Stockholm

Stockholm: Sophisticated City in Europe

Stadsholmen Island and Gamla Stan from Skeppsholmen Bridge, Stockholm, Sweden

Stadsholmen Island and Gamla Stan from Skeppsholmen Bridge, Stockholm, Sweden Photographic Print
Falzone, Michele
12 in. x 16 in.
Buy at AllPosters.com
Framed   Mounted

Stockholm, very simply stated, is like no other city you have ever seen. At times, it resembles a Camelot, all surrounded by forests and laced with spires and turrets, very stately in its aspect, and seemingly as conservative as the John Birch Society. To think that this is the birthplace of cradle-to-grave security, and of experimental marriage, is a shock that often takes a few hours to overcome.

Physically, the city is one of the loveliest of capitals. It spreads over 14 separate islands, each connected by vaulting bridges, under which the waters of Lake Malaren-which flow into the Baltic Sea -are often covered with sailboats, cruising deep into the city. Same of the islands rise on steep diffs from the water, and on these diffs, high above, are the stern, dignified buildings of Sweden, untouched by the ravages of war for nearly two hundred years. Best yet, the city is surrounded by woodlands and farms, never more than 10 minutes away from any point in town.

Viewed from another aspect, the city is one of the most sophisticated in Europe, not only in the attainments of its art and culture, but in the social relationships of its citizens. There is no public graft in Sweden, no discernible poverty. If you’ll probe deep enough, you’ll be constantly surprised by the projects and ideas erupting about you: the futuristic suburbs, all built within the past ten years;the ingenious efforts to make life pleasant and full, within a framework of democracy. It may be a minor example, but it’s typical of Sweden, that every school child under 14 is given a free ticket on the Swedish Railways to make a yearly summer vacation trip to any point in Sweden.

For the tourist, there’s an endless variety of sights and activities: the unique open air “museums,” the Archipelago of Stockholm, the brilliant Royal Dramatic Theatre, the Milles Sculptures, the jazz dance hall called “Nalen,” the Katarina Elevator. When Hope and I finally had to depart his city, we felt that we were being dragged away.

Here, now, is how I’d organize a first visit:

ORIENTATION: The very first thing to do upon arriving in Stockholm is to go to the hotel accommodations bureau (“Hotellcentralen“) in the Central Station and obtain a room (details appear in our section on hotels, below). Then, after depositing your bags, the very next thing to do is to take the subway (“tunnelbana“) to the “Slussen” stop, where you’ll find the great Katarina Elevator, which rises in an open lift to the roof of a tall building, from which you can see all the way to the Baltic and to the beginning of the Stockholm Archipelago. The city is spread out below you: the boats that go to Finland are on your left, the ships to nearby Russia are directly ahead.

From this vantage point, youıı first begin to understand the arrangement of the 14 islands that make up the city of Stockholm. But only five of them need concern you: Norrmalm, Södermalm, -Gamla Stan, Kungsholmen and Djurgarden (the Deer Park).The big northern island, which contains the shopping areas, the office buildings, and almost all the hotels we’ll recommend, is the Norrmalm. The major squares in the Norrmalm are the Norrmalmstorg, the Stureplan, and the Gustav Adolfs Torg (where the Opera is located).

Directly below the Norrmalm, and almost touching upon it, is the tiny island of Gamla Stan-the Old City-where the Royal Palace stands, and where the streets are narrow, twisting, and incredibly picturesque. Although there are some cheap hotels here, they’ re all in centuries-old and somewhat-damp-feeling buildings, and we’ve recommended none of them. The Gamla Stan does have some of the best restaurants of Stockholm, together with several bustling shopping streets, so narrow that cars are excluded. It can’t be missed.

Directly below the Gamla Stan is Södermalm-the Brooklyn of Stockholm-where the residents speak with a special argot all their own, and are fiercely proud of their island. This is almost entirely a residential area, and virtually no tourists-including us-go there.It’s at the top of the Södermalm, however, at the point where the island nearly touches upon the Gamla Stan, that the Katarina Elevator stands.

To the left of the Gamla Stan is the Kungsholmen, site of the major government buildings of this capital of Sweden, including the Town Hall of Stockholm. Except for the Town Hall-which you definitely should visit-there’s little to attract you to Kungsholmen. But to the right of the Gamla Stan (after first skipping over an even tinier island-the Skeppsholmen-a naval base), you’ll find the magnificent Djurgarden (“Deer Park”), pronounced yoor-gohr-dun, a breathtaking, wooded fairyland, on whose lands the royalty of Sweden once rode to the hounds and let graze their pet deer, and which even today is maintained solely as a park, with no residential or business buildings on it. It’s to Djurgarden that the people of Stockholm go for their summer recreation-to the fascinating open air museum and park of Skansen, to the carnival grounds of the Tivoli Gröna Lund, and to the various dance halls scattered near both spots.

