOB Bratislava Marathon is the
biggest running event in the city
Several charity runs are
organised in Bratislava Photo: STaRZ
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/88 bratislava
www.tourismbratislava.com
BRATISLAVA TOURIST BOARD - MEMBERS
ACCOMMODATION AND HOTELS
AND FOOD
Austria Trend Hotel Management
Slovakia, spol. s r.o.
www.austria-trend.at/Hotel-Bratislava
Eurovea, s.s.
www.sheratonbratislava.com
Best hotel properties, a.s.
www.grandriverpark.com
Carlton Property, s.r.o.
www.radissonblu.sk/hotel-bratislava
City Hotel Bratislava s.r.o.
www.hotelbratislava.sk
Diamond hotel Slovakia, s.r.o.
www.crowneplaza.sk
FalkensteinerHotelBratislava,s.r.o.
www.falkensteiner.com/sk/hotel/
bratislava
FantastiCo, s.r.o.
www.fantastico.biz
Hotely Plus, a.s.
www.hotelyplus.sk
Orava - stav, s.r.o.
www.biofarma.sk
www.slovakpub.sk
RR Consulting, s.r.o.
www.hostelblues.sk
Hotel Patio - Slovak Hostel, s.r.o.
www.patiohostel.com
Slovunit Chorvátska, s.r.o.
www.hotelmamas.sk
Tulip House, a.s.
www.tuliphousehotel.com
Víno Matyšák s.r.o.
www.hotelmatysak.sk
Zemegula, s.r.o.
www.u-f-o.sk
TOURIST GUIDES AND TOUR
OPERATORS
Asociácia sprievodcov Bratislavy
www.asba.sk
Adamcová Daniela
www.taste-bratislava.com
Authentic Slovakia s.r.o.
www.authenticslovakia.com
Berdis Juraj
www.berdis.eu
Best Eastern hotels, s.r.o.
+421 (0)905 228-026
Blue Danube tours
www.bluedanube.sk
Bratislava tourist service, s.r.o.
www.bratislava-info.sk
CK HelL s.r.o.
www.ckhell.sk
Csonga Miroslav
+421 (0)940 337-971
Go Running tours Bratislava
www.gorunningtoursbratislava.com
FLORA TOUR, s.r.o.
www.floratour.sk
Gubová Dagmar
www.carpatica.sk
Jitka Spillerová
www.dowina.sk
Roland Loureiro
+421 (0)903 531-388
Luka - Tours, s.r.o.
www.bratislavasightseeing.com
Maroš Borsky
+421 (0)907 538-988
Meetcentives, s.r.o.
+421 (0)2 5920-1711
Michalíková Renáta
+421 (0)917 497-524
Mladen Heruc
+421 (0)944 232-490
MS agency, s.r.o.
www.bratislava-guide.sk
Paxtravel, s.r.o.
www.paxtravel.sk
Petrovičová Dagmar
+421 (0)902 230-453
Plus Tour, s.r.o.
www.bratislava-tours.sk
Satur Travel, a.s.
www.satur.sk
Slovakotourist s.r.o.
www.tryslovakia.com
Slovenská spoločnosť sprievodcov CR
www.touristguides.sk
Tour4u, s.r.o.
www.tour4u.sk
Visit Bratislava, s.r.o.
+421 (0)907 538-988
Volek Štefan
+421 (0)907 930-999
X-cursion s.r.o.
www.what-bratislava.sk
Znasik.travel, s.r.o.
+421 (0)915 808-080
MICE
Be Cool, s.r.o.
event organizer, mostly
running events; www.becool.sk
Bratislava Hotels and Travel, s.r.o.
DMC-related services
www.bratislavahotels.com
Emerge, s.r.o.
PCO services, planning of
conferences, events, workshops,
social gatherings; www.conference-
-slovakia.sk
Enjoy Slovakia DMC, s.r.o.
travel events organizer;
www.enjoyslovakia.com
Guarant International, s.r.o.
incentive tourism; www.guarant.sk
Sharkam V.I.P. catering, s.r.o.
catering company; www.sharkam.sk
S - tours, s r.o.
meeting and conference organizer
www.s-tours.sk
VOLKSWAGEN SLOVAKIA, a.s.
car producer; www.volkswagen.sk
TOURIST ATTRACTIONS,
SERVICES & OTHERS
ALIANCIA STARÁ TRŽNICA, o.z.
Place for food markets and cultural
events
www.staratrznica.sk
American chamber of commerce
in Slovak republic
www.amcham.sk
Astor Slovakia, s.r.o.
publisher of the yearbook Travel Guide
of Slovakia; www.lexikon.sk
Mgr. Emil Haas
escape room; www.brainteaselava.sk
Bratislavské kultúrne a informačné
stredisko
organization of programs,
services and products in the fields of
culture, tourism, sports and social life
www.bkis.sk
Bratislavský okrášľovací spolok
Beautification Association Bratislava
www.bos-bratislava.sk
Centrum moderného umenia, n.o.
gallery of modern art; www.danubiana.sk
Dušan Šmidák
tourist sightseing train
+421 (0)905 204-615
Ekonomická univerzita v Bratislave
University of Economics in Bratislava
www.euba.sk
Minimedia, s.r.o.
advertising and media agency
www.foxone.sk
Galéria mesta Bratislavy
city gallery; www.gmb.sk
Galéria Nedbalka, n.o.
gallery of slovak modern art
www.nedbalka.sk
Hot chilli lode, s.r.o.
cruises on Danube river
www.vyletneplavbypodunaji.sk
Hudobné centrum
concert organizers, promotions
of slovak music
www.hc.sk/en
M&L Hardcorrect, s.r.o.
bike and scooter rental
+421 (0)948 884-997
MAPA Slovakia Editor, s.r.o.
map producer
www.mapaeditor.sk
Múzeum mesta Bratislavy
city museum
www.muzeum.bratislava.sk
Divoká voda, s.r.o.
sport complex offering rafting, surfing,
flyboard
www.divokavoda.sk
Renáta Hermysová
production of traditional slovak folk
majolica
www.majolika-r.sk
Starz
Management of sports and leisure
facilities of Bratislava
www.starz.sk
Slovenský dom-Centrope
provides special services
for its members specializing in the
areas of culture, tourism,
and networking
www.domcentrope.sk
The Rock, s.r.o.
Publisher of The Slovak Spectator
newspaper
www.spectator.sme.sk
Volis Academy, s.r.o.
language academy
www.volis.sk
ZOO Bratislava
www.zoobratislava.sk
Zuzana Baloghová
coffee and souvenirs
www.zeppelincafe.sk
Zväz vinohradníkov a vinárov
Association of winegrowers
and winemakers
www.nsvsr.sk
Židovská náboženská obec
cultural, religious and social activities
for the Jewish community
+421 (0)907 538-988
Hlavné mesto Slovenskej
republiky Bratislava
Bratislava city
www.bratislava.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: outside the city 89
R1
R11
R21
R30
R2
R12
R22
R32
R3
R13
R23
R33
R4
R14
R24
R5
R15
R6
R16
R7
R8
R28
R9
R19
R29
R10
R20
R31
R26
R27
R25
R18
R17
Dračí
hrádok
Vápenná
Klokoč
Ostrý
Kameň
Malokarpatská
vínnacesta
Biely
kríž
Biely
kameň
Villa rustica
R11 Hrubá Borša (farm) pg 92-93
R12 Kostolná pri Dunaji (Siberian tigers) pg 92-93
R13 Kráľová pri Senci (tourist flights) pg 95
R14 Senec (aquapark, lake, observatory) pg 92-93, 84-85
R15 Bernolákovo (paintball, golf) pg 95
R16 Ivanka pri Dunaji
R17 Malokarpatská vínna cesta
(Small Carpathian Wine Route) pg 90-91, 80-81
R18 Svätý Jur (wine, hiking) pg 90-91
R19 Biely Kameň (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R20 Slovenský Grob (goose feast) pg 98-99
R21 Pezinok (wine, pottery) pg 90-91, 94, 80-81
R22 Šenkvice (wine) pg 80-81
R23 Pezinská Baba hill (hiking) pg 98-99
R24 Malé Karpaty (the Small Carpathians)
(hiking, cycling) pg 98-99
R25 Modra (wine, pottery) pg 90-91, 80-81, 94
R26 Červený Kameň (castle, hiking) pg 91, 53, 84-85
R27 Doľany (wine) pg 80-81
R28 Vápenná hill (hiking) pg 98-99
R29 Plavecké podhradie
(castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R30 Plavecký hrad (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R31 Klokoč hill (hiking) pg 98-99
R32 Smolenice (castle, cave, hiking) pg 98-99
R33 Ostrý Kameň (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R1 Veľké Leváre (Haban Museum) pg 94
R2 Malacky (Holy Stairs, golf) pg 62-63, 105
R3 Lozorno (farm, shooting range) pg 92-93, 95, 84-85
R4 Stupava (farm) pg 92-93, 84-85
R5 Pajštún (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R6 Marianka (pilgrimage site) pg 62-63
R7 Dračí hrádok (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R8 Biely kríž (hiking) pg 98-99
R9 Villa rustica (remnants of an ancient Roman building) pg 98-99
R10 Malý Dunaj (inland waterway, canoe) pg 70-71
0 3.1 6.2 9.3 12.4 mile
= 3.1 mile
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/90 bratislava: outside the city
R18 Svätý Jur
16 km (21 min) v 20 min
Feši Restpub
Krajinská cesta 58, Svätý Jur
Å +421 (0)903 705-245
www.fesi-restpub.menu.atlas.sk
Wine tasting – Dubovský-
-Grančič
Zuby 293, Svätý Jur
Å +421 (0)905 607-379
www.dubovskygrancic.sk
a booking necessary depends
on number of tasted wines
R21 Pezinok
21 km (28 min) v 30 min
Small Carpathian Museum
N page: 80-81
City Wine Shop
Radničné nám. 9, Pezinok
Å +421 (0)907 593-294
www.vinoteka-pezinok.sk aMon-
-Fri 10:00-18:00, Sat 9:00-12:00
Wine tasting – Víno Hacaj
Cajlanská ulica 66, Pezinok
Å + 421 (0)948 539-453
www.hacaj.sk
a booking necessary
R25 Modra
28 km (35 min) v 50 min
Zoya Museum (ELESKO)
Elesko Wine Park 2275,
Modra Å +421 (0)2 2092-2649
www.eleskorestaurant.sk
The restaurant and museum are
located to the southwest from the
town among vineyards.
a Wed-Sat 11:30-22:00, Sun
11:30-18:30
Museum of Slovak Ceramics
Sculpture and Gallery of Ignác
Bizmayer
N page: 94
Wine tasting – Chateau Modra
Štúrova ulica 108, Modra
Å +421 (0)907 944-726
www.chateaumodra.sk a booking
necessary depends on number
of tasted wines
The Catholic Church of St George,
built in Svätý Jur at the beginning
of the 13th century
Through the Small Carpathians
Historical wine cellars,with their
distinctive moist smell and walls
overgrown by moulds,make all your
senses tingle.These entire places are
dominated bywine: stacked bottles cram
the shelves,barrels line the floor and
people quietly chat with glasses in their
hands.There are countless examples of
places like this on the Small Carpathian
Wine Route,a string of more than 30
towns and villages along the east
side of the Small Carpathians
of which Pezinok,Modra and
Svätý Jur are the best known.
There are more than 100 wine
growers in this region,
each following a tradition
that dates in the area from
Roman times.The real wine
renaissance came in the
13th century,when German
colonists settled here.
According to the 18th
century polymath Matej Bel,
“Svätý Jur wine is the best,Pezinok
vineyards are the most beautiful and
Modra vineyards are the most fertile”.
Although a lot has changed in the region
since then,the assessment still holds
largely true.
Driving out of Bratislava,Svätý
Jur is the first town to greet the keen
wine-taster,but it’s worth taking a few
minutes to explore the town itself before
delving into the cellars.Svätý Jur’s
hillside location grants terrific views
from the top of the town.Eventually
you will wind up with a glass in your
hand and in the company of a local wine
producer.
“You never buy good wine at the
supermarket,“ said Miloš Grančič,
41,who is typical of Svätý Jur’s wine
makers, decrying the mass production
of millions of litres of wine a year.
“The thing I like the most about wine
making is to sit down with people, talk
with each other and enjoy the wine.”
Further along the road from Svätý
Jur is Pezinok,the de facto centre of the
Small Carpathian Wine Route.The town
also houses the Malokarpatské múzeum
(Small Carpathian Museum),which
informs visitors about the wine-making
process and the lives of the people who
work in the vineyards.
“The wine in the past was
produced from lots of grape
types,so the wine wasn’t
pure and it contained
more alcohol,” said Martin
Hrubala,the museum’s historian.
“Nowadays,85 percent of
wine produced in the Small
Carpathians is white wine.”
“Modra – the capital of
wine” (a registered trademark)
is another typical wine
making town whose hillside
vineyards can be seen from afar.
Although the most common wines
for the region are internationally-
known white wines such as Riesling
or Veltliner there are also new Slovak
grape varieties.
“You can taste Dunaj, Hron or
Nitria,which are red wines,” said Jerguš
Hajdučík, a wine-maker standing next
to a row of barrique barrels.
Apart from winemaking,Modra is
well known for its multi-coloured,hand-
painted ceramics,of which white and
blue are the most typical.Various fine
examples are displayed in an old tower
gate converted into a small museum,
as well as the gallery of Ignác Bismayer,
where there is an exhibition of special
ceramics depicting people working in
vineyards,beggars,brides or typical
Slovak outlaws. - Peter Nagy -
Tasting Slovak wine along the Small Carpathian Wine Route is an excellent way to explore the region
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: outside the city 91
R26 Hrad Červený Kameň
(Red Rock Castle)
37 km (48 min) v 70 min
uČastá
Å +421 (0)33 245-5103
The castle is located on a cliff above
the village of Častá. From Častá,
you can either walk or drive (2 km)
right to the castle where there is a
large parking area.
www.hradcervenykamen.sk
a May-Sept: 9:00-17:00,
Oct-Apr: Tue-Sun 9:30-15:00
€7 (€8 in ENG) ä e WC
Červený Kameň is a goldmine of
historical architecture, furniture,
weapons, cellars and more
A family home of red rock
Between the 16th and mid-20th centuries,
the renowned Pálffy familywere fortunate
enough to call the castle at Červený
Kameň (Red Rock) home.But to anyone
born outside an order of Hungarian
noblemen,their humble abode will be
seen as nothing short of a monumental
palace,now one of the most imposing and
best preserved castles in Slovakia.
Originally constructed in the 13th
century in the foothills of the Small
Carpathians,Červený Kameň was
later owned by the prosperous mining
magnateAnton Fugger,who began its
transformation into both an “ultimate
fortress” and a luxurious Renaissance
residence.Fugger\'s rebuilding took place
under the influence ofAlbrecht Dürer,
arguably the most talented German
painter of all time,and also a pioneer
of design.The master builders’ finesse,
coupled with Fugger’s wealth,produced
a quite wonderful structure of style and
stolidity,the perfect foundations for
further renovations under the Pálffys,who
were also hardly timid in their approach
to decoration.
The last Pálffy departed the
castle in 1945,and its late 20th century
refurbishment as a tourist attraction was
probably easier than most similar projects.
It is now chock-a-block with exceptional,
sometimes eccentric,furnishings and
art,and is large and grand enough to host
conferences and exhibitions,including a
meeting of European leaders in the early
21st century.
Among countless notable sights is
the “salla terenna”,or concert hall,on the
ground floor,which resembles a mystical
cave grotto with an underground lake and
dripping walls providing a permanent
accompaniment to occasional recitals
held on the premises.The Pálffy family
stage-coach is now on display in the
entrance hall,and there is also an on-site
apothecary,inlaid with turtleshell,built
during the plague epidemic.Parked in
a first floor gallery is a fur-lined sledge,
covered in solid gold,the kind last seen
hauling the White Witch through Narnia.
