Sofia

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Introducing Sofia

By far Bulgaria’s biggest city, Sofia (So-fia) is one of Europe’s most compact and walkable capital cities, although it’s still one of the least known by foreign travellers. It’s usually bypassed by tourists heading to the coast or the ski resorts, but they’re missing out on something special. Sofia has a young and dynamic vibe, like a city waking up after decades of slumber, and is becoming a confident and cosmopolitan European capital. The old east-meets-west feel is still here, with a scattering of onion-domed churches, Ottoman mosques and Red Army monuments topped with air-punching Soviet soldiers, but these days they share the skyline with glitzy shopping malls, five-star hotels and the best bars and clubs the country has to offer.

Although no grand metropolis, Sofia is nevertheless an attractive and cultured city with plenty to keep you busy for several days or more. Museums, art galleries, theatres, fine restaurants, they’re all here. Sofia is also a surprisingly green city, with huge swaths of parkland within the city boundaries and the ski slopes and hiking trails of mighty Mt Vitosha right on the doorstep.

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Outdoor cafe, St. Nedalya Square.
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Outdoor cafe, St. Nedalya Square.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Doug McKinlay
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Roma woman outside Alexander Nevsky Cathedral.
  • Alexander Nevsky Cathedral.
  • Shoppers boarding a tram at Ladies Market.
  • Locally produced pottery for sale at Ladies Market.
  • Women's fashions for sale at Ladies Market.
  • Woman with fantastic glasses selling sandwiches and pizza at Ladies Market.
View gallery