Gamla Stan (Old Town)
Landmark
About Gamla Stan (Old Town)
Gamla Stan is Stockholm's 13th-century island core where medieval cobblestone streets wind between ochre and rust-colored buildings that house everything from tiny cafes to the Royal Palace. You'll walk the same narrow passages where merchants traded 700 years ago, the original street grid intact and surprisingly navigable. The Nobel Museum on Stortorget square (SEK 130) covers prize history, while the massive Royal Palace offers state apartments and crown jewels, but the real draw is simply wandering streets like Västerlånggatan and Österlånggatan.
The island feels like a film set, especially early morning when soft light hits the weathered facades and you can hear your footsteps echo off ancient walls. Stortorget's colorful buildings frame the main square where 90 people were executed in 1520, a grim history marked by a simple plaque. Side streets like Prästgatan and Kåkbrinken reveal tiny courtyards and medieval details most tourists rush past. The contrast between tourist-packed main drags and quiet residential corners is striking.
Most guides oversell this as unmissable, but honestly, summer crowds make it claustrophobic by 10 AM and the souvenir shops feel repetitive quickly. The Royal Palace is expensive (SEK 160) and takes hours you could spend exploring for free. Focus on the architecture and atmosphere rather than paid attractions, and don't bother with the touristy restaurants along Västerlånggatan where you'll pay SEK 200+ for mediocre food.
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