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Paldiski Voyage Tips and guide

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    Paldiski is a small port town on the shore of Baltic Sea, in Harjumaa county in northwestern Estonia. Here the drab Soviet past meets the sea and the cliffs with wind power plants.

    Understand

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    Houses along Sadama Street from the Soviet era – you will see lots and lots of these

    Paldiski is on the Pakri Peninsula stretching out into the Baltic Sea. As such the port rarely freezes over during winter (unlike Tallinn for instance). The Swedes were the first to discover this and established the settlement of Rågervik in the 14th century. After the Great Northern War in the early 18th century, present-day Estonia became Russian, and Peter the Great had a fortress built here. The settlement first functioned as a penal colony, though over the decades the port was developed and in 1762 the settlement was renamed Baltiiskiy Port (Балтийский Порт). The German name Baltischport was also used, as Baltic Germans held a high position in the Baltic commercial life, and the Estonians called the town Paldiski.

    In 1870 the railway from St. Petersburg along the north Estonian coast reached Paldiski; this railway line served as an axis of development for the cities along it. In addition to commerce and industry, the military also had strong position in the town during Russian Tsarist and Soviet rule. Between the world wars, Estonia was an independent country, and the town's name was established as Paldiski. When the country fell into Soviet hands, Paldiski became a military outpost towards the western bloc and as such a closed city – off-limits to foreigners, non-resident Soviet citizens, even non-resident Estonians themselves because of its military importance. By the 1960s, it had grown in size considerably and was the largest submarine base in the Soviet Union. In 1994, three years after the fall of the USSR, it became a normal town with the nuclear reactors used for training crews for nuclear submarines buried in concrete sarcophaguses.

    However, this caused the town to decline, as its main activity had been dissolved, with a population of 3,500 in 2021. Paldiski's economy centres around civilian freight, oil, and to some extent the passenger port, and a kind of decaying Soviet (and to some extent Imperial Russian) open air museum, open to everyone. It's worth a visit if you're interested in the grey world of the Soviet Union: Paldiski and the Pakri Peninsula are covered with abandoned bunkers, piles of unidentifiable junk and various military debris. Moreover, like many former Soviet cities that housed major functions, most inhabitants are Russian-speaking, "left behind" when the USSR disappeared, which gives the town a different feel from the rest of Estonia that surrounds it. Indeed, the scenes taking place in a location introduced to the audience as “somewhere in the former Soviet Union” in the film Lilya 4-Ever were shot in Paldiski.

    The natural surroundings are interesting, too; the cliffs to the sea, the lighthouses outside town, and the wind farms, of which there are probably more than anywhere else in the country.

    Get in

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    Best to take the train one way and the bus the other way to enjoy both sides of the ride. Bus and train schedules are easily available online – read more under Estonia.

    By train

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    Paldiski railway station building

    Trains run from Tallinn Balti Jaam, departures about every 1.5 hours. The trip takes just over an hour and it costs €3.15.

    • 1 Paldiski railway station. At the southern end of the city, near the oil terminals. Though it's more of a railway stop as the old wooden station building (a listed heritage building) isn't in use.

    By bus

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    Buses – the Tallinn region bus line 145 – depart almost hourly during daytime, though not from the bus station but from Tallinn Balti Jaam, going clockwise around the old town via Viru Hotel and Vabaduse väljak before heading west to the Zoo, Rocca al Mare shopping mall and the Paldiski highway. The trip takes about 1 hr 10 min and it costs €3.

    The 2 central bus stop to get in and out is along Sadama street in the centre (they also have a timetable posted there), the one on Kivi is quite central also. But there are other stops between and including the railway station.

    By car

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    Paldiski is a 50-km drive from Tallinn along highway 8. From the south-west, you can get in from Haapsalu along highways 9 a short bit, 17 to Padise and 174 to Paldiski; that is a 70-km drive.

    By boat

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    DFDS operates daily freight ferries from Kapellskär, Sweden that also carry passengers (with cars).

