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A New Look for an Old City

The center of ancient Greek civilization is now home to a magnificent modern museum that highlights the city's storied past

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  • By Rick Steves
  • Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
 
The Acropolis Museum
The Acropolis Museum shows off treasures from the Parthenon. (Cameron Hewitt)

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Hydra Greece

Rick Steves' Europe: Hydra, Greece


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Athens and Side Trips - Rick Steves' Europe

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  • Rick Steves' Athens, Avalon Travel, 2009
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  • Rick Steves' Europe: Hydra, Greece
  • Hydra's History
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A century and a half ago, Athens was a humble, forgotten city of about 8,000 people. Today one out of every three Greeks packs into this city of about four million.

The city has been infamous for its sprawl, noise, and pollution. My advice has long been to see the big sights, then get out. But visiting it recently to research my guidebook, I saw a dramatic change. The city has made a concerted effort to clean up and pedestrianize the streets, spiff up the museums, build a new airport, and invest in one of Europe’s better public-transit systems.

Athens has a long history. You’ll walk in the footsteps of the great minds who created democracy, philosophy, theater, and more...even when you’re dodging motorcycles on “pedestrianized” streets. Romantics can’t help but get goose bumps as they kick around the same pebbles that once stuck in Socrates’ sandals, with the floodlit Parthenon forever floating ethereally overhead. It rises gleaming like a beacon atop the Acropolis, high above the gray concrete drudgery of modern Athens. The mighty Parthenon—the most famous temple on the planet—is an enduring symbol of ancient Athens’ glorious Golden Age nearly 2,500 years ago.

The major monuments of the Acropolis survive in remarkably good condition. While the Persians, Ottomans, and British were cruel to the site in the past, the greatest dangers it faces now are acid rain and pollution. Ongoing restoration means that you might see some scaffolding—but even that can’t take away from its greatness. I like to come late in the day, as the sun goes down, when the white Parthenon stone gleams a creamy golden brown.

While the Acropolis was the city’s ceremonial showpiece, it was the Ancient Agora—just below it—that was the real heart of classical Athens. For some 800 years, it was the hub of all commercial, political, and social life, as well as home to much of the city’s religious rites. Little survives from the classical period. Other than one very well-preserved temple and a rebuilt portico, it’s a field of humble ruins nestled in the shadow of the Acropolis. But that makes it a quiet, uncrowded spot to wander and get a feel for the ancients.

To see the artistic treasures of Athens, visit its stunning museums. North of the city center is the world’s best collection of ancient Greek art, the National Archaeological Museum. It takes you from 7000 B.C. to A.D. 500, from prehistoric and Mycenaean artifacts to the evolution of classical Greek statuary.

This museum now has a worthy competitor—the Acropolis Museum, built in a neighborhood just below the Parthenon. It fills an aching void, preserving and displaying cultural treasures once held prisoner in a musty old Acropolis-top museum next to the Parthenon.

The striking, glassy building—designed by Swiss-born, New York-based architect Bernard Tschumi—gives a postmodern jolt to Athens’ otherwise staid, mid-century-concrete cityscape, even as it echoes the ancient history all around and even under it. Its two lower levels are aligned with the foundations of the ancient ruins beneath the building (which are exposed and open to the public). The building is the boldest symbol yet of the post-Olympics vision for Athens.

This world-class museum hopes to lure the famous Elgin Marbles (the Parthenon sculptures) away from London’s British Museum. In the early 19th century, the British ambassador to the Ottomans, Lord Elgin, got permission to strip marble panels from the Parthenon and take them to England.

For years, the Greeks have asked for the marbles back, and for years, the Brits have responded with claims that Greece can’t give them a suitable home. And yet, now that this state-of-the-art facility is ready and waiting, it still seems unlikely that the marbles will be returned anytime soon. Britain is reluctant to give in, for fear of setting a precedent...and getting “me, too” notices from Italy, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, and all the other nations who’d like the missing pieces of their cultural heritage back. But even without the Marbles, this museum captures the timeless splendor of ancient and modern Athens.

Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com, or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, WA 98020.

