Things to do in Chişinău
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Cactus Café
This is a true winner. The eclectic interior décor (Wild West meets urban bohemian, but with grace and humour) is matched by the city's most creative menu. There are incredible breakfasts (a rarity in these parts), lots of vegetarian meals (soy meat!), wild plates such as turkey with bananas and the country's most killer gazpacho.
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Dublin Irish Pub
The atmosphere is always lively at this expensive but popular Celtic-cum-Moldovan Irish pub. While the bar is the highlight, the restaurant is a temptation as well with tantalising dishes such as Cock-a-leekie (leek with duck, chicken, prunes and veggies stewed in Guinness), 'slappy joe' and a classic Irish stew.
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Lake Valea Morilor
Chişinău locals' favoured haunt is Lake Valea Morilor, just west of the centre. Steps lead to the lake and surrounding park from Str A Mateevici (opposite the university). Bus 29a from the city centre stops outside the university entrance to the park.
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Beach
The beach on the Valea Morilor Lake's northwestern shores gets packed with sunbathers and swimmers at weekends. You can hire canoes, rowing and paddle boats from the boat station on the lake's southern shores.
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Central Market
The Central Market has since 1825 been the place where Moldovans haggle over prices for fresh produce. It's well worth a visit for its choice of fresh food and lively ambience. The market spreads out across a huge area along Str Mitropolit Varlaam, around the bus station. The constant activity of the bustling crowds and tradespeople is reminiscent of Istanbul.
Porters scurry around with trolleys to carry goods away, cars honk like crazy as they madly try to squeeze through the bustling crowds, women spit out sunflower seeds and old men huddle in groups haggling for the best bargain. There's always something going on here at all times of the day or night.
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National Archaeology & History Museum
The National Archaeology & History Museum is the granddaddy of Chişinău's museums, and well worth visiting. It has archaeological artefacts from Orheiul Vechi including Golden Horde coins, Soviet-era weaponry and a huge WWII diorama on the 1st floor, where you can speak to a man who spent 12 years as a political prisoner at a worker's camp in desolate Vorkuta in northern Siberia.
A statue of Lupoaica Romei (the wolf of Rome) and the abandoned children Romulus and Remus stands in front of the museum. To Moldovans, this is a symbol of their Latin ancestry.
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Walking
No one can accuse Chişinău of being overburdened with tourist sights. Lacking in 'must-sees', it's more a pleasant city to wander about in and discover as you go. Sadly, little remains of its historic heart due to heavy bombing during WWII. There are still some great museums and parks, however, and it is fun to see how Communist iconography merges with symbols of Moldovan nationalism.
Begin smack in the centre, where Chişinău's best-known parks oppose each other diagonally, forming two diamonds at the city's core.
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Memorial Park
Bounded by Str A Mateevici and Str Ismail is a Memorial Park, dominated by a victory memorial to the Soviet army in 1945. An eternal flame burns in the centre in memory of Chişinău's unknown soldiers who died in WWII. Soldiers' graves line the boundaries of the park and there is a small military cemetery at its northern end. In the centre of the park is a memorial to those who died during the fight for Moldovan independence in the early nineties.
At the far northern end of the park is the civil cemetery.
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Parcul La Izvor
Northwest of the centre on the road to Cojuşna and Ungheni is Chişinău's largest park, Parcul La Izvor, on Calea Eşilor. It is dominated by three interconnecting lakes, which you can explore with hired canoes and rowing boats. Opposite the park's southern entrance is a cable-car station that makes a three-minute journey across the valley. To get to the park, take trolleybus 1, 8 or 23 to the last stop. Maxitaxi (microbus) 11 runs from Str Studenţilor in the centre to Calea Eşilor.
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Pushkin Museum
Several blocks northeast of the central parks is the Pushkin Museum, housed in a cottage where Russian poet Alexandr Pushkin (1799-1837) spent an exiled three years between 1820 and 1823. It was here that he wrote The Prisoner of the Caucacus and other classics - that is, when he wasn't involved in the amorous intrigues, hard drinking and occasional violence of his social circles in what was then a rough-around-the-edges distant outpost of the Russian empire.
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Grădina Publică Ştefan Cel Mare şi Sfint
Grădina Publică Ştefan Cel Mare şi Sfint is the city's main strolling, cruising area. The park entrance is guarded by a 1928 statue of Ştefan himself. The medieval prince of Moldavia is the greatest symbol of Moldova's strong, brave past. Every Moldovan will be happy to tell you that during Ştefan's 40-year reign, he lost a mere two battles (out of anywhere from 34 to 47, depending on your source's level of enthusiasm).