    Get around

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    Map
    Map of Paldiski

    There's no public transport but as a small town, Paldiski can be explored on foot. Rae, a continuation of the highway from Tallinn, is the main street, and the town stretches about two blocks east and west of this street where its delimited by the port or forest. If you wish to access the sea, you can do this north of the city where it's not blocked off by the port functions. For the lighthouse, 5 km north, try taking a taxi, hitch or walk anyway.

    See

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    Most of Paldiski dates to Soviet times or later; don't expect a picturesque old town like for instance in Haapsalu. Poorly maintained two- and five-floor apartment buildings, and newer buildings in between make up the bulk of the town. Virtually all of the military buildings, including the large submarine training centre, have been demolished also. They have given place to the port, or just been turned into something between meadows and lawns.

    In town

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    • 1 Amandus Adamson Studio Museum (Amandus Adamsoni Ateljeemuuseum), Adamsoni 3, +372 6742013. Tu-Su 11-18 (May-Sep), Th-Su 11-16 (Oct-Apr). Old summer studio of Amandus Adamson (1855–1929), one of the most famous sculptors in Estonian history. Built according to his own design, the quirky wooden building is an attraction in itself. Today works of Estonian artists are exhibited here, and it's also an event venue. €4.
    • 2 Petrovskaya fortress (Peetri kindluse bastionid / Muula mäed). The remains of a fortress on a hill, with low overgrown ramparts. There are great views to the sea and the port functions.
    • 3 St. George church (Püha Georgi kirik), Pakri 2. Here the first Orthodox church in Paldiski was built in 1721, and in the late 18th century it was rebuilt in its current grey stone form. It looks pretty modest as it lacks a tower and is almost hidden by trees.
    • 4 St. Nicholas church (Nikolai kirik), Mere 12. Built in 1842, though its "cubist" form may make you think it's newer. The church fell into serious decay during Soviet times, and was restored into its current shape.
    • 5 Church of St. Sergius of Radonezh, Tuule 1. A modern wooden Orthodox church.
    • 6 Monument to Salavat Yulaev (corner of Pakri and Rae). Salavat Yulaev was one of the leaders of the 1773–1775 Bashkir uprising (also known as Pugachev's Rebellion) against the Russian Empire. He was caught, tortured, and sent to a penal colony the opposite end of the empire like the common practice was back then, which meant Rogervik (Paldiski retained its Swedish name) where he reportedly died in 1800. In 1989 Soviet authorities erected a monument to him, which still stands.

    Pakri

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    Bank and Pakri lighthouse, situated about 5 km north
    View from the road towards Padise (just south of the port) across the bay

    The Pakri peninsula, whose south-western shore Paldiski occupies, has a rocky coast. The best place for seeing the waves crashing into the rocks is the tip of the peninsula where the Pakri lighthouse is. There are actually two lighthouses. The old one was built in 1722 on orders by Peter the Great, nowadays falling apart and dangerously located at the cliff. Across the road is the new lighthouse, built in 1889.

    7 Pakri lighthouse, Majaka tee (4 km from Paldiski), +372 55576087. May-Sep: daily 10:00-20:00; Oct-Apr: Sa Su 12:00-18:00. From Estonia's highest lighthouse (52 meters) you can enjoy views of the Baltic sea, but it's rather expensive compared to the lighthouses on Hiiumaa island. €5/3 adult/student. Pakri Lighthouse (Q3376587) on Wikidata Pakri Lighthouse on Wikipedia

    Near the lighthouse(s) there's also a staircase leading down to the sea. Overall the peninsula is a good place for just wandering around the shore and watching the Baltic Sea. Do not go too close to the edge as the ground is unstable (and forget about any fences).

    8 Leetse manor (Leetse mõis) (5 km west of Paldiski). The remains of a grand manor, just the walls remain of the main building, in addition to stairs down to the sea, the decorated gate, and the manager's house. On the way here, you will pass the "sarcophagi" with the deactivated nuclear reactors from the former submarine training facility.

