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What two would you prefer to visit?

It's my first time to Europe and I need to pick two cities from the above. I'm doing my research and trying to pick two cities with plenty of contemporary culture to see. I'm not that into old ruins and castles.

2006-08-16 06:05:53 · 23 answers · asked by brightorangeysun 1 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

I'm in my late twenties.

2006-08-16 06:06:56 · update #1

23 answers

Venice
Athens

2006-08-16 06:10:23 · answer #1 · answered by Penguin Gal 6 · 0 0

Residing in a broad bay, Dublin lies between Howth in the north and the headland of Dalkey to the south and the River Liffey separate the city in two creating using this city an appealing city that you will have the chance with hotelbye to see it. Dublin has provided the world such famous literary like: Yeats, Beckett, Joyce, Shaw, and Wilde. Dublin was a UNESCO City of Literature this year therefore is definitely an intriguing city to visit especially if you wish to visit Bewley's Oriental Café ;.Several might say that Bewley's Oriental Café could be the jewel in the crown. Bewley's Oriental Café is an establishment that has been built-in 1927.

2016-12-19 23:13:56 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'd take Barcelona and Istanbul.

Barcelona is beautiful, great nightlife, and has wonderful cultural heritage in the city.
Istanbul is a nice contrast to see western and eastern cultures combine.

BY the way, Athens is a dirty pit of a city, and Dublin is only for drinking. Avoid at all costs.

2006-08-16 06:11:20 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Budapest is often explained because the "Little Paris of Middle Europe" and if you wish to see this city you need to take a look with hotelbye . Budapest is famous not merely for the monuments sending its own 1,000-year-old lifestyle, but additionally for the relics of other individuals who resolved here. Remains from both Roman occupation and much later ruled by the Turks may however be observed in the city. Budapest has two sides, Buda and Pest, extending along the banks of the Danube, and they are addressing two different people of the city. Suburban Buda and their historical castle region provide old streets and properties, museums, caves and Roman ruins. The active Pest area boasts the biggest parliament building in Europe, riverside promenades, flea markets, bookstores, classic stores and café houses.

2016-12-16 10:54:35 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Venice...eh, overpriced, smelly, too many con-artists trying to sell you cheap things at rip off prices, food's very bad unless you thoroughly research it; lodging guaranteed to be a rip off unless you are a college girl who doesn't mind flirting with the male concierge. Definitely not contemporary.

Barcelona..is OK if you're in college and you like to get drunk all the time. It is very run down looking.

Dublin: is great but very expensive. Nearly as expensive as London.

Athens: too many people in that city do not wear deodorant. If you like "gamey" smelling people, you'd love Athens.

Stockholm: extremely expensive, the tourist pass is great way to save money on this city's overpriced transportation. There are so many beautiful women in Stockholm that, a fat woman is considered "hot" because she looks uniquely different.

Istanbul: People are too clingy and the city is too dirty.

Budapest: Too many situations where the government traps tourists into having them ripped off because of fines.

If it's your first time to Europe, coming from a guy that's been here many times, I suggest that you chose between:

Paris-Very contemporary with embedded history nonchalantly everywhere.
London-Extremely contemporary.
Tallinn-Growing at an alarming rate.
Berlin-Because of WW2 bombings of 90% of the City and because of the wall coming down (ugly communist architecture taken down and replaced), the modernity of Berlin is spectacular from an Architectural Standpoint. Potsdahmerplatz's Imax Center is a study in modern architecture.
Frankfurt is pretty modern too.

2006-08-16 06:19:27 · answer #5 · answered by Tones 6 · 0 0

Friend of mine had a blast in Budepest. I've heard Barcelona is a great city as well.
Nothing wrong with the other cities you mentioned, but you specified a city that is "contemporary" and not hung up on the past.

2006-08-16 06:15:15 · answer #6 · answered by neerdowel 3 · 0 0

Barcelona is now among the first tourist location of Spain because it understands just how to please the major bulk : with a record on the list of oldest in Europe, an area that never sleeps and an inland filled with charm, wonderful wonderful beaches in La Costa Brava and you can see all of this if you take a peek with hotelbye first. The range of artistic pieces, the Romanesque churches and the truly amazing titles in contemporary art and architecture like: Dali, Gaudi, Miro and Picasso give Barcelona an area in the list of towns you should see.

2016-12-15 23:00:34 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Istanbul

Barcelona
or Athens

Most History

2006-08-16 06:11:17 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Istanbul and Dublin is what I picked, but I don't know a
g o d d a m n thing about Europe, so, listen to someone else.

2006-08-16 06:10:37 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

None of the above. I suggest if you really want to get to know Europe, go check out some of the smaller cities and towns around. There you will get to chat will locals and eat authentic food. The small towns are the best way to go when you travel.

IMHO

2006-08-16 06:12:03 · answer #10 · answered by Dallas M 2 · 0 0

definitely venice and athens ive been to budapest, and barcelona but never dublin or istanbul

athens is gorgeous and venice is amazing budapest is really pretty so that would be my third choice

2006-08-16 06:10:55 · answer #11 · answered by banana music mango 3 · 0 0

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