Huge tapestries that line the walls were
not only pleasing to the eye,but were
also used to keep the warmth in the vast
chambers.The inventory of impossible
extravagance is endless.
Lest we get carried away in the
opulence,however,there is also an
exhibition in the castle of savage
weaponry,including one especially brutal
teardrop-shaped sword favoured by the
Ottoman invaders,complete with a nifty
device for cutting off the ears of the slain
in order to earn a bloody bonus for the
slayer.It’s also impressive to see some
primitive and recyclable hand grenades,
essentially a metal handle attached to
a rock.
The knight’s banquet hall,decorative
baroque chapel,well-stocked library
and a dining hall replete with crystal
chandeliers are probably only to be
expected.But the enormous cellars are
likely to surprise even the most seasoned
castle-goer.The largest measures 90
metres in length and is something like
a stone aircraft hangar.The lighting is
unique: despite being buried in rock,
natural light is channeled through vertical
vents and the cellars are far from the
cramped,dingy places you might expect.
- Howard Swains -
Photo: Courtesy of Bratislava Region Tourism
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/92 bratislava: outside the city
Near the capital,near adventure
If you have a spare day or two while
visiting Bratislava,why not pay a visit
to places outside the city.
Sheepand
Awooden village
In Stupava,you can soon be
surrounded by sheep,pigs,
horses and other domestic
animals in the unique bio
farm,where you can also
taste the national cuisine in
the local restaurant or buy
some food as a present.The Slovak
cheeses korbáčiky and bryndza
are both available in the shop,as
well as žinčica (a sheep’s milk
product) or home-made bread
and cakes.
The farm is especially
popularwith families,and
features a children’s playground,plus the
opportunityto ride horses and ponies or
to pet thevarious other animals.You can
sampleyour food and drink on a small
terrace area and enjoythe entertainment.
“At Easter, there was a
performance on a shepherd´s pipe by
some skilled musicians,” said Jana
Miklošová from the farm.
In addition to the farm, you
can also visit the manor house,
Saint Stephen’s Church or a
museum dedicated to the
renowned ceramics maker
Ferdiš Kostka.The area
also offers plenty of
hiking and cycling
opportunities.
The town of
Lozorno is another
welcome stop if you are
fleeing the hectic life.The
wooden village of Abeland
is situated nearby, which
features a chalet, tea house
and church all constructed
from timber.There is a rare, relaxing
atmosphere as you gaze at still ponds
stocked with fish or the surrounding
untarnished environment.
You can try shooting with a
traditional bow and arrow, horse-riding,
fencing or observing the locals go about
their daily business, which they carry
out dressed in period costume. You can
also encounter more domestic animals,
such as ducks, pigs or quails. You can
also sample homemade goulash.
“All visitors are foreign for us – we
made our own kingdom here, coins
included,” said Igor Abel, one of the
owners of Abeland. “Everybody finds
something they like and we are happy
making new friends.” The crowded car
park confirms Abeland’s popularity.
Water,tigers
and horses
Approximately 22 kilometres south-
west of Bratislava is Senec, best known
for the Slnečné jazerá (Sunny Lakes)
recreational area.
The town also boasts Aquapark Senec,
a complex of 11 swimming pools, water
attractions, beach volleyball courts, a
wellness centre and sauna, providing
R14 Senec
31 km (28 min) v 50 min
A popular summer location for
tourists thanks to Slnečné Jazerá
(Sunny Lakes) located to the east
of the city.
Aquapark Senec
Slnečné jazerá – sever, Senec
Å +421 (2)4564-8021
Located in the north of the town
after passing two roundabouts
surrounded by many hotels.
www.aquathermal.sk
aMon-Sun 10:00-21:00
from €10 ä WC
Solar – Senec Observatory
Nám. A. Molnára 2, Senec
Å +421 (0)910 482-150
The observatory is connected to A. M.
Szenczi school, close to the Church
of St Nicolaus.
www.senec.solarastronomy.sk
a booking necessary voluntary
Aquapark Senec provides everything for the visitor seeking a spot to relax, all the year round
The wooden village of Abeland
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: outside the city 93
R3 Lozorno
25 km (23 min) v 45 min
Abeland
Abeland is located in the town
of Lozorno, about 1 km past Vodná
nádrž dam
Å +421 (0)904 237-777
www.abeland.sk
a Sat 10:00-18:00 é
R4 Stupava
19 km (23 min) v 45 min
Biofarm Stupava
Pass through Stupava and
continue in the Lozorno direction for
approximately 3 km. Then turn right
onto a narrow two-way road through
the forest.
Å +421 (0)918 280-546
www.biofarma.sk a10:00-21:00
(during the summer), 11:00-20:00
(during the winter) free
ä WC
R11 Hrubá Borša
40 km (38 min) v 60 min
Corporex farm
The farm is in the village of
Hrubá Borša, approximately 7 km
from Senec and signposted from the
town. Å +421 (2) 4590-1322
a booking necessary
R12 Kostolná pri Dunaji
36 km (33 min) v 60 min
Oasis of the Siberian tiger
Leave the village of Kostolná
pri Dunaji in the direction of Urbano-
va Ves. After about 3 km, turn right
onto a rough road, where Oasis is
situated in the middle of a field.
Å +421 (0)905 423-846
www.tigre.sk a Mon-Sun
12:00-16:00 (booking necessary)
voluntary
everything for the visitor seeking a
spot to relax, all the year round.
For those less interested in water
tourism, however, there are other
sights in the town, including the
Turkish house, the Church of Saint
Nicolas or the observatory, which is
a part of the local school but open to
visitors.
The best time to visit is late
at night, when you can admire a
breathtaking view of the universe.The
observatory is under the supervision
of the astronomical association Solar,
which provides a lecture series from
leading astronomers and various
projects and activities. It is necessary
to book visits in advance, for a
maximum of 12 people.
There is more to see in the
surrounding area too – if you can find
it.To get to the main attraction in
Kostolná pri Dunaji, visitors have to
pass through the village and then take
a right turn onto a dirt track.
They will be rewarded by a visit to
a farm where some 30 tigers and three
lions now find their home.
This oasis of the endangered
Siberian tiger is run by about
eight volunteers and financed by
contributions. Much of the money goes
to the approximate 10-15 kg of meat
consumed by each beast each day.
“It’s better to come in the winter,
when they tend to be more active,”
said Michaela Kocmundová, one of
the volunteers. “It’s the most natural
season for them. In the summer they
are hidden in their sheds.”
Although the animals are
dangerous, there is no need to be afraid
and no injuries have been sustained on
the park.
“You can determine the mood of
the tiger by specific signs, movement
and noises,” said Kocmundová. “I have
known this tiger, Samko, since his birth.
I’m not afraid of him.”
Slightly less carnivorous animals
can be found in the nearby village
of Hrubá Borša, specifically at the
Corporex riding school.
“It’s a great place for the children
from the cities,” said Miriam Agárdiová,
the owner of the school. Horses, ponies,
ducks, pheasants, parrots, and even
ostriches could accompany you during
your stay.There is also a pony that has
been known to jump at visitors like
a dog.Welcome to the farm,which is
popular among people of any age.Take a
saddle and helmet, and climb aboard.
- Lucia Rusnáková, Michaela Gedaiová -
The Oasis of Siberian Tigers is home to 24 tigers and three lions
Biofarm Stupava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/94 bratislava: outside the city
Ancient crafts alive today
The area around Bratislava has become
internationally known as the home
of folk majolica,a particular style
of ceramics produced since the 16th
century,especially centred on the
towns of Pezinok and Modra.The craft
was brought to the area by the Habans,
a branch ofAnabaptists,who fled
persecution in Germany,Switzerland
and the Netherlands to settle in western
Slovakia.Even though the Habans
moved on,their skills transferred to
local artists,who have continued the
production to this day.
The products – plates,bowls and
cups,as well as more elaborate figurines,
etc.– are made from clay and are
something between regular porcelain
and terracotta.The clay is spun on a
potter’s wheel,and then fired in a kiln,
as usual.But then a glaze of melted glass
is applied that covers the red pottery
in a white sheen.Various patterns are
then hand-painted onto the white
coating,traditionally in greens,blues
and yellows.Any red indicates a more
expensive product,since the red paint is
derived from gold.
In Pezinok,one of the most noted
producers of majolica ceramics
is Renáta Hermyšová,a former
employee of a state-owned pottery
companywho,in 1989,when she
was 20,founded her own company.
Hermyšová transformed her house into
a small factory and shop to create and
sell her wares,now employing more
than 10 people to fulfil orders received
from across the world,including Japan,
where she supplied ceramics to the
organisers of the Nagano Olympics.
Visitors are invited to take tours
around the small factory,where they
can see the production methods up
close.The processes are intricate
and relyvery much on the skills of
individual craftsmen and women;
there is not a machine in sight.Rather
there is a potter’s wheel and some
painstaking brushwork involved in each
item,before the item is stamped with
an “R” and is ready to hit the shelves.In
case anyvisitor is sceptical of the skills
required to produce such items,there
is even the chance to take a spin on the
wheel yourself.The apron is very much
recommended.
Anyone wanting to know more about
the lifestyle of the Habans should head to
Veľké Leváre,where a house in a former
Haban village has been reconstructed in
its former style and is now a museum
dedicated to the enigmatic community.
The Habans were similar in beliefs to the
Amish of today and also lived in simple,
community-oriented villages.They
excelled in the seemingly diverse fields
of pottery,irrigation and medicine,with
many of their methods credited as the
basis for modern practices.
Theywere,in turn,harried out of
Slovakia by the Catholic Habsburgs,
but some descendants remained in the
village for several generations,long
enough,at least,to be snapped in some
terrific photographs showing the entire
community posing in the village square,
else hard at work.
As was typical,the house in Veľké
Leváre is long and narrow,with a high,
steeply pointed roof,slanting over three
floors.The ground level comprises two
large rooms,utilised as galleries to
showcase authentic Haban clothing,as
well as the machinery they used to make
it,and lined by several photographs.
Upstairs,the long attic-like room is a
single dormitory-style bedroom,with
several beds arranged in lines.Be aware,
however,that at time of writing none
of the museum’s signs or information
panels were in English,so ask for manual
in English.
- Howard Swains -
A pottery display with a craftsman of ÚĽUV, the Centre For Folk Art Production
R25 Modra
27 km (39 min) v 50 min
Múzeum slovenskej
keramickej plastiky a
Galéria Ignáca Bizmayera
(Museum of Slovak Ceramics
Sculpture and Gallery of Ignác
Bizmayer)
Kukučínova 15, Modra
Å +421 (0)33 647-2765
www.snm.sk; aMon-Fri 8:30-
16:00 during summer season also
Sat 9:00-15:00 €1.5
In addition to exhibition the
museum also offers a course in
ceramics production. For the course,
booking by e-mail (mls@snm.sk) is
necessary two weeks before the visit
at the least. €60 (all group)
Ceramics courses are offered
also by Hotel Majolika (www.
hotelmajolika.sk).
R21 Pezinok
21 km (32 min) v 30 min
Keramika Renáta Hermysová
(Pottery Renáta Hermysová)
Vinice 3, Pezinok
Å +421 (0)908 308-191
www.majolika-r.sk
a booking one working day
before a visit necessary €20
(groups up to 20 people) Part of the
tour is a short interactive workshop
of ceramics production.
R1 Veľké Leváre
45 km (39 min) v 45 min
Habánske múzeum
(Haban Museum)
Veľké Leváre
Å +421 (0)34 779-4493
www.zahorskemuzeum.sk
a Tue and Thu, bookings
necessary €0.66
A fujara-player
made from
majolica
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: outside the city 95
R15 Bernolákovo
18 km (23 min) v 25 min
Paintball Bernolákovo
Playground is located near Golf
resort between Ivanka pri Dunaji and
Bernolákovo.
Å +421 (0)910 909-088
www.toppaintball.sk
a booking necessary €7
R13 Kráľová pri Senci
37 km (33 min) v 50 min
Tourist flights
The aeroplane hangar is
located at the end of the village
towards Hrubá Borša.
Å +421 (0)908 770-702
www.pilotclub.sk a booking is
necessary from €50
Parachuting-Vertical Jump
airport Kráľová pri
Senci 37 km (31 min)
Å +421 (0)905 519-268
www.verticaljump.sk
a booking necessary€150
R3 Lozorno
25 km (23 min) v 45 min
Shooting range
Lozorno (shooting range
located close to the highway in the
village Lozorno)
Å +421 (0)917 767-213
www.strelnica-lozorno.sk
a Mon-Fri 9:00-19:00 Sat-Sun
10:00-19:00 (Booking by e-mail one
day before the visit is recommended
(shooting.ba@gmail.com))
from €8
Pumping adrenaline with karts,
flights and guns
If you like the sound of rumbling
motors,wind in your hair,watching the
ground from way up above or shooting
pellets of colour at your friends,then
you are in the right place.Bratislava
region can provide all manner of
’adrenaline experiences’ only limited
by the time you have,the money in
your wallet and people you want to take
with you.
The forests of
Bernolákovo provide a perfect
spot for paintball.A small river forms a
natural border on one side and a rising
hill the other.Between them are trees,
trenches,barricades,moats and built
up towers,patrolled by battalions of
men clasping guns,wearing helmets,
protective vests and camouflage clothes.
“Paintball is not about shooting as
much as you can,” said Michal Velčík,a
paintball event manager.“That’s Rambo
style.The winning team will be the one
that communicates better and is more
coherent.”
There are several different game
styles to try.The most common is the
team death-match,where the aim
is simple: shoot your enemies.But
strategy changes in games where the
objective is to capture a flag,or in which
participants have only 10 pellets in the
magazine,forcing them to think wisely
when to shoot and when to hold fire.
Games require at least eight players
(smaller groups should call in advance),
and cost €11.7 per person,including
equipment hire and an initial 100
pellets.Not bad for something that lasts
upwards of three hours.
Although tourist flights in Kráľová
pri Senci are not officially considered
part of the adrenalin sport family,flying
about 200 metres above the ground in
a light aeroplane constructed for two
people will likely get many people’s
blood pumping.
“Flying is for lunatics who
want to see places
from above,”
said Peter
Chromek,a
pilot with
about 7,000
flight hours,
as he gently
teased a small
airplane out of
its hangar.But up
in the air,after a quick look at someone
like Chromek,who pilots the two-seater
plane,any fear is replaced by the
exhilaration of flight.
The passenger is the boss and can
instruct the pilot to fly practically
anywhere around the Bratislava region.
The only limitation is the fuel in the
tank and,again,the money in your
pocket.
For those who like real guns,the
shooting range in Lozorno is an option.
The building is in operation all year
round with eight shooting boxes for
its visitors.“We are offering shooting
also for foreigners without a firearms
licence,” said Igor Beháň,the owner
of the site.“However those visitors are
shooting supervised by instructor,”
Beháň added.