    9 Suur-Pakri Chapel (Suur-Pakri kabel) (in the Suur-Pakri island). The ruins of the abandoned church and cemetery.

    A couple of kilometers west of Paldiski are the 10 Pakri islands (Pakri saared), that are a nature reserve. The islands were inhabited by Swedes from 1345 onwards, who were growing rye there, wherefore the island were named Rågöarna - the Rye Islands. They were evicted in WWII by the Soviet military, who turned the islands into a base and later a bombing range. After restoration of independence, the islands were cleared of ordnance and turned into a nature reserve. In addition to nature, you can see the remains of abandoned Swedish villages including a church bell tower and Soviet military buildings.

    The reserve authorities operate tour boats that leave from 4 Kurkse each morning in the summer at 10:00, returning in the afternoon - these trips take place only if there are enough passengers. Return tickets cost €33 and trips need to be booked 36 hours before departure.

    Klooga

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    Abandoned military building in Klooga

    11 Klooga. is a village along the railway, 10 km east of Paldiski. After WWII, when the peninsula with surroundings was militarized, the civilian population was evicted. Nowadays its a normal village, but there are still some abandoned buildings built by the Soviets.

    North of the village, the Nazis operated a concentration camp during the German occupation in World War II, where more than two thousand Jews were murdered. Of the camp, a 12 memorial. remains. During the same time, Ingrian Finns escaping the Soviet Union were placed in a camp in the nearby village of Põllküla, and many died due to the poor conditions there; of this camp too a 13 memorial. remains.

    Further south

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    • 14 Ämari Pilots’ Cemetery (Ämari lennuväe kalmistu), Ämari tee (between Ämari village and the current airforce base). This cemetery is the last resting place of a number of Estonia's fighter pilots who served in the air force under Soviet rule before 1991. Pilots of which the aircraft were downed and recovered have their graves decorated with the tail fin of their aircraft instead of a generic tomb stone, making the cemetery look like a squadron of jet fighters buried in the forest.

    Do

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    A pedestrian bridge connecting the Pakri Islands

    If you have a good map that has many foot paths (like OpenStreetMap, which many mobile Apps like OsmAnd or Mapy.cz use), you can walk around the port and continue north along the cliffs towards the lighthouse.

    • 1 Pakri Straus, Sadama 38, +372 509-88-97. Sa-Su 10-18. Ostrich farm.

    Buy

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    • 1 COOP (formerly known as Konsum), Rae 38. 09:00–22:00. Supermarket with pharmacy.
    • 2 Maxima, Rae 14b. 08:00–22:00. Another supermarket, with modern products and Russian-style borscht.
    • 3 Kaubamaja, Rae 23. 9-21. The first floor is a supermarket, on the second household goods. A good place to find Slavic products, Russian beers, confectionary.

    In addition the town has a few kiosks and second hand stores.

    Eat and drink

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    Peetri Toll tavern is inside an old customs building
    • 1 Peetri Pizza, Rae 17, +372 6742095. Daily 11:00–21:00. Pizzeria with very good ratings online, part of a national franchising chain. €4-6.
    • 2 Peetri Toll, Mere 10, +372 5342-3425, . 11:00–24:00. Tavern in an old customs house (from the Imperial time) just outside the port. Slavic and international cuisine; not everything on the menu is always available, just the dishes written on the blackboard. On the second floor there's a photo exhibition of Paldiski in the bygone times. €7–11.
    • 3 Anne KoogiKodu, Sadama 13. Bakery and café.

    Other than these, self-catering is also possible (see Buy above). The closest thing to bars and nightlife is the tavern, which is rather quiet in the evenings too.

    Sleep

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    Connect

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    • 1 City Library (Paldiski Linnaraamatukogu), Rae 38. Tu–F 11:00–18:00, Sa 11:00–16:00. Library with Internet access point.
    • 1 Post office (Paldiski postkontor), Rae 14B–14C. M–Tu, F 10:00–15:00, W–Th 13:00–18:00. The town's post office.

    All mobile operators (Elisa, Tele2 and Telia) have 4G coverage in and around Paldiski.

    Go next

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    • Laulasmaa — 20 km east to the east from Paldiski towards Tallinn there is this small coastal village.
    • Nõva — 20 km towards Haapsalu is this beautiful coastal village with untouched pine forests and a clean beach.
    Routes through Paldiski
    Kapellskär  W  E  KeilaTallinn


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