Stockholm Travel Guide

General
  City Overview
  City Stats
  Culture
  Language
  History
  Weather
Getting There
  By Air
  By Ship
  By Car
  By Train
Accommodation
Transportation
  Getting Around
  Stockholm Maps
Business
Sightseeing
  Sightseeing
  Key Attractions
  Other Attractions
  Tours of the City
  Excursions
Entertainment
  Stockholm Nightlife
  Sport
  Shopping
  Major Events

HotelsCentral.com
 

Book Stockholm Hotels at Discount Rates! HotelsSweden.com

Key Attractions

Vasamuseet (Vasa Museum)
Sweden’s most visited museum enshrines the warship, Vasa, sunk inside Stockholm harbour while on her maiden voyage in 1628. The ship was built to the order of the great Vasa king, Gustavus Adolphus, and was the most powerful war galleon of her age. She was raised whole from the harbour bed in 1961, over 330 years after she had last seen the light of day. Carefully preserved, the ship now rests intact in the museum’s main hall. Displays recreate life on board the ship and a film shows how the salvage operation was carried out. The museum’s beautiful waterfront site on the island of Djurgården is an added attraction. There are guided tours in English, Monday to Friday 1230 and 1430, Saturday and Sunday 1030 and 1630.

Galarvarvsvagen 14
Tel: (08) 5195 4800. Fax: (08) 5195 4888.
E-mail: vasamuseet@sshm.se
Website: www.vasamuseet.se
Transport: Bus 47 or 69.
Opening hours: Daily 0930–1900 (10 Jun–20 Aug); Thurs–Tues 1000–1700, Wed 1000–2000 (21 Aug–9 Jun).
Admission: SKr70 (concessions available).

Stadshuset (City Hall)
Voted by the Swedes as the country’s finest building, Stockholm’s City Hall was begun in 1911, to an Art Nouveau design by Ragnar Östberg. Its interior has grand civic apartments, including the Golden Hall, with its glass and gold mosaics, while its tower gives a sweeping panorama of Stockholm. The building’s Blue Hall – which is actually red – is the venue for the annual Nobel Prize banquet. Visitors must join one of the scheduled tours to see the interior, although access to the tower is unrestricted during opening hours.

Hantverkargatan 1
Tel: (08) 5082 9058. Fax: (08) 5082 9059.

Website: www2.stockholm.se/stadshuset
Transport: Five-minute walk from Stockholm Central station; bus 48 or 62.
Opening hours: Daily 1000, 1100, 1200 and 1400 (Jun–Aug), 1000 and 1200 (Sep–May) for tours of the interior; daily 1000–1630 (May–Sep) for the tower.
Admission: SKr50 (interior); SKr15 (tower); concessions available.

Kungliga Slottet (Royal Palace)
Situated in the heart of Stockholm, on the central island of Riddarholmen, the Royal Palace is the official residence of the monarchs of Sweden and the chief venue for official state events. With 608 rooms, it is among the largest surviving palaces in Europe. The present glorious Baroque edifice is the work of Nicodemus Tessin the Younger, from a 1692 design, however, parts of the older medieval Castle of Three Crowns still survive. Attractions include the Banqueting Apartments, the Apartments of the Orders of Chivalry, the Hall of State, the Royal Treasury, Gustav III’s Museum of Antiquities and the Royal Chapel. In addition, the changing of the guard at the palace is as much of a spectacle in Stockholm as it is in London.

Slottsbacken
Tel: (08) 402 6130. Fax: (08) 402 6167.
E-mail info.stockholms-slott@royalcourt.se
Website: www.royalcourt.se
Transport: Metro Gamla Stan; bus 43, 46, 55, 59 or 76.
Opening hours: Tues–Sun 1200–1500 (1 Feb–14 May and 1 Sep–31 Dec); Tues–Sun 1000–1600 (15 May–31 Aug).
Admission: SKr110 (combined ticket, for all parts of the palace); SKr70 (separate tickets, for selected parts of the palace each); concessions available.

Statens Historiska Museet (Museum of National Antiquities)
Sweden’s national historical museum, which traces the nation’s history from prehistoric times to the present day, is now graced by a spectacular Gold Room, housing the gold of the Viking chiefs. These hoards, recovered from tombs or hiding places, show Scandinavian Viking culture at its most prosperous and magnificent. There is also one of the finest European collections of medieval painted wooden religious sculpture on exhibition.

Narvargen 13–17
Tel: (08) 5195 5600. Fax: (08) 5195 5603.
E-mail: info@historiska.se
Website: www.historiska.se
Transport: Metro Karlaplan; bus 44, 47, 56, 69 or 76.
Opening hours: Tues–Sun 1100–1700 (summer); Tues, Wed and Fri–Sun 1100–1700, Thurs 1100–2000 (winter).
Admission: SKr60 (concessions available).

Strindbergsmuseet (Strindberg Museum)
Stockholm’s most famous cultural figure has his temple here. The Blå Tornet (Blue Tower) was August Strindberg’s last home, from 1908 until his death in 1912. His apartment and library have been preserved in their original state. An exhibition showcases his last works, written on the premises. The museum, which also hosts temporary exhibitions and plays, is furnished in a strikingly sparse Nordic Art Nouveau style.

Drottninggatan 85
Tel: (08) 411 5354. Fax: (08) 411 0141.
E-mail: info@strindbergsmuseet.se
Website: www.strindbergsmuseet.se
Transport: Metro Radmansgatan.
Opening hours: Tues–Sun 1200–1600 (summer) Tues 1200 – 1900, Wed–Sun 1200–1600 (winter).
Admission: SKr40 (concessions available).






 
Copyright @ HotelsCentral.com , Columbus Publishing and other third parties. Click here for details.   Links