- Peter Nagy -
The shooting range in Lozorno
Photo: Courtesy of Strelnica Lozorno
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/Cycling routes
www.region-bsk.sk
Danubian cycling route 1
(27.2 km) SNP most - Prístavny
most - Zimný prístav - Hamuliakovo
Danubian cycling route 2
(19.1 km) Berg - Čunovo
Malokarpatská cycling route
(45.9 km) Vysoká pri Morave -
Zohor - Lozorno - Jablonové - Pernek
- Kuchyňa - Rohožník - Sološnica
- Plavecké Podhradie - Plavecký
Mikuláš
Moravian cycling route
(68.1 km) Most Lafranconi - Devín
- Devínska Nová Ves - Vysoká pri
Morave - Záhorska Ves - Suchohrad -
Gajary - Malé Leváre - Závod
Záhorská route
(55.9 km) Devín - Zohor - Láb -
Malacky - Gajary - Malé Leváre,
Veľké Leváre - Závod
Ružinovská radial
(13.6 km) Štrkovec lake (Ružinov)
- Vrakuňa - Prístavný most - Štrkovec
lake (Ružinov)
SvätýJur-VysokápriMorave
(32.7 km) Svätý Jur - Košarisko
- Borinka - Stupava - Vysoká pri
Morave
Dúbravská radial
(7.2 km) SNP most - Botanická
záhrada - Líščie údolie - Dúbravka
Hamuliakovo - Senec route
(37.6 km) Hamuliakovo -
Kalinkovo - Dunajská Lužná - Most
pri Bratislave - Malinovo - Ivanka pri
Dunaji - Bernolákovo - Veľký Biel -
Malý Biel - Senec
Green Bike Tour
(71.9 km) Železná studienka,
Rotunda buffet - Malý Slavín - Biely
kríž - Pezinská Baba - Limbach - Biely
kríž - U Slivu - Kamzík - Železná
studienka, Rotunda buffet
96 bratislava: CYCLING
Two wheels good:
Cycling in and around Bratislava
Bratislava is a relatively small city,whose
charms can mostly be explored on foot.
But this is also one of the most rewarding
regions in central Europe in which to hop
on two wheels and exercise some pedal
power,either on the very fringes of the
city centre or slightly further into the
surrounding countryside.
One popular cycling route along
the Danube offers all the luxury one can
imagine: an excellent smooth surface
divided for both cyclists and roller
bladers; numerous refreshment stands
dotted along the way.Plus,of course,the
appeal of the largest river in Slovakia.
It attracts thousands of cyclists every
weekend.On the other hand,there are
also plenty of routes offering a more
peaceful journey,where your only
companywill be deer and birds.This
is the more tranquil reality of cycling
outside of Bratislava,which has much
to offer for both recreational and more
experienced cyclists.There are more
than 100 kilometres of cycling routes in
Bratislava,and another 800 kilometres
of paths and roads to navigate across the
Bratislava region.It’s not bad for an area
slightly more than 2,000 km2.
Popular routes
Of course,it is not easy to choose any
one route over another,but three of the
best include: “Cycling trip along the
Danube”,which leads from Bratislava to
Danube Čunovo dam,20 kilometres from
the centre of Bratislava; the 37km-long
“Along the Morava River” route,starting
at the village of Devínska Nová Ves and
ending at Vysoká pri Morave; and “To
Marianka and Stupava” which also starts
at Devínska Nová Ves and describes
a 28km-long circle passing through
Stupava,Marianka and Záhorská Bystrica.
All are detailed on the website of the
Bratislava Self-Governing Region (www.
region-bsk.sk).
While the previous three routes are
all suitable for recreational cyclists,a
fourth,known as the “Green BikeTour”
has been laid out to appeal to more
experienced riders and offers a more
physically demanding option.It leads
from Železná Studienka recreation area,
through the rugged terrain of the Small
Carpathians,and then to Kamzík hill,a
total 34km trip.
In the recent past,many Slovak
cyclists have done much of their riding
in easternAustria,which is close to
Bratislava and offers a more advanced
cycling infrastructure and,largely,
better road surfaces.It can often be the
opposite in Slovakia,where many of the
paths are undermined by a low quality
surface,particularly in Bratislava city,
and routes that often do not connect with
one another.
However,cyclists point out that
the Bratislava region offers a greater
variety of both terrain and distance
from civilisation than easternAustria,
in particular in the hills to the north of
Bratislava.
“I think around Bratislava it doesn’t
matter whether you ride a road or touring
The Danube embankment offers plenty of cycling opportunities
Cycling routes are dotted with refreshment spots
Photo: SITA
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: CYCLING 97
Cycling trip along the Danube
The route starts at the SNP Bridge
(SNP most) and first leads along
the Danube to Rusovce, whose
neo-gothic mansion and park is
regrettably closed to the public.
After passing the village of Čunovo,
one finds the Čunovo Water Sports
Centre at Čunovo Dam, which offers
a wide range of sports activities. For
those who wish to combine sports
and arts there is also the Danubiana
Meulensteen Art Museum here.
There are a couple of options for
routes back to the city. It is possible
just to turn around and retrace your
steps, but if you press on to Vojka
nad Dunajom, there is an hourly
ferry connecting the village with
Kyselica, on the other side of the
river. It is then possible to return to
Bratislava along the other bank of
the Danube.
Bicycle rental
Bike Bratislava
Panenská 30
Å +421 (0)948 884-997
www.bikebratislava.sk from €8
Bike Tours & Rental
in the car park under the UFO
restaurant Å +421 (0)907 683-112
www.bratislavasightseeing.com
from €6
Turistická Informačná Kancelá-
ria Devínska Nová Ves
Istrijská 49
Å +421 (0)2 6477-0260
www.tikdnv.sk from €2
bike,whether you are professional or just
a person on Saturday ride,everyone will
find something that suits them,” said
Andrej Daňo,a medical student from
Bratislava.“There are hills and there are
plains.”
Alongthe rivers
ortothe hills
Back on the most popular route along
the Danube,it is not uncommon to
experience literal traffic jams of cyclists,
especially during spring or summer
weekends.But it is easy to see why: the
route,which usually takes two and half
hours for an average cyclist to navigate,
also takes in the castle in Rusovce and the
Danubiana MeulensteenArt Museum,as
well as wonderful views of the river itself.
The many refreshment possibilities
are also a bonus.“You can just take one
bottle of water which you can refill all the
time,or buy a drink somewhere,” Daňo
said.“You do not have to take five litres
[of liquid] with you.”
However,problems may occur
when the path is overcrowded,
according to Ľuboš Jakubek,a
student from Bratislava,who is
a regular on the route.“I have
seen ambulances there many
times,” Jakubek said,referring
particularly to the part of
the path close to Slovnaft,
Bratislava’s oil refinery,
where roller-bladers do
not have their own lane.
Plenty of other
routes exist for
anyone with a more
adventurous spirit. Emília Šišková,
a cycling instructor, suggests using
the routes in the Carpathians,
which are well sign-posted despite
being in the rural regions away
from the city. Daňo prefers
heading along the Danube to the
Morava River, especially when
he is in the mood to substitute
some nature and wild animals
for other cyclists. “There are
wetlands there,which attract
various birds,” he said. “When
those fields are flooded it is
simply pure romance.”
Plans
Of course, cycling can have its dangers
and Bratislava’s riders are often
frustrated that routes do not connect
with one another, particularly out of
the city, forcing them onto the busy and
poorly-surfaced roads,where they can
be vulnerable to the whims of ignorant
drivers.
After every winter, the roads in
Bratislava are left in not a good shape,
and the number of pot-holes made
headlines in the local news. “The
first day [I took a ride outside] I got
a puncture because of stupid hole
and destroyed a new tire-tube,” said
Šišková.
The cycling lobby in Bratislava
will continue to campaign for
improvements. Several bike rental
spots as well as guided bike tours have
been introduced for tourists.
In September 2012, the
BSK opened a new bridge
between Devínska Nová Ves
and Schloss Hof for
pedestrians and cyclists
aimed to improve the
connection between
Slovak and Austrian
cycling routes, and
opened a public vote
to decide its name.
Thanks largely to an
online campaign,
the public decided
that it should be
called the “Chuck
Norris Bridge”,
after the American
martial artist and
internet hero.
Slovak regional
officials rejected the
results of the poll and
called it “Freedom
Cycling Bridge”.Actual
mayor of Bratislava Ivo
Nesrovnal explained
that the name was not
suitable since: “You
can not cross Chuck
Norris”.
- Roman Cuprik -
Devín Castle is a popular destination for cycling tourists
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/98 bratislava: HIKING
80 Sandberg
N page: 37
81 Devín Castle (ruins)
N page: 37
84 Železná studienka (Iron
Spring)N page: 37
R4 Stupava (Biofarm)
N page: 92-93
R5 Pajštún Castle (ruins)
24 km (30 min) uBorinka
v 45 min a non-stop free
R6 Marianka N page: 62-63
R9 Villa Rustica
the remnants of an ancient
Roman building are located on
the Veľká lúka meadow between
Devínska Nová Ves and Dúbravka
u Technické sklo v 20
R18 Svätý Jur N page: 90-91
R23 Pezinská Baba
22.3 km (30 min)
R26 Červený Kameň Castle
N page: 89
R30 Plavecký hrad (castle
ruins) 58.4 km (45 min)
uPlavecké Podhradie v 80 min
a non-stop free
R32 Smolenice Castle
Zámocká 18, Smolenice
80.1 km (59 min) v 90 min
Å +421 (0)33 596-3232 €2
www.kcsmolenice.sav.sk a Jul-Aug
10:00-18:00 (entry every hour)
R33 Ostrý Kameň Castle
(ruins)
72.7 km (58 min)
u Buková v 110 min
a non-stop free
Sakrakopec
N page: 64-66
Tourist map
see www.turistickamapa.sk
Big adventure on offer
in the Small Carpathians
The bigger the better?Absolutely not.In
the case of the countryside surrounding
Bratislava,“small” is not only beautiful,
it is positively great.
The seemingly flat silhouette of the
Small Carpathian mountains can easily
be overlooked: there are no monumental
hills,no deep valleys,no obvious
ready-made attractions; just a strip of
green somewhere on the horizon.But
then you actually take a closer look and
the featureless strip suddenly comes
alive with the most vivid colours and
incredible diversity.Just pick a map and
you will discover big treasures hidden in
a small package.
Names can sometimes be
misleading.With their length of
approximately 100 km,width of up to 15
km and a maximum altitude of 768 m,
the Small Carpathians are definitely not
among the biggest mountain ranges.But
what makes them so appealing is the
rich diversity of attractions they offer.
In this relatively small area there are
abundant unique flowers and spectacular
panoramas.There are serene forests and
popular dams; cosyvalleys and rocky
hills.You can visit ancient ruins and
remote outlook towers,or ride a cable-
car.All of this is usually in comfortable
walking distance from each other,
and connected by a network of well-
marked hiking trails.With a map,a few
words of advice,or even just a slightly
adventurous soul you have endless
possibilities at hand.And all right on
Bratislava’s doorstep.
Hikingtrails
Only a few steps from a Bratislava city
bus stop,you can completely forget about
civilisation.After visiting Devín castle,
follow the yellow trail that will lead you
through the forests and meadows.After
4 km you will reach Sandberg,which,
several thousand years ago,was a seabed
and has subsequentlyyielded some rich
paleontological finds.Although most
eyes will naturally be drawn to the views
overAustria – occasionally theAlps are
visible on the horizon – do not forget
to look around your feet.In spring in
particular,the meadows change colour
to yellow and violet thanks to several
rare plant species,such as pheasant’s
eye (Adonis vernalis) and prairie crocus
(Pulsatilla).
For those in a more meditative
mood,you can also reach Marianka (30
min by bus from the Main Bus Station in
Bratislava),the oldest Slovak pilgrimage
site from where you can delve into deep
beech and oak woods.A two-hour stroll
will bring you to Biely kríž,an important
crossroad of hiking and biking trails,
where you’ll find a remarkable bar
offering a small range of drinks and
snacks,usually a spectacular soup and
always an unforgettable atmosphere.
From Biely kríž make a short and
sombre detour to Sakrakopec,where
The Small Carpathians are small only by name
A wooden cross and birch trees commemorate an air crash
from 1966
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: hiking 99
there is a plantation of 82 birch trees,
each of which represents one life lost in
what remains the worst air crash in the
history of the former Czechoslovakia.
You can end your trip in Rača,with
numerous public transport possibilities
(direct links to the city centre),or
descend to Železná studnička.Once best
known for its spa,this romantic valley is
now a very popular trip destination with
comfortable paths and lots of places for
barbeques.It is ideal for a leisurely stroll,
and there is also a picturesque cable-car
from Železná studnička to Kamzík
area.During holidays and weekends,
a bus service number 43 goes deeper
into the forest to Kačín,a clearing with
a gamekeeper’s lodge and a cosy pub,
Lesanka.You’ll often find tramps playing
folk and country songs here.
The Small Carpathians offer many
more places where you can seemingly
enter a totally different world.You
can sample fresh sheep cheese,for
instance,at the bio-farm Príroda,near
Stupava,after a pleasant walk among
their domestic animals.Alternatively,
you can drink hot chocolate in the
intimate atmosphere of the mountain
chalet Korennývrch at Pezinská Baba,a
mountain pass especially popular with
hikers,mountain bikers,skiers and
cross-country skiers.
Castles inthe hills
If you want to submerge yourself in
history,visit one of the numerous castles
or castle ruins.Pajštún,Plavecký hrad
or Ostrý Kameň castles all demand a
slightly steeper ascent,but you will
be rewarded with spectacular views.
Alternatively Biely Kameň or Dračí
hrádok require most work from your
imagination to picture the original
appearance of these ruins.
You’ll get a clearer idea of how the
places used to look byvisiting Červený
Kameň and Smolenický zámok,both of
which are excellently preserved and can
make a perfect interruption to a hiking
trip.Meanwhile,if the 13th century isn’t
quite ancient enough for you,then
don’t miss Neštich,the site of a former
fortified settlement above the village
of Svätý Jur,which dates from the 9th
century,or Villa Rustica,the remnants of
an ancient Roman building on the Veľká
lúka meadow between Devínska Nová
Ves and Dúbravka.It dates from the 1st
centuryAD.
Of course,the oldest treasure here
is nature - even if it is often strangely
overlooked.“Yes,there is no mountain
pine here,nor mountain goats and
the mountain height does not exceed
a three-digit number,but it does not
mean that there is nothing interesting
here,” says Vladimír Lukačovič,who
treats the Small Carpathians as a second
home.“I definitely recommend visiting
Klokoč in June,when the showy mullein
(Verbascum speciosum) is in bloom.”
It is possible to spend as much time
as you like exploring the region,and
for a good full-day hike,follow the blue
markers from Plavecké Podhradie to the
ruins of Plavecký hrad,then continue
through to Báborská hill.From there,
head to Klokoč hill,noting the unique
flowers,and up to Sedlo Uhliská.From
there a red trail will lead you to Vápenná,
a rocky hill with a small outlook
tower.After approximately six
hours walking,a yellow trail
will guide you back to Plavecké
Podhradie.
The Small
Carpathians are small
from the outside but
big from within.Do
not hesitate to wake
up the adventurous
spirit,take a map
and go.“The whole
Small Carpathians are
surrounded byvillages,
therefore it is not a big
problem if you get lost,”
says Lukačovič.“Within
an hour or two you can
get from the ridge to
the closest village.So
nothing stands in the way
of exploring unknown
regions.”
- Jitka Parobeková -
Ostrý Kameň Castle is one of the popular castle ruins near Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/100 bratislava: beyond the region
Out of the region: Day trips
Brno (129 km)
City, castle, villa: www.brno.cz
from CZK300/€11.5 (Tugendhat Villa)
P D2 129 km (78 min) v www.cp.sk (90 min)
Brno is the second largest city
in the Czech Republic and the
traditional capital city of Moravia,
also known as a wine-producing
region.The most important main
sights of Brno are the royal castle
Špilberk,the cathedral of Saints
Peter and Paul and the OldTown
Hall.Another important monument
is the functionalistTugendhat Villa
designed by architect Ludwig Mies
van der Rohe which is a UNESCO
World Heritage Site.
Lednice (91 km)
Mansion: www.zamek-lednice.com from CZK230/€8.3
P D2/E65 91 km (61 min)
v www.cp.sk (80 min)
Lednice,together with its twin
manor of Valtice,was inscribed on
the UNESCO World Heritage List
as “an exceptional example of the
designed landscape that evolved
in the Enlightenment”.Lednice
contains a neo-gothic palace,a
historical greenhouse and the
English garden park with a solitary
60-metre minaret,reputedly the
tallest outside the Muslim world
at the time of its construction.
