Skip to content

Travel – The New Adventures of Old Athens

THIS ANCIENT CITY HAS BECOME A MODERN TREASURE

Photo Taken In Athens, Greece
Photo Taken In Athens, Greece
Photo by Stefan Brueckner, EYEEM, via Getty Images

This article originally appeared in the March/April 2023 issue of Seattle magazine.

When you’re one of the oldest cities in the world, you’re bound to experience some ups and downs. Witness Athens, historically 3,400 years old but probably many thousands more.

Anyone who might have visited Athens — say, during their college years with a backpack on the way to the islands — may have decided they had seen enough. It is time to reconsider, as today’s version of Athens is bold, seductive, and full of fun.

Less expensive than many European capitals and orders of magnitude friendlier, Athens is having its day in the sun again. With an excellent subway system thanks to the 2004 Olympics and bustling neighborhoods to rival Paris or Barcelona, the city of Athena is ready for her closeup. A perfect weekend in Athens awaits.

FRIDAY

It isn’t as important which hotel you choose, but that it has a rooftop swimming pool and bar to fully appreciate the Parthenon lit up at night. After sundowners, head out for an evening symposium — the name for “social gathering” in Ancient Greece.

Anafiotika neighborhood in Athens under Acropolis hill. Part of the old historical neighborhood called Plaka, Greece
Photo by Posnov via Getty Images

Psyri has a fun fit for all types of gods and titans. The quiet quarter becomes electric after sundown, with tables spilling into the streets and so many different tavernas and ouzerias, it would take weeks to visit them all. It’s nightlife without the nightclubs, a festive wandering experience where every street unlocks a new find.

It’s also a prime shopping area for boho thrifting. The stores don’t stay open very late, so you’ll want to return during the day. Don’t miss Remember Fashion, the punk retro shop that has been there since 1978.

SATURDAY

Have a late brunch at Tzitzikas & Mermigas — from Aesop’s The Cicada and the Ant — serving Greek classics with a modern twist in a bright, airy spot with plenty of outdoor tables. Take a leisurely stroll through the Plaka, Athens’ poshest neighborhood, and then it’s time for some culture and history.

The Acropolis Museum opened in 2009 to worldwide acclaim. Finally, Greece had a museum to match the grandeur of its artifacts. It’s a wonderful place to visit and can be combined with tours of the Parthenon and the Temple of Olympian Zeus. In the agora, take the short peaceful walk around the Temple of Hephaestus, one of the best-preserved ancient temples in Greece, and conjure up the days of the empire. Toast yourself after the history lesson with a dry rosé on the museum’s expansive terrace.

Enjoy an Eden Garden cocktail.
Courtesy of The Clumsies

For a taste of the new, visit the National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens. Although there is plenty of international art as well, the is the only museum in Athens to focus on Greek contemporary art and inhabits the sleekly redesigned site of the former Fix Brewery.

Have dinner and a nightcap at The Clumsies, the oddly named, fantastic cocktail lounge that reached No. 3 on the world’s top bars list. The mixology program is Mediterranean-inspired and whimsical, with a fresh take on the classics.

SUNDAY

This is a beach day, and the Athenian Riviera has several great sandy strips. Check out Artemis Beach or Voula Beach for golden sand and blue water. The subway goes all the way to Piraeus, then hail a car for your beach of choice. You can certainly stay longer, and you should. But these three days in Athens will make any visitor feel like Zeus or Hera when done.

 

Natalie and Greg have written for Travel + Leisure, Fathom, Food52 in addition to Seattle magazine. They’ve been to 117 countries combined. Inbetween trips they live in a houseboat on Seattle’s Lake Union.

Follow Us

A New Place to Ice Skate by the Water

A New Place to Ice Skate by the Water

Hyatt Regency Lake Washington’s dockside rink offers lake views and eco-friendly synthetic ice.

Skating season has officially arrived. There’s a particular joy in gliding—or trying to—on cold days. I always go for the outdoor rinks, especially the ones strung with twinkling lights. It can be so romantic. And this year, there’s a new place to lace up. A 71-foot by 38-foot covered Glice rink is up and running…

Bergen: Finding a Home, Abroad

Bergen: Finding a Home, Abroad

A trip across western Norway reveals strikingly Northwest sensibilities.

A few months ago, we randomly walked into Wallingford’s Fat Cat Records. Greeting us, face-out by the cash register, was not Nirvana, not Soundgarden, but Peer Gynt Suite, by the Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg. Was this a Norse omen, a mischievous prank from Loki? For us, two Seattleites with a trip to Norway on the…

Hives Among the Headstones

Hives Among the Headstones

Inside a north Seattle project reimagining cemeteries as sanctuaries for pollinators.

In many old stories, bees are more than just insects. They’re messengers—tiny intermediaries between the living and the dead. There was once even a custom in Europe and America known as “telling the bees:” When a family member died, or another significant life event occurred, someone would go to the hive to share the news….

Dispatches from Greenland, Part Two: Nuuk

Dispatches from Greenland, Part Two: Nuuk

An insider’s guide to Greenland’s mysterious, overlooked, and charming capital.

Greenland is too vast to take in all at once. Yet a few days in Nuuk—the island’s compact, curious capital, just a four-hour flight from Newark—offer a surprisingly complete portrait. Nuuk changes like the weather that shapes it: by turns wild and polished; intimate and bold. To Northerners, it feels as hectic as Manhattan; to…