The Steam Baths Stockholm

The Steam Baths Stockholm

Even more so than in Denmark and Norway, the Swedes go in heavily for “sauna”-that combination of steam baths, showers, massages, and frigid immersions that’s supposed to add ten years to your life. They claim, in Sweden, that two hours of sauna equal eight hours of sleep-and that is, in fact, how a roistering Swede-who’s been up until 4 a.m.-revives himself to begin work the next day. I tried it on our last trip to Stockholm-and everything they say is true!

There’s a steam bath in Stockholm for every purse. The most “luxurious” of the lot is the Sturebadet on Sturegatan, right at the Stureplan (the Sture Square), where a low payment will get you everything they have to offer, other than a sun-lamp treatment and a massage.

Actually, however, you can go in for a quick swim and one steam room -even at the Sturebadet. Slightly less expensive are the Centralbadet, at Drottninggatan 88 (near the skyscrapers), and the Forsgren ska Badet, in the Civic House at Medborgarplatsen (take the Tbahn to Medborgarplatsen.The least expensive bath-and the spot where the younger set gathers-is the Akeshovsbadet, at Bergslagsvagen 60, features an enormous swimming pool (indoors) and beautiful terraces for summer sunbathing, a cheap cafeteria, and charges few dollars for a full dose of sauna. To get there, simply take the subway (‘T-bahn“) to the Akeshov station, and you‘ll find the baths right outside.

Af Chapman, Stockholm

AF CHAPMAN:For life in Stockholm on a starvation budget, let us now introduce you to the “Af Chapman,” a three-masted sailing ship, and the most unusual youth hostel in the world. Years ago, the “Af Chapman” was a training ship for officer candidates of the Swedish navy. When the navy tired of the “Af Chapman” and announced it would scrap it, an idea came to the brilliant head (Mr. Erik Thor) of the Stockholm Tourist Office. He bought the “Af Chapman”, moored it to a dock on the centrally-located island of Skeppsholmen, and turned it into a youth hostel. There it has remained ever since-a fixture of the city to such an extent that all the maps of Stockholm now contain little drawings of the “Af Chapman.”

You can spot the “Af Chapman” from the verandah of the plush Grand Hotel (what a contrast!), and you can also easily walk to the ship from the Grand. It is a real-life, massive sailing ship-straight from an Errol Flynn movie-with crow’s-nests, portholes, towering masts, and sea gulls circling above. It’s open all year around, charges exactly 165.00 kronor for a bunk, is so popular that it imposes a five-day limit on your stay, and theoretically requires that you be a member of a student or youth hostel organization.

Incidentally, any member of the public can eat on the Af Chapman; and you ought to pay it a visit, even if you don’t plan to stay there. At lunch time, when there’s good weather, tables are placed on deck and sandwich meals are served. At all other times, the ship’s dining room is open for snacks. Hope and I had two large pieces of cake and two teas. And as we munched away, the ship’s bells sounded!

The hotels of Stockholm are heavily booked in the summer months

Just as in Copenhagen, the hotels of Stockholm are heavily booked in the summer months. That, however, doesn’t mean that the city is crawling with tourists-as Venice, for example, is-but simply that no overwhelming number of hotels exist for the tourists who arrive in summer.

But just as in Copenhagen, the city guarantees that it will find you a hotel room, at the price you specify. To pick up their offer, go to the Central Railroad Station, where you’ll find an office calIed “Hotellcentralen” on the station’s lower level. Staffed with Englishspeaking aides, it maintains contact with every hotel, boarding house or guest-accepting private home in Stockholm, and stays open every day of the week (until 11 p.m.) to obtain a room for you.

If the budget hotel situation happens to be particularly tight on the day you’re there, the Hotelcentralen will find you a room in a private home-often a surprisingly comfortable room-renting for affordable prices. They also have the scoop on the youth hostels of Stockholm, the dormitories, and the mission hotels situation. Your best time to get the best budget hotel is in the morning hours, for they gradually fill up as the day goes along.

I’ve set forth my own hotel choices immediately below, and you can write for reservations, making certain to enulose an international postal response coupon. But that really isn’t necessary; simply schedule your arrival into Stockholm for early in the morning, go to Hotelcentralen, ask if they can squeeze, and if they can’t, they’ll get you another room, similarly-priced.

Virtually all of these hotels, in this most expensive city of Europe, offer doubles at prices ranging to a high price. For cheaper digs, either request a room with a private family, or else turn the section headed “Af Chapman”-a mysterious name that will introduce you to the starvation budget variety of Stockholm accommodations.