Valtice and its impressive baroque
residence host the annual Valtice
Wine Market,the largest and most
prestigious exhibition of wine in
the Czech Republic.The city of
Mikulov,with several attractions,is
also nearby.
Schloss Hof (29 km)
Palace: www.schlosshof.at €13
P 61, B9 and B49 29 km (33 min)
Just across the Slovak-Austrian
border is a magnificent baroque
estate,Schloss Hof,consisting of a
lordly palace,a terraced garden and
an idyllic farm.The estate has been
undergoing an extensive authentic
renovation to restore the look that it
had when it was owned by Empress
MariaTheresa.Visitors to Schloss
Hof will have insight to everyday
life of the imperial family in the
18th century.A new bridge between
Devínska Nová Ves and Schloss Hof
serving pedestrians and cyclists was
opened in September 2012.
Carnuntum (24 km)
Roman settlement: www.carnuntum.co.at €10
P 61 and B9 24 km (28 mins)
You don’t need to travel far to
see ancient Roman history.The
CarnuntumArchaeological Park
in Bad Deutsch-Altenburg offers a
fabulous journey back to Roman
times in its OpenAir Museum
Petronell.Special attractions
include numerous reconstructed
Roman buildings.About 700 metres
from the museum visitors can see
one of two ancient amphitheatres.
Visitors can also easily reach large
public baths situated about 500
metres from the museum.
Vienna (79 km)
City, mansions: www.vienna.info
P D4, A6 and A4 79 km (57 min)
v www.cp.sk (60 min)
The capital ofAustria is a great
destination for one-day trips for
visitors interested in history,music
and arts or up-scale shopping.The
historic citycentrewith St Stephen’s
Cathedral,the Hofburg complex,
and the Schönbrunn and Belvedere
palaces is a UNESCO World Heritage
Site.Vienna is also home to many
museums,galleries and opera
houses.Architecture lovers can
view its phases of architectural
development with prominent
examples of gothic,baroque and art
nouveau styles.Those looking for an
adrenaline buzz can go to Prater,an
amusement park.
NeusiedlLake(64km)
Lake: www.neusiedler-see.at
P D4, A6, A4/E60 64 km (53 min)
Lake Neusiedl is the second largest
steppe lake in central Europe,shared
byAustria and Hungary.The lake is
315 square kilometres but on average
is not more than 1.8 metres deep,a
factor that made it an escape route
from the iron-barbed Soviet satellite.
The National Park Neusiedler See
- Seewinkel was founded in 1993.
The lake is a popular holiday resort
favoured by ornithologists,water
sports enthusiasts and nature
lovers,offering ample opportunities
for sailing,windsurfing,fishing,
Photo: ČTK
Photo: Courtesy of Schloss Hof
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Courtesy of Carnuntum
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: beyond the region 101
bird watching and cycling.
Podersdorf is the biggest and the
most popular tourist town within
the region known as Seewinkel.
Mosonmagyaróvár
(41 km)
Spa: www.thermal-movar.hu from €7 (salt cave),
from €5 (massage), from €10.5 (spa)
P E-75/E65 41 km (34 min)
Mosonmagyaróvár could be easily
called the town of dentists since
it has approximately 150 dental
offices and 350 practicing dentists –
perhaps one of the highest densities
of dentists anywhere.Dental
tourism has been flourishing here
due to very affordable prices.But
what draws many tourists to Moson
and Magyaróvár,the two parts of
this town,is the spa,whose thermal
waters are considered one of five
best in Europe.There are limited
attractions for children.
Orechová Potôň
(41 km)
Race track: www.slovakiaring.sk from €30
P 572 41 km (46 min)
Slovakia Ring,which claims to be
one of the longest motor racing
tracks in Europe,offers a visitor an
authentic experience of car racing
while improving one’s driving skills.
After undergoing a brief safety
course visitors can drive their own
cars on the track if they are in good
technical condition or they can rent
a car from the track.The ring offers
12 racing alternatives.
Nitra (95 km)
City, castle: www.eng.nitra.sk
P D1 and R1 95 km (63 min)
v www.cp.sk (60-100 min)
Nitra,one of the oldest cities in
Slovakia,is a perfect day-trip
destination: it’s not a big city but
it offers many different types of
activities.In a single day,you can
visit the historic city castle with
its cathedral,a surrounding upper
town with its churches,seminaries
and cobblestone streets and then
enjoy the more modern lower town
with its shops,bars and cafés.As
well there are quick but rewarding
hikes in nature and fabulous local
wines.Nitra often compares itself to
Rome because of the seven hills that
surround the city.
Komárno (104 km)
Fortress: www.komarno.sk €2
P 63 104 km (105 min) v www.cp.sk (120 min)
The fortress in Komárno is a stark
and magnificent example of military
might – a structure of prodigious
scale that has been strengthened
and enlarged many times during its
history.The fortress continued to
be used almost to the present day
but it is now abandoned.Visitors
can walk in and around what feels
like a sprawling ghost city.Even
the very knowledgeable guides say
that some areas remain unexplored.
Tunnels with entrances within the
fortress may lead all the way under
Komárno; no one has yet found
out.Reservation for a visit outside
regular opening hours is required.
Budapest (200 km)
City, castles, sites: www.budapest.com
P D2, M1 200 km (120 min)
vwww.cp.sk (165 min)
With its numerous historical sites
and easy access from Bratislava,the
capital of Hungary,often dubbed as
‘the Paris of the East’,can make an
interesting side trip for visitors to
the Bratislava region.Along with the
famous Chain Bridge,the natural
thermal baths,the Royal Palace,
the Fisherman’s Bastion and the St
Matthias’ Church,Budapest offers a
number of museums and galleries,
as well as shopping districts and
a zoo.
Wien
(79km) Komárno
(104km)
Neusiedler See
(64km)
Sloßhof
(29km)
Nitra
(95km)
Mosonmagyaróvár (41km)
BRATISLAVA
Lednice
(91km)
Carmuntum
CZECH RE P.
SLOVAKIA
HUNGARY
AUSTRIA
Brno (129km)
Budapest
(200km)
Photo: Courtesy of Slovakia Ring
Photo: Courtesy of HNTO
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/102 bratislava: TRAVELLERS’ NEEDS
slovakia GENERAL
INFORMATION
Population: 5,397,036
(Slovak Statistics Office,as of 2011);
48.7% men,51.3% women
Nationalities: Slovak: 80.7%,
Hungarian: 8.5%,Roma: 2% (10%
- estimated),other: 1.8% (Czech,
German,Ukrainian,Ruthenian,
Polish),7% (not specified)
Religion: Roman Catholic (62%),
Evangelical (5.9%),Greek Catholic
(3.8%),Reformed (1.8%),Orthodox
(0.9%),other (1.6%),not specified
(10.6 %),no religion (13.4%)
Capital: Bratislava (pop.420,000)
Currency: euro €
Language: Slovak (for some Slovak
phrases see inside front cover)
Business hours: Mon-Fri 9:00-
17:00,bigger shopping centres daily
10:00-21:00
Time zone: GMT/UTC +1 hour
GEOGRAPHY
Area: 49,035 km2
Borders with neighbouring states:
Hungary (679 km),Poland (598 km),
the Czech Republic (265 km),Austria
(127 km) and Ukraine (98 km)
Land use: forest: 41%,arable land:
29%,meadows and pastures: 18%,
urban areas: 5%,water: 2%,other
agricultural land: 2%,other: 3%
(statistics from the Environment
Ministry,as of 2012)
Highest point: Gerlachovský štít
(2,655 m)
Longest river: Váh River (403 km)
Towns: 136 (settlements with more
than 5,000 inhabitants)
Major cities: Bratislava (population
411,228),Košice (240,433),Banská
Bystrica (80,003).
Villages: 2,717 (settlements with
fewer than 5,000 inhabitants)
Caves: 6,700 (discovered)
National parks: 9 - HighTatras,
LowTatras,Pieniny,Slovenský raj,
Slovenský kras,Malá Fatra,Veľká
Fatra,Muránska planina,Poloniny.
Castles and castle ruins: 300
SItes ONTHE UNESCO
WORLD HERITAGE
LIST
Cultural
-The historic town of Banská
Štiavnica and the technical
monuments in its vicinity
- Bardejov town centre
- Spiš Castle and its associated
cultural monuments,Levoča
- Vlkolínec
- Wooden churches
Natural
- Caves ofAggtelek Karst and Slovak
Karst
- Primeval Beech Forests of the
Carpathians
TELECOMMU-
NICATIONS
It is easy to arrange a SIM card
with a Slovak phone number.The
biggest mobile operators in Slovakia
are: Orange Slovensko,Slovak
Telekom,4ka and O2,each with
many branches around the country.
To place an international call,dial
00,the country code,city code,
A DOZEN THINGS TO REMEMBER IN SLOVAKIA
1. Call for a taxi (many taxi firms have English-
-speaking staff) or use HOPIN / UBER applications;
getting a taxi from a rank can be significantly more
expensive. Either way, check if the meter is running
and get out if it isn’t.
2. Always punch your ticket on public transport
in cities (and make sure you have a ticket before
boarding). Fares aren’t high but fines are, and
inspectors are merciless. Drivers on municipal buses
and trams usually do not sell tickets, but there are
plenty of machines and kiosks that do.
3. Please remember that most of museums and
galleries are closed on Mondays. Take opening
hours with a grain of salt. Major attractions publish
their opening hours. Pay particular attention to
information on the last admission on the day you
want to visit, which might be as much as one hour
before the attraction officially closes.
4. Don’t leave your shopping until late. Even in
Bratislava, many shops close at Saturday lunchtime
and don’t open again untill Monday morning.
Exceptions are shopping malls and kiosks near
rail/bus stations. Several Tesco hypermarkets are
open 24 hours.
5. Don‘t be discouraged if a waiter/shop assistant/
post office clerk scowls at you. They are not singling
you out as a foreigner: everyone gets the same
treatment.
6. Don’t smoke or drink alcohol in public places.
Smoking is prohibited in restaurants, bus stops and
shopping malls and can result in a significant fine.
7. Don’t leave your belongings on your car seats.
Slovakia is generally a safe country but your
belongings may ‘inspire’ an opportunist to break
the window of your car and take them.
8. Always have your passport with you. In
Slovakia, you must normally produce a passport
or ID when checking into a hotel.
9. When visiting someone in their home, take a
bottle of wine, a box of chocolates or a bunch
of flowers. If flowers, make sure you take an
odd number! An even number of flowers is only
ever taken to funerals or cemeteries. Slovaks
frequently bring flowers to weddings and birthday
parties. Everyone wants to shake hands and kiss
the person who is celebrating, so be prepared for
hand-shaking and kissing lines.
10. Be prepared to say ’No’ several times if
you really don’t want extra helpings of food or
another shot of slivovica. Slovaks are very hospita-
ble and retain the notion that carrying a few extra
pounds is healthier than being on the thin side.
11. Bratislava is a state within a state. Most
tourists don’t leave the city, which is a shame
because the rest of the region is dramatically
different.
12. If you have to use the toilet (záchod), make
sure you have pocket change. Some restaurants
and pubs charge a small fee, usually 20-50 cents,
to use it. Men may have to pay extra for toilet
paper as well.
Belgrade
Prague
P
E
IRL
GB
F
CH
B
NL
L
D
AND
N
S
FIN
DK
A
CZ
H
IS
PL
SK
EST
LT
BY
RUS
UA
RO
MD
BG
AL
BIH
SLO
TR
CY
MK
GR
SRB
M
I
Copenhagen
Moscow
Kyiv
Warsaw
Brussels
Lisbon
Rome
Athens
Chisinau
Bucharest
So a
Tirana
Vienna
Vilnius
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: TRAVELLERS’ NEEDS 103
Average temp.: 9.8°C / 49.6°F
Maximum recorded temp.: 38.2°C / 100.8°F (20.7.2007)
Minimum recorded temp.: -24.6°C / -12.3°F (7.1.1985)
Warmest month (average temp.): July (21.4°C / 70.5°F)
Coldest month (average temp.): Jan (-0.3°C / 31.5°F)
Temp. below 0°C / 32°F : 88 days (per year)
Temp. above 25°C / 77°F: 69 days (per year)
Days of snowfall (per year): 38 days
Annual precipitation total: 576 mm / 22.7 in
and number.Example: to call San
Francisco,dial 00 + 01 (country) + 415
(city) + number.
General phone numbers:
Information 1181; General
emergency 112; Police 158;
Ambulance 155; Fire 150; Emergency
Road Service 18124; Emergency
HighwayService 0800 100-007
TRANSPORT
For more details about airports,
trains,buses and taxis in Bratislava
please see the pull out map.
the post office
At a Slovak Post Office
(Slovenská pošta), you can
make phone calls and buy
phone cards, pay your utility
bills, get film developed, buy
lottery tickets, and, of course,
send mail. Often, the simplest
thing to do with outgoing mail
(odosielanie listov) is hand it to
the person behind the counter;
they will stamp it and send it
off for you. The main post office
in Bratislava at Námestie SNP
(close to the historical centre)
is open Mon-Fri 7:00-20:00, Sat
7:00-18:00 and Sun 9:00-14:00.
MONEY
Slovakia’s basic currency unit
is the euro (€). When changing
money, look for signs saying
zmenáreň, or “change”, and steer
clear of strangers offering to
exchange money on the street. You
can get cash from international
accounts at an automatic teller
machine (ATM), usually marked
Bankomat.Travellers’ cheques can
be cashed at most banks and some
exchange offices. Credit cards are
accepted.
PUBLIC HOLIDAYS
Jan 1 - NewYear’s Eve and
Independence Day; Jan 6 -
Epiphany; Mar/Apr - Good Friday
and Easter Monday; May 1 - Labour
Day; May 8 - Victory over Fascism;
Jul 5 - Cyril and Methodius Day;Aug
29 - SNP Day; Sep 1 - Constitution
Day,Sep 15 - Our Lady of Seven
Sorrows; Nov 1 -All Saints’ Day; Nov
17 - Day of Struggle for Democracy;
Dec 24-26 - Christmas.
SHOPPING
Most stores in Slovakia are open
from 8:00 to 18:00 Mon-Fri and 8:00-
12:00 on Saturday.Shopping centres
typically have opening hours for
all shops from 9:00–21:00 during
the entire week.SeveralTesco
hypermarkets are open non-stop.
DRINKING WATER
It is safe to drink water from all
taps unless there is a warning
otherwise.
RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Jewish service
Synagogue on Heydukova Street
– Friday evening (before twilight),
Saturday morning (usually at 9:00),
and during feasts.Services held in
Hebrew.
Sunday services in foreign
languages
Roman Catholic Church
Church of St John of Matha - 9:00
(Latin) N page 20
St Martin’s Cathedral - 7:45 (German),
9:00 (Latin) N page 24
Church of St Ladislavus - 11:00 (ENG)
N page 32
Church of the Merciful Brothers
11:30 (Italian) N page 18
Small Evangelical Church
8:15 (German),9:30 (ENG)
Panenská Street (entrance from
Lýcejná Street),map C 2; www.
bratislavainternationalchurch.org
CitylightChurch-10:00(ENG),
Námestie1.mája1;mapC2
www.citylightbratislava.com
Bratislava International
Fellowship -Trnavské mýto 1
(Istropolis); www.bif.sk; 10:30 (ENG)
International Baptist Church
10:00 (ENG),Súľovská 2
www.ibcb.baptist.sk
25
20
15
10
5
0
-3
77
68
59
50
41
32
26.6
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2.4
2
1.6
1.2
0.8
0.4
0
°C °F
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Average monthly temperature
Average monthly rainfall inches
mm
Climate in Bratislava
Source: Slovak Hydrometeorological Institute
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/104 bratislava: TRAVELLERS’ NEEDS / FOOD, accommodation
Where to eat
Listed in price ranges alphabetically
The rating was created based on prices of
meals that include a soup and main dish
(mostly chicken).
