How to spend one day in Heraklion
You
have a day or two to spend in Heraklion, the main city and key business centre of Crete. The city is also a major
cruise destination. Beyond the crazed progress of moped riders, noisy scooters and a battered, out-of-control look to the city, there is much to do and plenty of things worth seeing. Apart from shopping and the designer clothes on Daedalou Street ("DaydAloo"),
there are many small shops off all the main streets which sell those
local products which normally are used when you live in Crete. Just have
a look along 1866 Street and more so its side streets - you may find a
curio distinctly different from more typical "gifts" offered to visitors
in gift shops.
The famous tourist attraction, the Saturday market that was by the port, an almost kilometre
long display of fruit and vegetables and sundry items - has now sadly
moved to an obscure suburb. See in our blog:
Saturday
market in Heraklion: moved!
This is a brief guide to some of the well known and some less well known enjoyments and rewards of
Heraklion:
The enormous Archaeological Museum (converted from an old power station well before the idea of using the old Battersea power station in London as an art gallery) on one corner of the central Eleftherias
Square (see simple map), collects together many of the finds from Knossos, Archanes, Phaestos, Zakros and many other archeological sites in Crete. The museum spans a period starting several thousand years ago, through the Minoan, post-Minoan and later periods.
Popular highlights include the Phaestos disc, classic Hellenic and Roman sculptures, frescoes, jewelry, wall-paintings and pottery. A selection of guide books is available at the museum shop - best to buy one to gain some insight into the items that make up this substantial collection.
It's a good idea to start early in the morning or late in the day during
the summer months to avoid a rush-hour style of viewing - this is a very
popular destination.
Open: every day 08.00 to 19.30 summer, 08.30 to 17.00 winter. Monday opening is from 12.00. December to Ferbuary
closing time is 15.00.
Closed on public Holidays. Tel: 2810-279086, 279087.
Admission: 6.00 euros. Combined museum and Knossos ticket: 10.00 euros.
IMPORTANT NOTE: All museum surrounds
and the original museum building are being completely rebuilt. The date of completion is undetermined. A temporary, partial exhibition (of 400 exhibits) is open at a new annex behind the museum. The full exhibition will be displayed
again when works have been completed.
(Phones: see Calling
Crete)
History Museum on Sophocleus Venizelou.
Easy way to find it is to walk to the bottom of 25th August and at the end, turn left along the seafront - it's about half a kilometre
along on your left (some nice cafes and tavernas have opened in the
square beside it).
Open: 09.00 to 15.00
every day, except Saturday 09.00-14.00, Sunday closed. Tel: 2810-283219.
The Battle of Crete Museum. Walk down the side of the Archaeological museum on Hatzidaki and at the end, where it meets Bofor
is this small but informative gem.
Open: 09.00 to 15.00 every day except Saturday & Sunday. Free entrance. Tel: 2810-346554.
The Venetian Loggia on 25th August Street ("Avgoostoo Eekosi Penday"), 50 metres down the street from
"Lion Square" (Morosini or Venizelos Square on maps) on the right, is now the city hall of Heraklion. You can walk in a take a quick look.
If you take the left turn instead (off 25th August) you enter Theotokopoulou or El Greco square where the OTE ("Otay") buildings house public
telephone and fax facilities. Also if you are in need of a supermarket you will find Halkiadakis
on the next side of this square.
The Municipal Gallery and Basilica of St. Mark has an ever-changing variety of exhibitions from early
photographs of Crete, to specific works of art - have a look to see if there is a current exhibition. Opposite "Lion Square".
The Koules Venetian Fortress on the harbour walls, built in the early 1500's. Both for the impressive stone mass of its fortification and unfathomably solid walls, the pleasure of views from its turret and roof, restored interior and exterior reliefs of the Lion of St. Mark.
Open: 09.00 to 15.00. From 1 July to 31 October, open: 08.00 to 19.30. (We find that in reality their opening times seem
rather unpredictable!) Tel: 2810-246211.
Admission: 1.50 euros.
The Natural History Museum of Crete. 10 minutes walk along the sea front from the bottom of 25th of August street - turn left as you face the sea (same direction as for the History Museum). The museum is in the well-converted old electricity power plant for Heraklion.
