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A guide to Saint Petersburg for football fans

For football fans travelling to or already enjoying the pleasures of Saint Petersburg, you’ll find plenty of culture, nightlife and attractions to keep you entertained in between matches. Here Millionaire Escapes showcases five highlights of this thrilling city.


SKYLINE

As of relatively recently, rooftop tours are available to view Saint Petersburg's eclectic skyline


With gold-leaf cathedral domes, light blue Baroque palaces, neoclassical church spires and industrial Soviet blocks, the varied architecture of Saint Petersburg creates an eclectic skyline. As of relatively recently, there are rooftop tours available for anyone who doesn’t suffer from vertigo, while the number of bars and restaurants that provide great city vantage points is also growing; Mansarda and Makaronniki are two of the most popular, with the former looking straight out onto St. Isaac’s Cathedral. Stay at the swanky Renaissance St. Petersburg Baltic Hotel, just opposite Mansarda.


PARKS

Fountain Koronny in the peaceful Letniy Sad (Summer Garden)


Make the most of Saint Petersburg’s long summer days and white nights (a natural phenomenon due to the city’s high latitude whereby the sun never fully sets) by heading to one of the old imperial capital’s many parks. Each green space possesses a distinct character from the next, from the grandeur of the greenhouses and giant lily pads in the Botanical Garden of Peter the Great, to the peaceful pagodas and statue-lined boulevards of Letniy Sad (the Summer Garden). The Grand Hotel Petrogradsky offers modern, light-filled rooms just around the corner from the botanical gardens.


CULTURE

The Scarlet Sails is a theatrical public show on the Neva River in summer


Thanks to the warm weather and the twilight glow created by the white nights, summer in Saint Petersburg sees the cultural scene spill out onto the streets with events extended well into the evenings. The White Nights festival runs from late May to mid July and brings a 24-hour celebratory – almost euphoric – mood to the city; not to mention daily performances at the Mariinsky Theatre and the Mariinsky Concert Hall. There are open-air concerts, DJs playing in courtyards draped with fairy lights, classical ballet performances, and other events. It all culminates with the Scarlet Sails, a massive theatrical public show on the Neva River with a sailing ship that’s illuminated in purple, fireworks and music.


Aparthotel Saint-P provides great-value, highly-rated accommodation minutes from the Mariinsky Theatre.


CAFES

Visit Café Singer to gaze out of the window at the curved Kazansky Cathedral


Café culture in Saint Petersburg is strong, with speciality coffee available in eccentric venues like historic grottos, libraries and palatial tea rooms. Bolshe is a café housed in a grotto that dates back to the Tsarist era, where you’ll find beans roasted in-house and espresso with a real kick. Then there’s Biblioteka, a café-cum-bookshop, and Books and Coffee, which was opened by Russian writer Aleksandr Zhitnitsky and hosts screenings, concerts and creative events. Visit Café Singer to gaze out of the window at the curved Kazansky Cathedral. Or relax in the concrete-adorned Coffee 22, with its industrial decor and ambient electronic music.


Stay practically next door to Biblioteka at Abajour on Nevsky.


HISTORY

The enormous and gripping Hermitage Museum


Of all the cities in the world, Saint Petersburg has one of the most fascinating histories. From ancient imperial rule through bloody revolutions and Soviet rule, there’s a wealth of unmissable landmarks and museums that are truly spine tingling in person. You could spend days exploring the Hermitage Museum alone, before you’ve even set food in the city’s cathedrals, fortresses and palaces. Some of the most monumental are the Winter Palace (former residence of Russian tsars) and the Peter and Paul Fortress including an on-site museum. And of course the elaborate bulbous domes of the Church of the Saviour on Spilled Blood, thus named because it was built on the spot where Tsar Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881.


Put your feet up after an afternoon spent in the Hermitage at the nearby Bridge Hotel.

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