Price range:
€........................... under €10
€€............................€10-15
€€€.........................€15-20
€€€€....................over €20
Antica Toscana €€€€
Maďarská 27, Bratislava
www.anticatoscana.sk
Carnevalle €€€€
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 20,
Bratislava; www.carnevalle.sk
Fou Zoo €€€€
Ševčenkova 34, Bratislava
www.fouzoo.sk
Hotel Albrecht Restaurant €€€€
Mudroňova 82, Bratislava
www.restaurantalbrecht.com/home
River Bank Restaurant €€€€
Dvořákovo nábr. 6, Bratislava
www.riverbank.sk
Hotel Sheraton – Brasserie Anjou
€€€€
Eurovea – Pribinova 12, Bratislava
www.brasserieanjou.com
Hotel Tulip House – Rhapsody
€€€€
Štúrova 10, Bratislava
www.tuliphousehotel.com
Kogo – caffé ristorante €€€€
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 21,
Bratislava; www.kogo.sk
Liviano €€€€
Biznisuite Technopol, Bratislava
www.liviano.sk
Savoy Restaurant €€€€
Hviezdoslavovo námestie 3 (Hotel
Carlton), Bratislava
+421 (0)2 5939-0400
www.savoyrestaurant.sk
UFO watch.taste.groove. €€€€
Most SNP, Bratislava
www.redmonkeygroup.com
Al Faro €€€ (www.alfaro.sk)
Pribinova 1/B, Bratislava
LemonTree & Sky Bar €€€
Hviezdoslavovo nám. 7, Bratislava
www.skybar.sk
Bistro Soho €€ (www.bistrosoho.sk)
Dunajská 20, Bratislava
Bistro St. Germain €€
Rajská 7, Bratislava
www.stgermain.sk
Bratislavský meštiansky pivovar €€
Dunajská 21, Bratislava
www.mestianskypivovar.sk
Green Buddha €€
Zelená 4, Bratislava
www.greenbuddha.sk
Hotel Matyšák – wine restaurant €€
Pražská 15, Bratislava
www.hotelmatysak.sk
Meštiansky pivovar €€
Dunajská ulica 21, Bratislava
Drevená 8, Bratislava
www.mestianskypivovar.sk
Modrá hviezda €€
Beblavého 14, Bratislava
www.modrahviezda.sk
Prašná Bašta €€
Zámočnícka 11, Bratislava
www.prasnabasta.sk
U Kubistu €€ (www.ukubistu.sk)
Grösslingová 26, Bratislava
Zelený Rodrigéz €€
Zámocká 36; map B 3
+421 (0)905 218-569
Zyllinder €€
Hviezdoslavovo nám. 19, Bratislava
www.zylinder.sk
Verne €
Hviezdoslavovo nám. 18, Bratislava
BEST BURGERS
BeAbout
Prešernova 4, Bratislava
www.beabout.sk €7.99
Minerva
Michalská 3, Bratislava
www.restaurant-minerva.eu
€3
Regal burger
Palackého 4, Bratislava
Eurovea Galleria, Pribinova 8
www.facebook.com/regalburger €6
FAST FOOD
McDonald‘s
Námestie SNP 14, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 7:00-24:00,
Fri-Sat 7:00-1:00, Sun 9:00-24:00
Obchodná 58, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 7:00-24:00,
Fri-Sat 7:00-2:00, Sun 10:00-24:00
Korzo, Gorkého 1, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 7:00-24:00, Fri 7:00-1:00,
Sat 8:00-1:00 Sun 9:00-24:00
Subway
Hodžovo nám. 1/A, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 7:00-22:00, Fri 7:00-3:00,
Sat 10:30-3:00, Sun 10:30-22:00
Rajská 1, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 7:00-22:00, Fri 7:00-24:00,
Sat 10:00-24:00, Sun 10:00-22:00
Obchodná 27, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 8:00-22:00, Fri 8:00-24:00,
Sat 9:00-24:00, Sun 11:00-22:00
Orbis Street Food
Laurinská 7, Bratislava
Tue 11:00-22:00,
Wed-Thu 11:00-24:00, Fri-Sat 11:00-1:00,
Sun-Mon 13:00-22:00
I Love Pizza
Rybárska brána 1, Bratislava
Mon-Thu 11:00-22:00,
Fri 11:00-01:00, Sat 10:00-01:00,
Sun 10:00-22:00
Many fast food restaurants can be
found on Obchodná street
Accommodation: hotels, pensions
Apollo Hotel; Dulovo nám. 1,
map F 2; www.apollohotel.sk
Arcadia Hotel; Františkánska 3,
map C 3 (c 2); www.arcadia-hotel.sk
Art Hotel William; Laurinská 17,
map D 3; www.art-hotelwilliam.sk
Austria Trend Hotel; Vysoká 2A,
map C 2; www.austria-trend.at
Botel Gracia; Rázusovo nábrežie,
map C 4; www.botelgracia.sk
Botel Marina;
Nábrežie arm. gen. L. Svobodu,
map B 4; www.botelmarina.sk
Crowne Plaza Bratislava; Hodžovo
námestie 2, map C 2;
www.crowne-plaza.sk
Falkensteiner Hotel Bratislava;
Pilárikova 5, map C 3 (c 1);
www.falkensteiner.com/en/hotel/
bratislava
Film Hotel; Vysoká 27, map D 2;
www.filmhotel.sk
Grant Hotel Pressburg;
Antolská 2, map F 4;
www.hotelpressburg.sk
Grand Hotel River Park
Dvořákovo nábrežie 6, map A 3
Hotel Akademik; Vazovova 1,
map D 1; www.stuba.sk
Hotel Albrecht; Mudroňova 82,
map A 2; www.hotelalbrecht.com
Hotel Antares; Šulekova 15/a,
map B 2; www.hotelantares.sk
Hotel Arcus; Moskovská 5,
map E 2; www.hotelarcus.sk
Hotel Avance; Medená 9,
map C 4; www.hotelavance.sk
Hotel Bratislava; Seberíniho 9, map F 4;
www.hotelbratislava.sk
Hotel Danubia Gate; Dunajská 26,
map D 3; www.hoteldanubiagate.sk
Hotel Devín; Riečna 4, map C 4;
www.hoteldevin.sk
Hotel Mama’s; Chorvátska 2,
map E 2; www.hotelmamas.sk
Hotel Matyšák; Pražská 15,
map C 1; www.hotelmatysak.sk
Hotel Mercure; Žabotova 2,
map C 1; www.mercure.com
Hotel No.16; Partizánska 16a,
map A 2; www.hotelno16.sk
Hotel Old City; Michalská 2,
map C 3 (c 3); www.oldcityhotel.sk
Hotel Perugia; Zelená 5,
map C 3 (c 3); www.hotelperugia.sk
Hotel Saffron; Radlinského 27, map D 2;
www.hotelsaffron.sk
Hotel Tatra; Nám. 1. mája 5,
map C 2; www.hoteltatra.sk
Hotely Plus; Bulharská 72, map F 4;
www.hotelyplus.sk
Ibis Bratislava Centrum; Zámocká 38,
map B 3; www.ibis.com
Lindner Hotel Gallery Central
Metodova 4, map F 1;
www.lindnerhotels.com
Mamaison Residence; Šulekova 20,
map B 2; www.mamaison.com
Marrol‘s Boutique Hotel; Tobrucká 4,
map D 4; www.hotelmarrols.sk
Park Inn Danube;
Rybné námestie 1, map C 4;
www.parkinn.com/hotel-bratislava
Radisson Blu Carlton Hotel; Hviezdosla-
vovo nám. 3, map C 4;
www.radissonblu.com/hotel-bratislava
Sheraton Bratislava Hotel;
Pribinova 12, map E 4;
www.sheratonbratislava.com
Skaritz Hotel & Residence;
Michalská 4, map C 3 (c 3);
www.skaritz.com
Tulip House Boutique Hotel;
Štúrova 10, map D 3;
www.tuliphousehotel.com
Villa Park; Poľná 3, map E 2;
www.villa-park.snif.sk
Pension Castle Club; Zámocká 13,
map B 3; www.zamockypivovar.sk
Penzión Grémium;
Gorkého 11, map C 3 (c 4);
www.penziongremium.sk
Penzión Portus; Paulínyho 10,
map C 4; www.portus.sk
Penzión Virgo B&B; Panenská 14,
map C 2; www.penzionvirgo.sk
Accommodation: hostels
City Hostel; Obchodná 38,
map C 3 (c 2); www.cityhostel.sk
Downtown Backpacker‘s Hostel;
Panenská 31, map C 2;
www.backpackers.sk
Hostel Blues; Špitálska 2,
map D 3; www.hostelblues.sk
Hostel Possonium; Šancová 20,
map D 1; www.possonium.sk
Patio Hostel; Špitálska 35,
map D 3; www.patiohostel.com
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: TRAVELLERS’ NEEDS 105
TOURIST INFORMATION CENTRE
17 Bratislava Culture and Information
Centre Klobučnícka 2; map C 3 (c 4)
0.16 km (2 min)
Å +421 (0)2 5443-3715
www.visitbratislava.com a Apr-Oct
9:00-19:00 off season 9:00-18:00é
TOURIST GUIDES
Bratislava Tourist Guides Association
www.asba.sk
Slovak Tourist Guides Association
www.touristguides.sk
Grančay Martin; www.touristguides.sk
Grančay Nóra; +421 (0)910 939-147
Gubová Dagmar; www.carpatica.sk
Jančušková Viera; www.liber.sk
LoureiroRoland;+421(0)903 531-388
Michalíková Renáta
+421 (0)917 497-524
Petrovičová Dagmar (Christophorus)
+421 (0)902 230-453
Rapčová Nikola
+421 (0)907 545-095
Vavrinčíková Katarína
www.katarinabratislavaguide.com
Volek Štefan +421 (0)907 930-999
Znášik Micha +421 (0)908 878-195
accommodation N page: 104
COFFEE SHOPS, ICE CREAM
N page: 78-79
DISCOUNTS N page: 53
EVENTS
N page: 108-109, 76-77, 80-81,
extreme SPORTS N page: 68-69
Galleries N page: 50-52
Museums N page: 50-52
Night life N page: 56-57
Parks and Gardens N page: 72-73
Restaurants
N page: 104, 74-75, 76-77, 82-83
Souvenirs N page: 108-109
Wine N page: 80-81, 90
TAXI
Taxi Taxi Å+421 (0)904 216-321
AA Taxi Euro Å+421 (0)903 807-022
TAXI (unified ride rate)
Easy Taxi Å+421 (0)918 555-555
Green Taxi Å+421 (0)905 660-660
HOSPITAL AND PHARMACY
Medissimo Hospital and Polyclinic
(a private health-care facility)
www.medissimo.sk
Tematínska 5/A (near the lake
Veľký Draždiak)
Hospital and Polyclinic Ružinov
Ružinovská 6
Å +421 (0)2 4823-4113
Hospital and Polyclinic of Ladislav Dérer
(Kramáre hospital)
Limbova 5 Å +421 (0)2 5954-1111
Hospital in the Old Town
Nemocnica Milosrdní Bratia
Námestie SNP 10; map C 3 (c 1)
Å +421 (0)2 5788-7100
Hospital and Polyclinic of St Cyril and St
Methodius Petržalka Antolská 11
Å +421 (0)2 6867-1111
Non-Stop Pharmacy
Pharmacy Pokrok
www.lekarenpokrok.sk
Račianske Mýto 1; map E 1
WIFI
There are a few free WiFi zones across
the city: Primaciálne nám. (square),
Medická záhrada (garden), Rázusovo and
Fajnorovo nábr. (waterfront). You can also
get online in buses displaying a WiFi sign.
See also: www.wificafespots.com
PUBLIC TOILETS
71 Medical Garden N page: 72-73
Building of the Bratislava City
Magistrate
Uršulínska Street (historical centre);
map C 3 (c 4)
Subway under Hodžovo nám. (square)
map C 2
65 Garden of the Presidential Palace
(near the exit on Banskobystrická Street)
N page: 72-73
Some public toilets are not in good
condition – especially those which are
free; the bus and train stations all have
public toilets as well as shopping malls,
gas stations, restaurants and pubs (they
are mostly paid)
SHOPPING
Shopping centres N page: 58-59
Grocery stores tend to open from 9:00
to 21:00, but the Tesco hypermarkets in
Petržalka and Zlaté Piesky are open 24
hours. A smaller supermarket Hviezda at
Námestie 1.mája (map C 2) is also open
24-hour-a-day. Another option is to order
your food online at potravinydomov.
itesco.sk
Tesco hypermarket Lamač (OC Galéria)
Lamačská cesta 1
Tesco hypermarket Petržalka
Panónska cesta 25
Tesco hypermarket Zlaté Piesky
(Shopping Palace)
Cesta na Senec 2
Hviezda
Nám. 1. mája 15; map: C 2
0.95 km (12 min)
SPORT & WELLNESS
Golf courses close to Bratislava
Carpatia Golf Club (www.golf-carpatia.sk)
Golf Club Elán (www.gcelan.sk)
Golf Club Green Resort (www.golfborsa.sk)
Golf Club Pegas (www.golflozorno.sk)
Black River in Bernolákovo (www.golf.sk)
Golf resort in Dunakiliti (www.prgc.sk)
White Eurovalley Golf-Park (www.golf.sk)
Golem Health Club
www.golemclub.sk; The club has several
branches in the city, usually located in
shopping centres:
Tower 115
Pribinova 25 (near Eurovea), map E
4; fitness, group exercises, massages
Aupark Shopping Center
Einsteinova 18; fitness, squash,
bedminton, group exercises, massages
Avion Shopping Park
Ivanská cesta 16; fitness, group
exercises, massages
Central Bratislava
Metodova 6; map F 1; fitness,
group exercises, sauna, massages,
swimming pool
Hotel Devín
www.hoteldevin.sk; Riečna 4 (in the
city centre), map C 4; squash, fitness,
wellness, massages
NC - Bowling National Centre
www.bnc-sk.sk
Turbínova 1
Fanatix
www.fanatix.sk
Dunajská 23 (in the city centre), map
D 3; squash, fitness
Ponteo Activity Park Rusovce
www.ponteo.sk
bowling, fitness, tenis, squash, wellness,
beach volleyball, petanque
88 NTC – National Tennis Centre
www.ntc.sk Príkopova 6; map F 4
tennis, badminton, squash, fitness
Swimming pool Pasienky
www.starz.sk Junácka 4
swimming pool, sauna, fitness
Outdoor swimming pool Tehelné pole
ww.starz.sk Odbojárov 9 é
7 Spa; wellness N page: 82-83
Aquapark Senec
wellness N page: 92-93
Darsana
www.darsana.sk
Baštová 7; map C 3 (c 1)
ayurvedic massage centre
Planet Zen
www.planetzen.sk
Gorkého 7; map C 3 (c 4)
Asian wellness, massages, sauna
CINEMAS
Cinema City
Large cinemas in the city are operated by
Cinema City, and they are all located in
shopping centres.
www.cinemacity.sk
Aupark Shopping Center
Einsteinova 18
Polus City Center
Vajnorská 100
Eurovea Bratislava
Pribinova 8; map E 4
Lumiere
www.aic.sk (Slovak only)
Špitálska 4; map D 3
EXHIBITIONS
50 Incheba Expo Bratislava
www.incheba.sk
Viedenská cesta 3-7; map B 4
TRAVEL AGENCIES
Authentic Slovakia
www.authenticslovakia.com
Blue Danube Tours; www.bluedanube.sk
Bratislava Tourist Service
www.bratislava-info.sk
C.K. Adrija; +421 (0)944 232-490
CK Hell; www.ckhell.sk
Dowina; www.dowina.sk
Flora Tours; www.floratour.sk
Go Running Tours Bratislava
www.gorunningtoursbratislava.com
Luka - Tours
www.bratislavasightseeing.com
Meetcentives; +421 (0)2 5920-1711
MS Agency; www.bratislava-guide.sk
Paxtravel; www.paxtravel.sk
Plus-Tour; www.bratislava-tours.sk
Ponte Tour; www.pontetour.sk
Satur Travel; www.satur.sk
Slovakotourist; www.tryslovakia.com
Tour4u; www.tour4u.sk
Visit Bratislava
+421 (0)907 538-988
X-cursion
www.what-bratislava.sk
GUIDE TO PRICES
* AT A SUPERMARKET
bread €1 – €1.5
milk (0.1l) €0.8
butter (125g) €1.3
yoghurt €0.5
ham (100g) €0.6
mineral water (1.5l) €0.6
soft drinks (2l) €1 – €1.5
fruit juice (1l) €1.5
ready-made pre-packaged meal (to
warm-up in microwave) €2.2
Prices of fruit and vegetables depend
on the season.
