Vlad the Impaler stated his claim to Bucharest in 1459. His citadel on the Dambovita was the first of flotillas of palaces, many of which still stand. Four subway lines and a modern bus network transport visitors and commuters. Nicknamed "Little Paris", Bucharest's elegant early 20th-century architecture shows French influences. Don't miss the Village Museum, Romanian Athenaeum and the Peasant Museum. You can't miss the Palace of Parliament, the second-largest building in the world (after the Pentagon).
Restaurants in Bucharest
5.0 based on 2 reviews
This the place where you don't pay for what you eat or drink, but for the time you spend. It is a library, a bookshop, a teahouse, a place for meetings with friends, reading or working on your projects. This is where you will all the resources you need in order to become the best possible version of yourself. And it only costs 8 RON (about $2) per hour.
5.0 based on 9 reviews
Urban Collectors is a graffiti and street art gallery & library & shop. Collectible items. Appointment by visit only.
5.0 based on 6 reviews
Please visit if you need information about places of interest in Bucharest and in Romania. You'll receive free maps and advice and in exchange we would appreciate a kind donation to keep this NGO service open to the public.
4.0 based on 33 reviews
The exhibition "The Treasures of Ancient Egypt" is open at the National Library of Romania from Bucharest, from March 21 to June 21, 2018. More than one million people in Europe and Latin America visited this exhibition. The exhibition brings together over 300 exhibits containing original artifacts reflecting the development stages of Egyptian civilization. Among the exhibits are: the Tutankhamun pharaoh's mask, an authentic sarcophagus fragment, jewels, papyrus sheets, ushabti, or amulets that accompanied the deceased in the afterlife. The tickets cost is around 10 Euro in Lei, or less for children, students, or organised groups.
4.0 based on 47 reviews
...Can you believe that in 1989, following the thunderous political revolution in Bucharest, this building was almost missing its domed, elegant roof? With its walls peppered by bullet holes and half distroyed by fire, this is how I remember it from those times. And now, brightly renovated, reborn of its ashes, the Central Library stands proud accross from the Old Royal Pallace, waiting to be admired again.
3.5 based on 42 reviews
5.0 based on 2 reviews
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