Rīga

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Introducing Rīga

Rīga has always been the big boy of the Baltics - a metropolis with a big-city atmosphere hard to find elsewhere in the region. Funky and vibrant, it pulsates with a magnetism that traps travellers long after their planned departure date. Set on a flat plain divided only by the 500m-wide Daugava River, the city answers the quaintness of Tallinn and Vilnius with impressive Art-Nouveau architecture of its own, a historic old quarter and large parks. You won't want to leave once you're settled into a candlelit bar or lost on winding, sun-dappled or snow-covered cobbled streets. Rīga manages to couple its toy-town cuteness of steeples and turrets with a glitzy nightlife and thriving restaurant scene. Business is booming, with eager backers pouring much-needed money into its infrastructure. Old Town may be a Unesco World Heritage site, but this fairy-tale city, once dubbed the 'Paris of the East, ' is building so fast that Unesco has warned Rīga it may withdraw its protected status due to the number of glittering glass hotels and business centres springing up faster than mushrooms after the rain.

With lavish beauty, timeless elegance and a restless fusion of old and new, Rīga has a charm as potent as the Rīga Black Balsams liquor it's known for.

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Outdoor cafes in Dome Square in old town Riga with the spire of St. Peter's Church in background.
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Outdoor cafes in Dome Square in old town Riga with the spire of St. Peter's Church in background.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Brent Winebrenner
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Bakery interior, Old Town.
  • Street musician at Swedish Gate.
  • Facade of St Peter's Church.
  • Interior of National Theatre, salon ceiling.
  • Art Nouveau architecture on Alberta Iela.
  • Woman walking past door of Art Nouveau building in old town Riga.
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