* AT A PUB / CAFÉ
coffee €1.5
tea €1.5
mineral water / soft
drink (0.3l) €1.5
glass of wine €2
large beer (0.5l) €1.5-2
* IN A RESTAURANT
Daily menu – usually includes soup as a
starter, a main dish, and sometimes also
a soft drink or a dessert. Prices range
from €4 to €5, in fancier restaurants
up to €10.
The cheapest places to eat include fast-
-food restaurants and Asian-food bistros.
A kebab or hamburger in a fast-food
stall is around €2.5. A complete dish in
an Asian bistro is around €3.
PRICES OF SOME MAIN COURSES IN
AVERAGE RESTAURANTS:
Bryndzové halušky €5 – €7
Goulash with side dish €5.5
Schnitzel with side dish €7
Steak €15 – 25
Pasta €5 – €7
Note: Prices in cafés, pubs and restaurants
are slightly higher in the centre of Brati-
slava than in the rest of the country.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/106 slovak cuisine
A BRIEF GUIDETOTHE COUNTRY’S CUISINE
Slovakia,unlike France or Italy,may
not be on the list of top destinations
for those who take pleasure in
gastrotourism.Nevertheless,Slovak
cuisine,in which sheep-breeding
traditions combine with tastes
typical of Hungary orAustria,has
a surprising amount to offer –
particularly if you enjoy meat.
MORETHAN JUST
DUMPLINGS
When asked what the most typical
Slovak food is,every Slovak would
first answer bryndzové halušky.The
gnocchi-like dumplings made of
potato dough served with bryndza,
a traditional,strong-tasting Slovak
sheep’s cheese,originate in the
mountainous regions of northern
and central Slovakia.It is served in
practically every restaurant that
offers local cuisine,usually seasoned
with fried bacon or fried onions.
An alternative,which is better
known in several varieties as a
Polish traditional dish,is bryndzové
pirohy,ravioli-like pasta with a
filling made of bryndza and
potatoes.
Western Slovakia,
however,has its
own regional
speciality:
roasted goose
accompanied
with red cabbbage
and lokše,a kind of dry potato
pancake (resembling tortillas),
smeared with goose fat.Lokše can
also be served as a main dish,filled
with goose pate,or sweet,filled
with poppyseed and jam.Goose as
a regional specialty is a tradition
shared with Slovakia’s southern
neighbour,Hungary,as is that of
eating goulash,or guláš in Slovak.
Typically eaten with knedľa,a
kind of sliced,boiled and steamed
dumpling,guláš takes several
forms: traditional,spicy maďarský
(Hungarian,with beef); segedínsky
(creamy,with sour cabbage and
pork); or poľovnícky (with venison).
Apart from these,there is also
kotlíkový guláš,which is more like
goulash soup,served with bread.
Soups – polievky – generally
cannot be absent from a Slovak
table.The most frequently served
soups are chicken bouillon (slepačí
vývar),tomato (paradajková),
vegetable (zeleninová) and various
cream soups.
Faithful to theAustrian
tradition,Slovaks are very keen on
fried Wiener-schnitzel (vyprážaný
rezeň),which is a regular Sunday
or festive lunch for many.It usually
comes with either mayonnaise
potato salad,or with boiled potatoes
and pickles.
Grilled pork knuckle, or
grilované koleno, served with
bread, pickled hot pepper
known as baraní roh in Slovak,
horseradish and mustard, has
recently become a very popular
food in Slovak restaurants and grill
bars too.
Vegetarians might find it
rather harder to enjoy Slovak
cuisine.The most likely dish on
offer is vyprážaný syr, or fried
cheese, a typical central European
dish served with French fries and
tartar sauce.
Another specialty
which is hard to find
elsewhere in the
world is treska, a
mayonnaise-fish salad,
available in salad bars or
supermarkets.
Preparation of bryndzové halušky, a dish consisting of sheep’s cheese and potato dumplings, has become an archetype of traditional Slovak food
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/slovak cuisine 107
BEER OR KOFOLA?
The tradition of wine drinking is
not new to Slovaks,especially in
the southern part of the country
where vineyards constitute a
significant part of the cultivated
land.And although the tradition
of wine tasting has become more
popular only recently,there are
places,especially along the Small
Carpathian andTokaj Wine Route,
where it is possible to sip the local
vintages.
The most popular drink in
pubs,however,is beer,or pivo.
The most popular Slovak brands
include Zlatý Bažant,Corgoň,and
Šariš.Czech beer can be found
among the selection at pubs.Other
locations offer local beers from
small breweries for example in
Kláštorný pivovar,Zámocký pivovar
or Patrónsky pivovar.You can order
a small beer (0.3l) or a big one (0.5l).
The majority of Slovak pubs offer not
only draught beer,but also draught
Kofola,a cola-style soft drink,which
was developed as an alternative to
western competitors in the 1960s.
Slovaks and Czechs like to call it
the best product of the Cold War.
Another such soft drink is Vinea,
made from grape juice and available
in white,red and pink varieties.
Pubs in Slovakia usually offer
an interesting selection of small
snacks that go well with beer (and
encourage further consumption
thereof).
An evening in a pub offers a
chance to taste traditional Slovak
cheese too, such as traditional
korbáčiky, which are little whips
made of spaghetti-shaped cheese,
courtesy of the Orava region.
Korbáčiky can be found in two
versions – natural and smoked.
Slovak pubs have also adopted
the traditional Czech beer snack,
a pickled camembert-style cheese
called nakladaný hermelín. If you
are not much of a cheese lover,you
can go for pagáč, a salty
pastry made with pork
fat and crackling.
SWEETTOOTH?
NO PROBLEM
Central European
countries take pride
in their tradition of
sweet dishes,which are
often served not only
as desserts but also as
main dishes.That is the
case with slivkové gule,
dumplings filled with
plums seasoned with
poppyseed or minced
walnuts,but also crepes,
or palacinky.Apart from
that,Slovaks and Czechs
share the tradition of buchty
(buns),both baked and steamed,
and závin (turnover).Poppyseed
is a typical seasoning or filling
for these.The traditional desserts
includeAustrian strudel (štrúdľa),
but in Bratislava there is also the
regional specialty bratislavské
rožky,a fine,crescent-shaped pastry
with a poppyseed or walnut filling
and a glossy surface,which already
received recognition under the
EU’s protected geographical status
scheme.Central European cities,
from Vienna through Bratislava
to Warsaw,are the places to go
for those who like creamy cakes
and cookies,served to accompany
afternoon coffee.
PROTECTED
TRADITIONAL SLOVAK
FOOD PRODUCTS
TheEuropeanUnionseekstoprotect
thereputationofregionalfoods
throughitsProtectedGeographical
Status(PGS)framework.Slovakia
nowhasatotalof17productswitha
final‘registered’status.Registered
traditionalSlovakproducts:
Bakeryproducts:
Skalickýtrdelník(abakeryproduct
ofahollow,cylindricalshape);
Bratislavskérožky(crescent-shaped
pastrywithpoppy-seed
orwalnutfilling).
Cheeses: Slovenská
parenica(asteamed,
lightly-smokedcheese
woundintotworolls
connectedinan‘S’
shape);Slovenskábryndza
(anatural,white,mature,
spreadablesheep’s
cheeseingranularform,
manufacturedbymilling
alumpofmaturedsheep’s
cheeseorbymillinga
mixtureofcheeseandlump
cow’scheese);Slovenský
oštiepok(ahalf-fat,semi-
hardcheesecharacterised
byitsspecialshape,that
ofalargeegg,pineconeor
ellipsoidwithdecoration);Ovčí
salašníckyúdenýsyr(cheeseproduced
fromfreshsheep’smilk,processed
andsmokedinshepherd’shuts);Ovčí
hrudkovýsyr-salašnícky(produced
fromfreshsheep’smilkandderives
itscharacteristictasteasaresult
ofthetraditionaltechnologyused
duringitsfermentationandalsofrom
beingshapedbyhandintoalump);
Tekovskýsalámovýsyr(natural
semi-hard,ripenedfull-fatcheese,
intheshapeofacylinder);Oravský
korbáčikandZázrivskýkorbáčik(a
steamedcheeseproductintheshape
ofalittlewhip/korbáčikinSlovak);
Zázrivskévojky(steamedcheese
product,smokedorunsmoked,inthe
formofstrings);Klenoveckýsyrec(a
semi-hard,ripenedcheese,smokedor
unsmoked,intheformofawheel)..
Meat:
Liptovská saláma / Liptovský
salám and Lovecký salám / Lovecká
saláma (a long-life fermented meat
products); Spišské párky (a wurst-
like product); Špekáčky / Špekačky
(wurst-like,heat-processed meat
product).
Spices:
Paprika Žitava / Žitavská paprika (a
sweet paprika made by grinding the
dried fruits of the Capsicum chilli
pepper). - Michaela Terenzani, Jana Liptáková -
Bratislavský rožok, a fine, crescent-shaped pastry filled with poppyseed or walnuts
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/108 SOUVENIRS/EVENTS IN BRATISLAVA
TRADITIONAL SOUVENIRS
The usual souvenirs,such as fridge
magnets,book markers,postcards
and calendars with images of
Slovakia’s beautiful sights,can be
found in many souvenir shops and
tourist information offices across
the country.
But if you are looking for a
somewhat less common souvenir
to carry home from Slovakia for
your family and friends – or
yourself – to provide a
lasting memory of your
trip to central Europe,
several possibilities are
at hand.
Dolls wearing
traditional folk costumes are
among many tourists’ favourites,as
well as various carved-wood objects,
such as musical instruments
(perhaps a small shepherds’ pipe
or a rattle),decorative objects to
hang on the wall or several kinds
of household tools for daily use (a
honey container,decorated wooden
spoons,wooden egg-holders or milk
glasses).
Embroidered or crocheted table
cloths and similar products are
traditional for Slovakia as well.
Dolls made of
maize leaves,
usually depicting
traditional
Slovak crafts
related to
village life and
work in the
fields,such as
a woman brace-
wheeling,people raking straw or a
woman singing a lullaby to a baby in
a cradle,are common.
Traditional Slovak pottery,
majolika or keramika in Slovak,
can be interesting for tourists
as well.Several different kinds
of traditional pottery are still
hand-made in Slovakia: Modra
majolica has various traditional
patterns hand-painted onto a
white coating,traditionally in
greens,blues and yellows (www.
majolika.sk) whileTrstená keramika
brings a combination of a brown
glaze with white designs (www.
trstenskakeramika.sk).
Decorated Easter eggs,called
kraslice in Slovak,make a rather
fragile but lovely souvenir from
Slovakia too.There is no need to
worry about the longevity of this gift
as the eggs are just shells with their
contents blown out through small
holes on either side of the egg.A
wide variety of techniques are used
to decorate the eggs,among them
hot-wax painting,straw ornaments
Events in Bratislava
JanuArY
jUnE
februArY
jULY
marcH
august
aprIl
september
March: Bratislavský mara-
tón (Bratislava Marathon)
www.bratislavamarathon.com
August: Duodanube,
Medzinárodná výstava psov
(International Dog Show)
www.duodanube.sk
January:
ITF Slovakiatour
www.incheba.sk
The most important
tourism fair in Slovakia
APRIL, September, December:
Dobrý trh (Good Market)
www.dobrytrh.sk (SK only)
Street market (usually on Panenská Street,
Jakubovo námestie or in Old Market Hall)
offering various goods, farmers’ products,
international cuisine, clothing, antiquities
and books, as well as various performances
and competitions
April: Bratislava pre všetkých
(Bratislava for Everyone), www.bkis.sk
Various cultural events in the city
April: Národný beh
Devín – Bratislava (National
Run Devín – Bratislava)
www.devin-bratislava.eu
(SK only)
Organised run between
Devín Castle and the
Old Town
April: Hory a Mesto
(Mountains and the City)
www.horyamesto.sk
International festival of
outdoor activities, including
mountaineering and
extreme sports. Features
films, discussions with
mountaineers and
demonstrations.
June: Bratislava Coronation
Ceremony, www.bkis.sk
Historical coronation ceremony of the
Hungarian kings
June–September: Viva Musica Festival
www.vivamusica.sk, Open-air concerts of
classical music and jazz
June: Gurmán Fest Bratislava
(Gastronome Fest Bratislava),
www.gurmanfestbratislava.sk (SK only)
Cooking demonstrations, workshops, competitions and
concerts including the chance to taste food prepared by
top chefs and sommelier-selected wines
June–September: Kultúrne leto (Summer
of Culture), www.bkis.sk, Many independent
festival projects and many programme cycles
featuring artists from Slovakia and around
the world at more than 20 sites in Bratislava
August/September:
Dni majstrov ÚĽUV
(Craftsmen Days ÚĽUV),
www.uluv.sk/en
Festival of traditional
crafts and folk production
September:
Bienále animácie
Bratislava (Biennial of
Animation Bratislava)
www.bib-slovakia.sk
International festival
of animated films
for children
JUNE: Musica Sacra, www.choral-music.sk
International festival of sacral music
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/SOUVENIRS/EVENTS IN BRATISLAVA 109
glued to the eggshells,
embroidered eggs,or so-
called ‘scratched eggs’.
Many kinds of
traditional souvenirs can be
purchased in shops branded as
ÚĽUV –The Centre for FolkArt
Production (www.uluv.sk).
There are numerous souvenir
shops in the historical
centre,mostly on Hlavné
and Hviezdoslavovo Squares
as well as at Obchodná and
Michalská Streets.
If you prefer bringing
back some of the tastes
of the country rather than its
decorative objects,here’s a list of
Slovak-made products that could
be slipped into your luggage before
your return trip:
BEVERAGES
The favourite soft drinks available in
Slovakia are Vinea (a wine-flavoured,
carbonated drink,available
in white and red versions)
and Kofola (a caffeinated
cola-like drink with its
own characteristic taste).
You can purchase both soft
drinks in plastic bottles
and Kofola is also available
in cans.
Slovak-made spirits
that will be a hit in your
home country could be
Demänovka,a herbal
liqueur in two flavours
– bitter (red label) and
sweet (green label) – as
well as slivovica (plum brandy) and
hruškovica (pear brandy).If beer is
your preferred option,traditionally-
excellent Slovak beers are Zlatý
Bažant,Šariš,and Smädný Mních.
For wine lovers,the following
wineries offer choice Slovak
wines: Víno Mrva & Stanko; J.&
J.Ostrožovič;Tokaj & Co; Elesko;
Chateau Belá; Víno Masaryk; Víno
Matyšák; Martin Pomfy – Mavín,
Vinosady; and VPS - Vinohradníctvo
Pavelka-Sobolič.
