From paddleboarding to shabby-chic bars, a Reuters journalist shares her favorite ways to spend downtime in Hungary’s capital.
Krisztina Than, deputy bureau chief for Central and Eastern Europe, writes our first City Memo, a new feature that gives you the inside view on what to do in the most interesting places around the world.
My journalism career began almost by accident: I grew up in a small town in western Hungary and moved to Budapest, the capital, for university in 1987, just a few years before the fall of the communist regime. After returning from studying abroad in the U.S. and Scotland, I dropped copies of my CV in the mailboxes of 10 companies along an office block in downtown Budapest. One of them was Reuters.
The then-bureau chief hired me as a translator. I later moved to reporting. Recently, as deputy bureau chief for Central and Eastern Europe, I have covered Hungary’s plans to ratify Sweden’s NATO bid, the resignation of our former president over a sex-abuse case pardon, and Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s increasing isolation.
When people ask me how locals spend their downtime in Budapest, here’s what I tell them:
Paddling the Danube: For me, the defining feature of Budapest is the Danube, which cuts between hilly Buda and the flatter Pest side. In the summer, it’s possible to tour the river by kayak or even on a stand-up paddleboard, which has become increasingly popular in the last three or four years.
Taking a bath: With its restored Bauhaus-style buildings on Margaret Island in the middle of the Danube, the Palatinus Bath is popular with locals, especially in the summer. There are also many Turkish baths and thermal spas in the Hungarian capital. The Szechenyi Bath is famous for its beautiful architecture and summer night mass pool parties, but I enjoy it most on dark winter evenings, sitting in the heated pools with snowflakes falling on my head.