
Praha hlavní nádraží
Most travelers see this station as a gray, subterranean bunker. You'll arrive in a 1970s terminal of cold steel and concrete. It's a maze of quick-bite stalls a...


Most travelers see this station as a gray, subterranean bunker. You'll arrive in a 1970s terminal of cold steel and concrete. It's a maze of quick-bite stalls a...

Think of ibis Praha Old Town prague as your functional basecamp. It sits right on the edge of the Old and New Towns, giving you the best of both worlds. The win...

The Muzeum komunismu prague offers a sharp look at the 41 years of totalitarian rule in Czechoslovakia. You'll find it near Republic Square, sitting right next ...

Fighting the crowds in Prague’s Old Town is a choice. You don’t have to do it. Most people queue for hours at the Astronomical Clock or get lost in the tourist ...

If you're tired of the "Disneyland" vibe in Old Town, get out of the center. Prague's historic core is pretty, but it's also a commercial trap. Alternative Prag...

Náměstí Republiky is where Prague stops acting like a museum and starts behaving like a city. It sits right on the old moat line between the Old and New Towns. ...

Forget sterile white tiles. The original beer spa prague is a subterranean retreat of exposed brick and flickering firelight. You'll head down from the cobblest...

You'll find this shrine to Art Nouveau inside the Kaunický Palace in New Town. It's the first museum on the planet to focus entirely on Alphonse Mucha. Don't ex...

Walk through New Town's busy streets near Wenceslas Square and you'll find something weird. Prague is famous for old spires and heavy history. But the Museum of...

You'll find the secret lab of Speculum Alchemiae Prague under the cobblestones of the Old Town center. This isn't a museum with items behind glass. It's a real ...

You'll find Chapeau Rouge tucked away on a side street in Prague’s Old Town. You won't find a glossy mega-club here. It's a gritty, red-lit institution that’s a...

Walk down Celetná and you'll see plenty of gold and old stone. But step inside this Art Nouveau building and the vibe changes fast. This is the Steel Art Museum...
Karlín sits just northeast of Prague’s center in the Prague 8 district. It was once an industrial zone. Then the Vltava River flooded in 2002 and wrecked the place. Now it is the city's best neighborhood for food and coffee. You'll find wide streets and plenty of trees here. There are specialty coffee shops and Michelin-starred bistros. Old factories now house galleries. You are close to Old Town. Walk there in 15 minutes. Or use the Křižíkova and Florenc metro stations. Cross the HolKa footbridge to get to Holešovice. Stay here if you want to avoid crowds but love good eating. It's real Prague life.
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