Western LatviaSights

Sights in Western Latvia

  1. Karosta Prison

    A detention facility until 1997, today ghostly Karosta Prison offers a variety of tours. Originally built as an infirmary in 1900, the Soviets, Nazis and most recently the Latvians used the place as a military prison. Graffiti left behind by former inmates reveals the horrors incurred doing hard time here.

    Supposedly haunted, your tour guide will be happy to try to explain the unexplainable - light bulbs that mysteriously screw out of their sockets, doors that open without assistance and sudden eerie chills that descend upon a heated room. If you're craving some serious punishment, or just want to brag that you've spent the night in Latvian jail, sign up to become a pris…

    reviewed

  2. Dock No 18

    From the castle, it is a two-minute walk to the Venta River. Ostas iela, a riverside promenade proffering interesting views of the bustling industrial port on the opposite riverbank, leads east along the water. Between April and November the Hecogs Jēkabs boat sails around the mouth of the Venta River, a 45-minute trip; it departs six times daily from dock No 18.

    The Sea Stone (1998), at the far eastern end of the walkway, is a massive boulder dug out from a depth of 17.5m when the port canal was deepened. It is one of several sculptures to line the scenic promenade. Look out for Feldbergs' Seven Mental Meteorites (1996) and the monument to Krišjānis Valdemārs (2000), fo…

    reviewed

  3. South Mole

    Ventspils' prime attraction is its coastline, which is laced with a sandy, dune-backed beach stretching south from the river mouth, about 2km west of the town centre. You can reach it along Viļņu iela (or Medņu iela), which branches off Vasarnīcu iela, or take bus 10 along Lielais prospekts. Breakwaters poke 1km or so out to sea from the mouth of the river to form Ventspils' Sea Gates, with a narrow entrance that makes it treacherous for shipping if there's any sea running.

    A popular pastime is to walk or cycle 1km from the northern end of the beach, along the South Mole walkway, to the lighthouse at the end of the southern breakwater.

    reviewed

  4. A

    Liepāja History & Art Museum

    A collection of carved amber ornaments dating back 1500 years is just one of the highlights of a visit to the Liepāja History & Art Museum. Other exhibits include impressive Stone and Bronze Age artefacts unearthed on local archaeological digs, an interesting collection of old jewellery and weapons and vintage memorabilia from both world wars. At the seaside end of the same street is a monument to sailors and fishermen who died at sea.

    reviewed

  5. B

    Holy Trinity Church

    Built between 1742 and 1758, the baroque-style Holy Trinity Church has a dazzling gilded rococo interior. Its centrepiece is its fabulous organ, at one time the world's largest, boasting more than 7000 pipes, 131 registers and four manuals. For a small fee, the church caretaker will escort you up the myriad of creaky wooden steps to the clock tower, where fabulous city views await.

    reviewed

  6. C

    Okupāciju režīmos (Occupation Museum)

    This museum traces the history of Soviet and Nazi occupations in Latvia, with an emphasis on Liepāja. A visit here is a moving, albeit disturbing experience: captions are in Latvian, but words aren't needed to explain the powerful images of the 1939-40 deportations to Siberia, the genocide committed against Latvian Jews and the independence struggle in 1991.

    reviewed

  7. D

    Pētertirgus (Peter's Market)

    Vendors have touted their wares at the outdoor market on Kuršu laukums since the mid-17th century. The market expanded in 1910, when a pavilion was constructed adjacent to the square. Today you'll find stalls inside and out this bustling complex, selling everything from furniture, pirated CDs, DVDs and local crafts to fruit, vegetables and slabs of meat.

    reviewed

  8. St Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church

    There is little to see or do in Old Town except wander its streets and absorb the 18th-century architecture. Pils iela is the main street, cutting across Old Town in an east-west direction. Peering across Brīvibas iela is the neo-Byzantine St Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church, built in 1901 and crowned with five onion domes.

    reviewed

  9. Livonian Order Castle

    Ventspils' 13th-century Livonian Order Castle hosts a cutting-edge interactive museum on castle history, with digital displays and two panoramic telescopes for visitors to enjoy an eagle's-eye view of the port and city. The museum also showcases fine pieces of amber discovered on archaeological digs in the region.

    reviewed

  10. Seaside Open-Air Museum

    Towards the south of Ventspils beach is the Seaside Open-Air Museum, with a collection of fishing craft, anchors and other seafaring items. On weekends between May and October you can ride around the museum's extensive grounds on a narrow-gauge railway dating to 1916.

    reviewed

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  12. St Nicholas Evangelical Lutheran Church

    Walking west from St Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church, along Pils iela, you can detour south down Tirgus iela to Rātslaukums, a pretty cobbled square overlooked by St Nicholas Evangelical Lutheran Church, built in 1835.

    reviewed

  13. E

    St Anne's Basilica

    St Anne's Basilica is a red-brick, neo-Gothic edifice constructed in 1587. Its highlights include a sky-high steeple and an impressive baroque altar painting that is 5.8m high and 9.7m wide.

    reviewed

  14. Open-Air Concert Hall

    A little further south of the Seaside Open-Air Museum, there's an open-air concert hall. Buses 6 and 11 run here regularly from Lielais prospekts.

    reviewed

  15. F

    St Jospeh's Cathedral

    The Roman Catholic St Joseph's Cathedral is a towering yellow-brick church with a notable interior - it's ornately decorated with Bible scenes.

    reviewed