Has wonderful displays and good descriptive details about the flora and fauna, the wildlife, of Crete. An exciting feature is the "experience an earthquake" platform in the basement of the museum. It's a thrill for kids and educational for adults. There is also a not-to-be-missed childrens' area with caves and all sorts of play/learning materials (it's actually even fun for adults!). You might happily spend 1-2 hours here.
Admission: 5.00 euros adults, 3.00 euros children. Tel: 2810-282740. www.nhmc.uoc.gr
Another great place to visit with your children: the new
Aquarium ("CretAquarium" or "Thalassocosmos"). A 5000 square metre
structure, it is both a research centre (housing the Institute of Marine
Biology & Genetics and the Institute of Oceanography) and a fun,
impressive aquarium with 32 tanks (representing interesting underwater
Cretan sea landscapes) and 50 viewing points. 2500 organisms of 200
Mediterranean marine species, from hunter sharks to lobsters, to
colourful jellyfish. Touch screens provide information in 5 languages.
15 km east of Heraklion, within what was the American base of Gournes
(there are buses to it from the centre of town). Open 365 days/year
(including public holidays), Monday to Sunday: 09:00-21:00 (1 May to 15
October) and 10:00-17:30 (16 October to 30 April). Admission: 8.00 euros
adults, 6.00 euros 5-17 year olds & students. Children under 5 years:
free. Personal audio guide: 1.00 euro. Parking, cafe/restaurant with sea
view, souvenir shop. Tel: 2810-337788, 2810-337888.
www.cretaquarium.gr
The Palace of Knossos. 20-25 minutes from the centre of Heraklion. For many this is a must see, and for some a major reason to visit Crete. While you are in or near Heraklion it makes sense to visit this well-restored and sprawling work of Arthur Evans who spent much of his life, and his inherited fortune to make Knossos what is is today. A Minoan palace - this is is the closest you can get to piecing together the threads of the story of the Minoan civilization through the structures the Minoans lived in.
Many publications about Knossos are available both in bookshops in Heraklion and at the gift shop there. Knossos also has guides who will, for a fee, enlighten your visit with details and history and provide a more rewarding visit. There is a cafe just after entering the gate, and several cafes and tavernas to eat in on the Knossos road just outside the gates.
You could spend anywhere from 1 - 3 hours and more here, depending on your interest in archaeology.
To get there by bus go to Bus station A near the harbour. At the bus station look for the KNOSSOS ticket office [see more info about bus stations].
By car or taxi it is a 15-20 minute ride.
Open: every day 08.00 to 19.30 (to 15.00 in the winter). Tel: 2810-231940.
Admission: 6.00 euros. Combined Knossos and Heraklion Archaeological
museum ticket: 10.00 euros.
Sundays (November to end of March) free
for all!
The recently reconstructed underground Gate through the city walls, accessible from the central section of Eleftherias square.
One of the best known and most important for direction finding, streets
in Heraklion is 25th of August street, which has now been repaved
as a pedestrian street. There is very limited car access (it
is quite probable that we will see more cafes spilling onto the street
now cars are forced to take second place).
On the walk down 25th August Street from Dedalou to the sea (before most of the shops are turned over to car rental offices) is the church of
Agios Titos, a beautiful
building, Byzantine in origin then rebuilt in the 16th century by the Venetians. The
building was taken over by the Turks who converted it into a mosque and rebuilt it after the 1856 earthquake. It was renovated and re-consecrated by the Greek Orthodox Church in 1925. Fronted by a spacious square which accommodates a municipally run outdoor restaurant in the summer months
and the interesting
Pagopoieion restaurant/cafe/bar by the side of the church.
The church of Agia Ekaterini Sinaites - now a theological museum, is on the edge of the square surrounding the much larger and better known
Agios Minas. It has some very fine Byzantine icons. (see Heraklion photo
album). Monday-Friday: 10.00-13.00, admission: 1.50 euros.
See a movie at the Vincenzo Kornaros cinema with its wonderfully carved-wood-paneled interiors (theatre 1)
on Malikouti Street. Tel: 2810-243921.
Or, 5 minutes away by taxi, the
latest movie palace
has several screens, adding to your viewing choices.
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