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Moldexpo
Moldexpo, inside Parcul Valea Morilor, is an enormous international exhibition centre constantly hosting major expositions. Many tourists come here, however, to see the demoted Communist triumvirate of Lenin, Marx and Engels guarding the entrance. Though they were ignominiously moved here from a prize spot in front of the Parliament building, the pedestals are often overflowing with flowers.
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1903 Memorial
In Parcul Alunelul there is a 1903 Memorial to the Jews killed in the 1903 pogrom. The remains of the victims were moved here after the cemetery in which they were buried was bulldozed by the Communists in the 1960s. To get to the park and cemetery take bus 1 from B-dul Ştefan cel Mare and get off at the Parcul Alunelul stop. Cross the road and walk up the hill and along Str Milano.
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Chişinău Ghetto Memorial
North of the central bus station is a maze of run-down, dusty streets. Many of these formed the Chişinău Jewish ghetto. On the street leading east from B-dul Renaşterii to Str Fantalului is a Chişinău Ghetto Memorial to the martyrs and victims of the Chişinău ghetto, inscribed in Hebrew, Moldovan and Russian.
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Beer House
Of all Chişinău's hot dining places, you'll be returning to this brewery-cum-restaurant again and again - most likely for its four delicious home-brewed beers, but also for its excellent menu, which ranges from chicken wings and soups to rabbit and chicken grilled in cognac. Its relaxed ambience and impeccable service add to the charm.
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Zimbru Stadium
Moldovans are big football fans and Chişinau has three stadiums to prove it. The new Zimbru Stadium is the city's first European regulation football stadium, located in Botanica. Moldovans like football so much, in fact, there's an American football team called the Chişinău Barbarians, who hold occasional matches, in full gear.
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Chişinău History Museum
Near the university is the Chişinău History Museum. It's a treat mainly for the old water tower (1892) it's housed in. The museum was inexplicably closed at the time of writing. This is the main meeting place for the Chişinău branch of the notorious Hash House Harriers. Their bimonthly runs and drink-fests to oblivion start here.
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National Ethnographic and Nature Museum
The National Ethnographic and Nature Museum has some pop art, lots of stuffed animals and exhibits covering the sciences of geology, botany and zoology. The highlight is a life-size reconstruction of a mammal skeleton that was discovered in the Rezina region in 1966. A few blocks south of here is the state university.
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Symposium
Though not as expensive as some top-class restaurants in town, this can be called one of the city's top dining experiences in terms of elegance and refinement. In this cellar refitted with antiques, the French-style cuisine is succulent, with lamb dishes the speciality. There's a large selection of local wines.
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Star Track
The centrepiece of the Rîşcani district nightlife, its dark interior sports comfortable sofas and intimate booths where love-struck couples can smooch while scrutinizing the dance performances by lace-clad men and women. Under Star Track is the less titillating, but equally popular Military Pub.
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Dinamo Stadium
Moldovans are big football fans and Chişinau has three stadiums to prove it. Dinamo Stadium is north of the centre on Str Bucureşti. Moldovans like football so much, in fact, there's an American football team called the Chişinău Barbarians, who hold occasional matches, in full gear.
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Republic Stadium
Moldovans are big football fans and Chişinau has three stadiums to prove it. The Republic Stadium, south of the centre, has floodlighting. Moldovans like football so much, in fact, there's an American football team called the Chişinău Barbarians, who hold occasional matches, in full gear.
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Civil Cemetery
At the far northern end of the memorial park is the Civil Cemetery, known locally as the Armenian cemetery, whose main entrance is on the corner of Str A Mateevici and Str Armenească. The blue-and-silver-domed All Saints Church in the centre of the cemetery dates from 1830.
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Déjà Vu
This is a true cocktail bar, where the drinks menu is extensive and where the bartenders twirl glasses with aplomb. There is also a small dining hall serving meals, but most people come here to lounge about looking fabulous with multicoloured cocktails perched in their hands.
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Andy's Pizza
This popular chain has locations all around Chişinău, but this is its most stylish branch, with a high-tech look that makes it popular with a young, on-the-move clientele. The thick and gooey pizzas, spaghetti and chicken wings keep clients happily purring.
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