CHOCOLATESAND
SWEETS
If you are searching for Slovak-
made chocolates and sweets in a
supermarket,look for the Figaro
brand for various chocolate bars and
boxed chocolates,the Deva brand
for chocolate bars,boxed chocolates
and jelly boxes and the Sedita brand
for various biscuits and wafers,
including the very popular peanut-
cream filled wafers called Horalky
or Mila and Kakaové rezy.
mAY
oCTOber November december
April: Bratislavský Autosalón
(Bratislava Motorshow)
www.incheba.sk
The most important motoring
event in Slovakia
May: Nová drama
(New Drama), www.theatre.sk
Festival of contemporary
drama, including subtitles for
non-native speakers
November–December:
Christmas Days in Bratislava
and Traditional Christmas Market
www.bkis.sk
December: Partyslava - New
Year’s Eve Party, www.bkis.sk
April/JUNE: GLOBSEC, www.globsec.org
Bratislava Global Security Forum
Leading security and foreign policy
forum in central Europe
May: AsparagusDays
Asparagusandseasonal
delicaciesmadeofit,inatent
indowntownBratislava
May: Cirkul’art: Festival
nového cirkusu (Cirkul’art:
The Festival of Contemporary
Circus), www.cirkulart.sk
Various circus, theatre and
street performances, games
and competitions
May: Bratislavský majáles
(Bratislava May Feast),
www.bratislavskymajales.sk
Festival held on the river
bank featuring concerts, thea-
tre performances for children
and various side events
May: Slovak Food Festival,
www.slovakfoodfestival.sk
(SK only)
Known as the Biggest Picnic
in the City, the festival offers
food tastings, discussions
and workshops, and various
competitions
May: Flóra (Flora),
www.incheba.sk
Flower exhibition
May: Noc múzeí a galérií (Night of Museu-
ms and Galleries), www.muzeum.sk
Several museums and galleries around
Bratislava open into the night
October:
Medzinárodný festival gregoriánskeho chorálu
(International Gregorian Chant Festival)
www.choral-music.sk, Biennial event
october: Bratislava v pohybe (Bratislava
in Movement) www.abp.sk (SK only)
International festival
of contemporary dance
October/November:
Bratislavské hudobné slávnosti
(Bratislava Music Festival),
www.bhsfestival.sk (SK only)
Festival of classical music
October: Bratislavské
jazzové dni (Bratislava
Jazz Days), www.bjd.sk
Jazz festival with local and
international talents
November, May: Deň otvorených pivníc
(Day of Open Cellars), www.mvc.sk
Winemakers in the Small Carpathian region open
their doors for a day allowing visitors to taste
their wares. Several days are arranged throughout
the season.
November: Mesiac fotografie
(Month of Photography)
www.mesiacfotografie.sk (SK only), www.sedf.sk/en,
Various sites around Bratislava offer photo exhibitions,
including winners from the World Press Photo competition
November:
International
Film Festival
www.bratislavaiff.sk
November/december:
Jeden Svet
(One World Slovakia),
www.jedensvet.sk/en
International documentary
film festival
Photo: TASR
Photo: SITA
Photo: SITA
Photo: TASR
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/110 bratislava: index
Index
A4 56-57
Abeland 92-93, 95, 84-85
Academia Istropolitana 22
Airport 38
Andersen, Hans Christian 64-66
Apollo Bridge 30
Aquapark Senec 92-93, 84-85
Archaeological Museum 50-52
Archbishop’s Summer Palace 33
Arthur Fleischmann Museum 50-52
Aspremont Palace 29
Atlantis Science Centre 84-85
Bernolákovo (paintball, golf) 95
Bibiana (children\'s centre) 84-85
Bibiena, A. Galli 64-66
Biely Kameň (ruins of the castle,
hiking) 98-99
Biely kríž (hiking) 98-99
Biofarm 92-93, 84-85
Björnstjerne Björnson (Reduta) 64-66
Blue Church 31, 54-55
Botanical Garden 72-73
Bratislava Castle 26-27, 48-49,
53, 54-55, 64-66, 84-85
Bratislava City Gallery 20, 22,
50-52, 64-66
Bratislava City Museum 16, 50-52
B-S 8, B-S 4 (museum) 60-61
Bunker 60-61
Cafés 78-79
Carlton Hotel 12
Chatam Sófer Memorial 29, 62-63,
64-66
Children 84-85
Children’s Museum 84-85
Church of Clerical Congregation of the
Reformed Christian Church 18
Church of Our Lady of the Snows 62-63
Church of St Elisabeth 32
Church of St John of Matha 20, 64-66
Church of St Ladislaus 32
Church of St Stephen 21
Church of the Clarisses 23
Church of the Holy Saviour - Jesuit Church 15
Church of the Merciful Brothers 18
Church of Virgin Mary’s Assumption, Notre
Dame 13
Červený Kameň (castle, hiking) 91, 53,
84-85
City walls 22
Clubs 56-57
Coffee 78-79
Communism
Coronation 44-45
Corporex farm 92-93
Čumil (statue) 14
Danubiana Meulensteen Art Museum 39,
50-52, 53, 54-55, 70-71
Devín Castle 37, 50-52, 54-55,
60-61, 64-66
Discounts 53
Divoká voda (rafting) 68-69, 70-71
Doľany (wine) 80-81
Dračí hrádok (ruins of the castle,
hiking) 98-99
Erdödy Palace 22
Eurovea (river-front district) 30, 53,
54-55, 58-59, 70-71
Events 108-109, 76-77, 80-81
Family 84-85
Franciscan Church of Lord’s
Annunciation 19, 44-45
Galleries 50-52
Gerulata (museum) 39, 50-52, 84-85
Grassalkovich, Antun 64-66
Grassalkovich - Presidential Palace 33,
54-55, 64-66, 72-73
Great Evangelical Church 32
Historical Museum 50-52
Hlavné námestie 14, 44-45,
48-49, 108-109
Holy Trinity Church 28
Horský Park (park) 72-73
House of the Good Shepherd
(museum) 28
Hrubá Borša (farm) 92-93
Hviezdoslavovo nám. (square) 14,
64-66, 108-109
Incheba (exhibition centre) 105, 108-109
Iron Spring (Železná studienka) 37,
72-73
Jesuit Church 15
Jewish sites 42, 29, 32, 62-63
Jewish Synagogue 32, 64-66
J. Nepomuk Hummel Museum 50-52
Kamenné nám. (square) 31, 43, 60-61
Kamzík (TV tower) 38, 67, 72-73
Kapitulská Street 23
KC Dunaj (Centre of culture) 56-57
Klokoč hill (hiking) 98-99
Kochova záhrada (garden) 74-75
Kostolná pri Dunaji 92-93
Kozia brána (cemetery) 74-75
Kráľová pri Senci (tourist flights) 95
Kuchajda (lake) 72-73, 53
Lacinka-Palacinka 60-61, 53
Lourdes cave (Church of Our Lady
of the Snows) 62-63
Lozorno (farm, shooting range) 92-93,
95, 84-85
M. R. Štefánik Airport 39
Main Square (Hlavné nám.) 14, 44-45,
48-49, 108-109
Majestic Music Club 56-57
Malacky (Holy Stairs, golf) 62-63, 105
Malé Karpaty (hiking, cycling) 98-99
Malokarpatská vínna cesta 90-91,
80-81
Malý Dunaj (canoe) 70-71
Manderla’s house 18
Maria Theresa 6-9, 44-45, 46-47, 70-71
Marianka (pilgrimage site) 62-63
Mark Twain Club 70-71, 74-75
Market place (tržnica) 60-61
Medická záhrada (Medical Garden)
54-55, 64-66, 72-73
Michael’s Gate (museum) 20, 48-49, 67
Mirbach Palace (gallery) 20, 50-52
Modra (wine, pottery) 90-91, 80-81, 94
Most Apollo (bridge) 30
Most SNP (bridge) 30, 41-43,
60-61, 67, 70-71, 82-83
Museums 50-52
Museum of Carpathian German
Culture 50-52, 64-66
Museum of Clocks 50-52
Museum of Historical Interiors 16, 50-52
Museum of Hungarian Culture in Slovakia
50-52, 64-66
Museum of Jewish Culture 50-52,
53, 64-66
Museum of Pharmacy 50-52
Museum of Trade 50-52
Museum of Transport 50-52,
Museum of Viticulture 16, 50-52
Museum of Weapons 50-52
Music Museum 50-52
Námestie slobody
(Square of Freedom) 33, 60-61
Napoleonic soldier (statue) 15, 64-66
National Bank of Slovakia 34
National Tenis Centre 105
Nedbalka Gallery 15, 50-52
Night life 56-57
Oasis of the Siberian tiger 92-93
Obchodná ul. (Shopping St.) 32, 108-109
Old Bridge 67
Old Market Hall 18
Old Town Hall (museum) 16, 50-52,
53, 67, 80-81
Ondrej Nepela Arena (hockey stadium) 38
Ostrý Kameň (ruins of the castle,
hiking) 98-99
Pajštún (ruins of the castle, hiking) 98-99
Pálffy Palace (gallery) 22, 50-52, 64-66
Palisády 74-75
Petőfi Sándor 64-66
Petržalka (estate housing) 38, 60-61,
64-66
Pezinok (wine, pottery) 90-91,
94, 80-81
Pezinská Baba hill (hiking) 98-99
Plavecké Podhradie 98-99
Plavecký hrad (ruins of the castle,
hiking) 98-99
Podhradie (settlement below
the castle) 28
Port 70-71
Presidential Garden 72-73
Presidential - Grassalchovich Palace 33,
54-55, 64-66, 72-73
Prešporáčik (Bratislava tourist train) 13
Primate’s Palace (museum) 17, 64-66
Photo: Sue Nagyová
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/bratislava: index 111
Randal club 56-57
Red Crayfish Pharmacy (museum) 20
Red Rock Castle 91, 53, 84-85
Reduta (Slovak Philharmonic
Orchestra)
12, 50-52, 64-66
Restaurants 74-75, 76-77, 82-83
River Park (river-front district) 29,
58-59, 70-71
Rubberneck (statue) 14
Rusovce Manor House 39
Sad Janka Kráľa (park) 72-73
Sandberg (sandstone hill) 37, 74-75
Segner, Johann Andreas 64-66
Senec (aquapark, lake, observatory)
92-93, 84-85
Šenkvice (wine) 80-81
Shopping 58-59
Shopping Street 32, 108-109
Schöner Náci (statue) 14, 46-47
Slavín (memorial and cemetery) 34,
54-55, 60-61, 64-66, 67
Slovak National Gallery 12, 50-52, 53
Slovak National Museum 12, 50-52,
53, 84-85
Slovak National Theatre - Historical
building 13, 50-52, 82-83
Slovak National Theatre
- New building 30, 50-52
Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra 50-52
Slovak Radio 34, 60-61
Slovenský Grob (goose feast) 98-99
Slovenský rozhlas (Radio) 34, 60-61
Small Carpathian Wine Route 90-91,
80-81
Small Carpathians 98-99
Smolenice (castle, cave, hiking) 98-99
SNP Bridge 30, 41-43,
60-61, 67, 70-71, 82-83
Souvenirs 108-109
Sport 68-69, 105
Square of Freedom 33, 60-61
St Catherine’s Chapel 21
St Martin’s Cathedral 24-25,
44-45, 62-63, 64-66
Starý most (bridge) 67
Stupava (farm) 92-93, 84-85
Subclub (music club) 56-57, 60-61
Svätý Jur (wine, hiking) 90-91
Synagogue 33, 64-66
Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk 64-66
Tourist Information Centre 53, 105
Tržnica (market place) 60-61
TV Tower 38, 67, 72-73
U OčkA 56-57
UFO restaurant 30, 60-61,
67, 70-71, 82-83
University Library 21
Ursuline Church and Convent 19
Vápenná hill (hiking) 98-99
Veľké Leváre (Haban Museum) 94
Veľký Draždiak (lake) 72-73, 74-75,
53
Villa Rustica 98-99
Volkswagen 37, 68-69
Vydrica 28
Wellness 82-83, 84-85, 105
Wine 80-81
YMCA (multi-cultural hub) 56-57, 74-75
Železná studienka 37, 72-73
Zichy Palace (gallery) 22
Zlaté Piesky (lake) 38, 72-73
ZOO 84-85
Zuckermandel (church and
museums) 28, 64-66, 53
Galleries
Bratislava City Gallery 20, 22,
50-52, 64-66
Danubiana Meulensteen Art Museum
39, 50-52, 53, 54-55, 70-71
Mirbach Palace (gallery) 20, 50-52
Nedbalka Gallery 15, 50-52
Pálffy Palace 22, 50-52, 64-66
Slovak National Gallery 12,
50-52, 53
Zichy Palace 22
Museums
Archaeological Museum 50-52
Arthur Fleischmann Museum 50-52
Bratislava Castle 26-27, 48-49, 53,
54-55, 64-66, 84-85
Bratislava City Museum 16, 50-52
B-S 8 Hřbitov 60-61
Bunker 60-61
Devín Castle 37, 50-52,
54-55, 60-61, 64-66
Gerulata 39, 50-52, 84-85
Historical Museum 50-52
House of the Good Shepherd 28
Children’s Museum 84-85
Johann Nepomuk Hummel Museum
50-52
Michael’s Gate 20, 48-49, 67
Museum of Carpathian
German Culture 50-52, 64-66
Museum of Clocks 50-52
Museum of Historical Interiors 16,
50-52
Museum of Hungarian Culture in
Slovakia 50-52, 64-66
Museum of Jewish Culture 50-52,
53, 64-66
Museum of Pharmacy 50-52
Museum of Trade 50-52
Museum of Transport 50-52
Museum of Viticulture 16, 50-52
Museum of Weapons 50-52
Music Museum 50-52
Old Town Hall 16, 50-52,
53, 67, 80-81
Primate’s Palace 17, 64-66
Red Crayfish Pharmacy 20
Slovak National Museum 12,
50-52, 53, 84-85
Bratislava City Guide
The Slovak Spectator
www.spectator.sk
Publisher: Ján Pallo
Editor-in-chief: Michaela Terenzani
Editor: Howard Swains
Layout: Miroslav Čech, Peter Malatinec, Tatiana Štrauchová
Copy editors: Russel Lunday, Raub Murray, James
Thomson, Jeff Whiteaker
Part of the content was created in cooperation with
the Department of Journalism of Comenius University
in Bratislava.