© 2010 Rick Steves


A century and a half ago, Athens was a humble, forgotten city of about 8,000 people. Today one out of every three Greeks packs into this city of about four million.

The city has been infamous for its sprawl, noise, and pollution. My advice has long been to see the big sights, then get out. But visiting it recently to research my guidebook, I saw a dramatic change. The city has made a concerted effort to clean up and pedestrianize the streets, spiff up the museums, build a new airport, and invest in one of Europe’s better public-transit systems.

Athens has a long history. You’ll walk in the footsteps of the great minds who created democracy, philosophy, theater, and more...even when you’re dodging motorcycles on “pedestrianized” streets. Romantics can’t help but get goose bumps as they kick around the same pebbles that once stuck in Socrates’ sandals, with the floodlit Parthenon forever floating ethereally overhead. It rises gleaming like a beacon atop the Acropolis, high above the gray concrete drudgery of modern Athens. The mighty Parthenon—the most famous temple on the planet—is an enduring symbol of ancient Athens’ glorious Golden Age nearly 2,500 years ago.

The major monuments of the Acropolis survive in remarkably good condition. While the Persians, Ottomans, and British were cruel to the site in the past, the greatest dangers it faces now are acid rain and pollution. Ongoing restoration means that you might see some scaffolding—but even that can’t take away from its greatness. I like to come late in the day, as the sun goes down, when the white Parthenon stone gleams a creamy golden brown.

While the Acropolis was the city’s ceremonial showpiece, it was the Ancient Agora—just below it—that was the real heart of classical Athens. For some 800 years, it was the hub of all commercial, political, and social life, as well as home to much of the city’s religious rites. Little survives from the classical period. Other than one very well-preserved temple and a rebuilt portico, it’s a field of humble ruins nestled in the shadow of the Acropolis. But that makes it a quiet, uncrowded spot to wander and get a feel for the ancients.

To see the artistic treasures of Athens, visit its stunning museums. North of the city center is the world’s best collection of ancient Greek art, the National Archaeological Museum. It takes you from 7000 B.C. to A.D. 500, from prehistoric and Mycenaean artifacts to the evolution of classical Greek statuary.

This museum now has a worthy competitor—the Acropolis Museum, built in a neighborhood just below the Parthenon. It fills an aching void, preserving and displaying cultural treasures once held prisoner in a musty old Acropolis-top museum next to the Parthenon.

The striking, glassy building—designed by Swiss-born, New York-based architect Bernard Tschumi—gives a postmodern jolt to Athens’ otherwise staid, mid-century-concrete cityscape, even as it echoes the ancient history all around and even under it. Its two lower levels are aligned with the foundations of the ancient ruins beneath the building (which are exposed and open to the public). The building is the boldest symbol yet of the post-Olympics vision for Athens.

This world-class museum hopes to lure the famous Elgin Marbles (the Parthenon sculptures) away from London’s British Museum. In the early 19th century, the British ambassador to the Ottomans, Lord Elgin, got permission to strip marble panels from the Parthenon and take them to England.

For years, the Greeks have asked for the marbles back, and for years, the Brits have responded with claims that Greece can’t give them a suitable home. And yet, now that this state-of-the-art facility is ready and waiting, it still seems unlikely that the marbles will be returned anytime soon. Britain is reluctant to give in, for fear of setting a precedent...and getting “me, too” notices from Italy, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, and all the other nations who’d like the missing pieces of their cultural heritage back. But even without the Marbles, this museum captures the timeless splendor of ancient and modern Athens.

Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com, or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, WA 98020.

© 2010 Rick Steves

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Comments (1)

I remember reading one of my Smithsonian magazine articles that detailed the opening (2009) of the New Acropolis Museum in Athens. I toured that area in June/July 2009, so the article must have been that Spring. It was quite an extensive article, with many pictures and illustrations of the moving of the artifacts from the old musum, etc. I'd like to purchase a copy of that issue provided I can still do that. Is it possible? Please advise. Thank you. Pat Northrup

Posted by Patricia Northrup on January 31,2013 | 03:18 PM



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