Contributors and fact checkers: Beata Balogová, Tímea
Becková, Ivan Belko, Lucia Beňová, Ján Beracka, Roman
Cuprik, Dušan Dudík, Michaela Džomeková, Beata
Fojtíková, Michaela Gedaiová, Miroslava Germanová,
Kristína Hamárová, Jozef Hámorský, Kristína Krupčíková,
Karolína Kučerová, Sanela Kurtek, Filip Lehotský,
Jana Liptáková, Karina Miartanová, Radka Minarechová,
Peter Nagy, Lukáš Onderčanin, Ján Pallo, Jitka Parobeková,
Ján Pestún, Martina Raabová, Lucia Rusnáková, Lenka
Sabová, Natália Semianová, Katarína Sirotná, Howard
Swains, Michaela Terenzani, Sandra Tordová, Zuzana
Vilikovská, Carmen Virágová, Jeff Whiteaker
Photos:
Tímea Becková, Ivan Belko, Tomáš Benedikovič,
Lucia Beňová, Miroslava Cibulková, Roman Cuprik, ČTK,
Milan Dávid, Dušan Dudík, Michaela Džomeková,
Pavol Funtál, Gaspo Photography, Michaela Gedaiová,
Miroslava Germanová, František Halás, Kristína Hamárová,
HNTO, Jozef Jakubčo, Martin Janata, Viera Kamenická,
Bohuslav Kočtúch, Kristína Krupčíková, Karolína Kučerová,
Gabriel Kuchta, Sanela Kurtek, Filip Lehotský, Jana
Liptáková, Karina Miartanová, Radka Minarechová,
Peter Nagy, Sue Nagyová, Lukáš Onderčanin, Tomáš
Pallo, Peter Pallo, Ján Pallo, Jitka Parobeková, Christian
Prandl, Martina Raabová, Reuters, Lucia Rusnáková,
Lenka Sabová, Natália Semianová, SITA, Tibor Somogyi,
Stanislava Smadišová, Ján Svrček, Vladimír Šimíček,
Miro Švec, TASR, Carmen Virágová, Courtesy of Action
Park, Courtesy of Bratislava Region Tourism, Courtesy
of Carnuntum, Courtesy of Danubiana Meulensteen Art
Museum, Courtesy of Galéria mesta Bratislavy, Courtesy of
Hubert, Courtesy of Lanoland, Courtesy of Múzeum mesta
Bratislavy, Courtesy of Schloss Hof, Courtesy of Slovakia
Ring, Courtesy of Sme daily, Courtesy of SND, Courtesy of
SNG, Courtesy of STaRZ, Courtesy of Strelnica Lozorno
Drawings of architectural monuments
are the work of the following authors:
Bratislava Castle, construction and drawing Bouda a Masár
architektonická kancelária, s.r.o.
St Martin’s Cathedral, Old Town Hall, Primate’s Palace,
are done by Matúš Pniak based on photos by CBS Painted
maps (CBS Maľované mapy), Fly media and Fabrico.
© 2016 The Rock, s.r.o.
Address: The Rock, s.r.o. Lazaretská 12, 811 08 Bratislava.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/112 bratislava: STREET FINDER
A. Plávku C 1a,2
Alešova F 3
Alžbetínska D 3,4
Americké nám. D,E 2
Anenská D 1
Azovská F 2
B. Němcovej B 1
Banskobystrická C 2
Bartoňova A,B 3
Baštová c 1
Bazová F 2
Beblavého B 3
Belehradská E 1
Belopotockého D 1
Benediktiho D 1
Bernolákova E 1
Beskydská D 1
Bezručova D 3
Biela c 3
Björnsonova D 1
Blumentálska E 1,2
Bohúňova B 1
Bottova F 3
Bradlianska B 2,3
Bratislavský hrad B 3
Broskyňová A 2
Břeclavská B 1
Búdková cesta A 1
Budovateľská E,F 2
Bukureštská C 1
Cintorínska D,E 3
Cukrová D 3; E 2
Cyrilova F 1
Čajkovského C 1
Čelakovského B 3
Červený kríž A 2
Červeňova B 2
Čajakova D 1
Čapkova C 1
Čipkárska F 3
Čmeľovec A 2
Čulenova E 3,4
Dankovského B 3
Daxnerovo nám. F 2
Dobrovičova D 3,4
Dobrovského D 2
Dobšinského D 1
Dohnalova C 1
Dohnányho F 1
Dolná A 1
Donovalova B 2
Dostojevského rad E 3,4
Drevená c 2
Drotárska cesta A 1
Družstevná F 1
Dulovo nám. F 2
Dunajská D,E 3
Dvořákovo nábrežie A 3
Fajnorovo nábr. D 4
Fándlyho A 2
Farská c 3
Fazuľová D 2
Ferienčíkova E 3
Fialkové údolie A 3
Filiálne nádražie E,F 1
Flöglova C 2
Floriánske nám. E 2
Fraňa Kráľa C 1,2
Franc. partizánov B 1
Francisciho D,E 3
Františkánska c 2
Františkánske nám. c 3,4
Gajova D 3
Galandova B 2
Godrova B 2
Gondova D 4
Gorkého D 3; c 4
Grösslingová D,E 3
Grösslingová D,E 3
Gunduličova C 2
Gusevova F 3
Hamuliakova F 3
Havlíčkova B 1
Havrania B,C 1
Haydnova A 1
Heydukova D 3
Hlavatého B 2,3
Hlavné nám. c 4
Hlboká cesta B,C 1
Hodžovo nám. C 2
Holekova C 1
Hollého D 3
Holubyho A,B 2
Hradné údolie A 3
Hummelova A 2
Hurbanovo nám. c 1,2
Hviezdoslavovo nám.
C 4; c 4
Chalupkova F 3
Chorvátska E 2
Imricha Karvaša D 2
Inovecká A 3
Jakubovo nám. D,E 3
Janáčkova E 2,3
Jančova A 2
Jánska D 2
Jaskový rad D 1
Javorinská A 2
Jedlíkova c 2
Jelačičova F 1
Jelenia D 1
Jesenského D 3; c 4
Jiskrova E 1
Jozefská C 2
Jurkovského A 2
Justičná E 2
Kalinčiakova F 1
Kamenné nám. D 3
Kapitulská c 3
Kapucínska c 1
Karadžičova E 2,3
Karpatská D 1
Klariská c 1,3
Klemensova D 3
Klobučnícka c 2,4
Kmeťovo nám. E 1
Koceľova F 2
Kolárska D 3
Kollárovo nám. D 2
Komenského nám. c 4
Kominárska E 1
Konventn8 c 1
Koreničova B 3
Košická F 3,4
Kováčska E 1
Kozia B 2,3; C 3
Krakovská B 3
Krátka B 3
Križkova C 1
Krížna E 1,2; F 1
Krmanova A 2
Krupkova D 4
Kukučínova F 1
Kulíškova F 2
Kupeckého F 1
Kúpeľná C 4
Kuzmányho C 2
Kvačalova F 2
Kvetná F 2
Kýčerského D 1
Ľadová D 1
Landererova E,F 4
Laurinská D 3; c 4
Lazaretská D,E 3
Legionárska E 1
Lehotského D 1
Lermontovova C 2
Leškova C 1
Levická F 1
Lichardova B 2
Lodná C 4
Lomonosovova D 3,4
Ľubinská A 2
Lužická E 2
Lýcejná C 2
M. Bela C 2
Majakovského A , B 1
Májkova E 2
Malinová B,C 1
Malý trh E 3
Mariánska D 2,3
Maróthyho B 2
Medená D 3,4
Medzierka A 3
Metodova F 1
Mickiewiczova D 2
Michalská c 1
Mikulášska B 3; c 3
Miletičova F 1
Mišíkova B 2; C 1
Mlynské nivy E,F 3
Mojmírova F 2
Moskovská E 2
Most Apollo E 4
Most SNP B,C 4
Mostová C 4
Mošovského A 2
Moyzesova C 2
Mozartova A 1,2
Mudroňova A 1,2,3; B 3
Murgašova D 1
Múzejná D 4
Myjavská A,B 2
Mýtna D 1,2; E
1
Na Baránku A,B 1
Na brezinách C 2
Na hrebienku A 1,2
Na Slavíne B 1,2
Na stráni A 1
Na štyridsiatku B 2
Na vŕšku c 3
Nábrežie M. R. Štefánika
D,E 4
Nábrežie arm. gen. L.
Svobodu B 4
Nám. 1. mája C,D 2
Nám. A. Dubčeka B 3
Nám. E. Suchoňa C 3; c 4
Nám. Ľ. Štúra C 4
Nám. M. Benku E 2
Nám. slobody C,D 2
Nám. SNP C 2
Námestie Franza Liszta C 1
Nedbalova c 2,4
Nekrasovova B 1
Niťová F 2
Nitrianska F 2
Novosvetská B 1,2
Obchodná C 3; D 2; c 2
Odborárske nám. E 2
Okánikova C 1
Olejkárska E 4
Oravská F 3
Palackého D 4; D 3
Palárikova D 1
Palisády B 2,3; C 2
Panenská C 2
Panská c 3,4
Páričkova F 3
Partizánska B 2,3
Paulínyho C 4
Pavlovova F 2
Pažického B 1
Pilárikova B 3; c 1
Plátennícka F 3,4
Poľská E 2
Pod Kalváriou B 1
Podhorského B,C 1
Podchod Suché mýto C 2
Podjavorinskej B 2,3
Podjazd c 3
Podtatranského C 2
Poľná E 2
Porubského B 2
Poštová C 2,3; c 2
Povraznícka D 1
Prepoštská c 3
Prešernova D 4
Pri hrad. studni A 2
Pri starej prachárni F 1
Pribinova D,E 4
Primaciálne nám. c 4
Prístavná F 4
Puškinova C 1
Račianske mýto E 1
Radlinského D 2; E 1,2
Radničná c 4
Radvanská A 3
Račianska E 1
Rajská D 3
Rastislavova F 2
Rázusovo nábr. C 4
Revúcka F 2,3
Riečna C 4
Rigeleho C 4
Riznerova A 3
Rubinsteinova A 1,2
Rudnayovo nám. c 3
Rybárska br. c 4
Rybné nám. C 4
Sasinkova E 2
Satinského D 3
Sedlárska c 3
Schillerova B 1
Schody pri starej vodárni
B 4
Sienkiewiczova D 3
Skalná B 3
Skladištná E,F 3
Sládkovičova C 2
Slávičie údolie A 2
Slavín B 1
Slepá A 3
Slovanská D 1,2
Smetanova B 3
Smrečianska D 1
Soferove schody B 3
Sokolská C 1
Somolického C 2
Spojná C 2
Stará vinárska B 1,2
Staromestská c 1
Staroturský chodník A 3
Starý most D 4
Strakova C 3; c 3
Strážnická E 2
Strelecká B 3
Strmá cesta A 3
Súťažná F 2
Suché mýto c 1
Súkennícka F 4
Svätoplukova F 2,3
Svoradova B 3
Šafárikovo nám. D 4
Šagátova E 3
Šancová D,E 1
Škarniclova B 3
Školská D 2
Škovránčia D 1
Škultétyho F 1
Šoltésovej E 2
Špitálska D 2,3
Štefánikova C 1,2
Štefanovičova C 1; D 1,2
Štetinova C 2
Štúrova D 3
Šulekova B 2
Šumavská F 1
Tabaková D 1
Tallerova D 3,4
Tekovská F 3
Timravina B 2
Tobrucká D 4
Tolstého C 2
Továrenská E 3
Treskoňova D 3; c 2
Trnavské mýto F 1
Tvarožkova B 3
Tyršovo nábr. C 4
Ul. 29. augusta D 2; E 2,3
Ul. J. Kronera D 1
Urbánkova B 1
Uršulínska c 2,4
Úzka c 3
V záhradách A 2,3
Vajanského nábr. D 4
Valchárska F 3
Vansovej B 2
Vazovova D,E 1
Velehradská F 2
Ventúrska c 3
Veterná c 1
Viedenská cesta B,C 4
Vlčkova B 2; C 1,2
Vodný vrch B 3,4
Votrubova F 4
Vrábeľská F 3
Vrátňanská C 1
Vrchná A 2
Vysoká C,D 2
Wilsonova E 1
Záhradnícka E,F 2
Záhrebská D 1
Zámocká B 3
Zámocké schody B 4
Zámočnícka c 1,2
Zelená c 3
Zochova B 3
Zrínskeho B 2
Žabotova C 1
Železničiarska C,D 1
Žellova F 1
Žiarska A 2
Židovská c 3
Žilinská D 1
Živnostenská D 2
Žižkova A 3
Župné nám. c 1
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/R1
R11
R21
R30
R2
R12
R22
R32
R3
R13
R23
R33
R4
R14
R24
R5
R15
R16
R8
R28
R9
R19
R29
R10
R20
R31
R26
R27
R25
R18
R17
Dračí
hrádok
Vápenná
Klokoč
Ostrý
Kameň
Malokarpatská
vínnacesta
Biely
kríž
Biely
kameň
Villa rustica
R11 Hrubá Borša (farm) pg 92-93
R12 Kostolná pri Dunaji (Siberian tigers) pg 92-93
R13 Kráľová pri Senci (tourist flights) pg 95
R14 Senec (aquapark, lake, observatory) pg 92-93, 84-85
R15 Bernolákovo (paintball, golf) pg 95
R16 Ivanka pri Dunaji
R17 Malokarpatská vínna cesta
(Small Carpathian Wine Route) pg 90-91, 80-81
R18 Svätý Jur (wine, hiking) pg 90-91
R19 Biely Kameň (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R20 Slovenský Grob (goose feast) pg 98-99
R21 Pezinok (wine, pottery) pg 90-91, 94, 80-81
R22 Šenkvice (wine) pg 80-81
R23 Pezinská Baba hill (hiking) pg 98-99
R24 Malé Karpaty (the Small Carpathians)
(hiking, cycling) pg 98-99
R25 Modra (wine, pottery) pg 90-91, 80-81, 94
R26 Červený Kameň (castle, hiking) pg 91, 53, 84-85
R27 Doľany (wine) pg 80-81
R28 Vápenná hill (hiking) pg 98-99
R29 Plavecké podhradie (castle ruins, hiking)
pg 98-99
R30 Plavecký hrad (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R31 Klokoč hill (hiking) pg 98-99
R32 Smolenice (castle, cave, hiking) pg 98-99
R33 Ostrý Kameň (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R1 Veľké Leváre (Haban Museum) pg 94
R2 Malacky (Holy Stairs, golf) pg 62-63, 105
R3 Lozorno (farm, shooting range) pg 92-93, 95, 84-85
R4 Stupava (farm) pg 92-93, 84-85
R5 Pajštún (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R6 Marianka (pilgrimage site) pg 62-63
R7 Dračí hrádok (castle ruins, hiking) pg 98-99
R8 Biely kríž (hiking) pg 98-99
R9 Villa rustica (remnants of an ancient Roman building)
pg 98-99
R10 Malý Dunaj (inland waterway, canoe) pg 70-71
0 3.1 6.2 9.3 12.4 mile
= 3.1 mile
R6
R7
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/90
81
91
82
92
83
93
84
94
85
95
86
86
96
87
97
88
98
89
99
78 Lourdes cave (Church of Our Lady of the Snows),
pg 62-63
79 Horský Park (park), pg 72-73
80a Sandberg (sandstone hill), pg 37, 74-75
80b Volkswagen (car plant), pg 37, 68-69
81 Devín Castle, pg 37, 50-52, 54-55, 60-61, 64-66
82 Botanical Garden, pg 72-73
83 ZOO, pg 84-85
84 Iron Spring (Železná studienka), pg 37, 72-73
85 Kamzík (TV tower), pg 38, 67, 72-73
86 Atlantis Science Centre, pg 84-85
87 Ondrej Nepela Arena (hockey stadium),
pg 38
88 National Tenis Centre, pg 105
89 Kuchajda (lake), pg 72-73, 53
90 Zlaté Piesky (lake), pg 39, 72-73
91 M. R. Štefánik Airport, pg 39
92 Divadlo Aréna (theatre)
93 Petržalka (estate housing), pg 32, 60-61, 64-66
94 B-S 8 Hřbitov (museum), pg 60-61
95 Veľký Draždiak (lake)
and Hotel Bonbón, pg 72-73, 74-75, 53
96 Gerulata (museum), pg 38, 50-52, 84-85
97 Rusovce Manor House, pg 38
98 Divoká voda (rafting), pg 68-69, 70-71
99 Danubiana Meulensteen Art Museum,
pg 38, 50-52, 53, 54-55, 70-71
mile
e
= 0.9 mile
0 0.6 1.2 1.9 2.5 3.1 mile
80b
80a
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/w
W
Area: 367.6 km²
Total population:
420,000 inhabitants
Currency: €
Official language: Slovak
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/www.visitbratislava.com
Welcome & enjoy
free travel on public transport
free guided walking tour
further discounts up to 50%
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/bratislava-city-guide-2016/