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GOTHENBURG

How to visit the city of Gothenburg without ever leaving your home

Travel this summer will look different, with restrictions in place globally. The oncoming months won't feature any of the usual large events and festivals within Sweden, and you may even prefer to avoid domestic travel. Here's how you still can visit Sweden's west coast city of Gothenburg without ever stepping outside your front door.

How to visit the city of Gothenburg without ever leaving your home
The empty amusement park Liseberg in the city of Gothenburg. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

A virtual walk through Haga

Haga is one of the oldest and most charming neighbourhoods in Gothenburg. The pedestrian street Haga Nygata is lined with well-preserved houses, many in the characteristic Gothenburg style called landshövdingehus with one floor in brick and the rest in wood. Today they house plenty of independent shops and cafés.

The fika (coffee with something sweet) you will have to cook up yourself – brew a strong cup of coffee, bake or buy several kanelbullar or cinnamon buns – but some of the shopping can be done from your couch. As can the sunny stroll up and down Haga Nygata, simply by visiting Google Maps.

A taste of Gothenburg

Talking about fika – Gothenburg, as, frankly, the rest of Sweden, has a strong coffee tradition. But since the creation of internationally-known roasters Da Matteo, in 2007, specialty coffee has been a growing scene here, providing plenty alternatives to the traditional Swedish bryggkaffe or filter coffee. The Gothenburg roasters have opened up a world of espresso, V60, drip, Aero Press and all the other latest additions to the evolving coffee industry.

And if you can't get to the café, the café can come to you. Da Matteo ships its home-roasted coffee beans and equipment across the world.

Another west coast taste that can't be left out of the Gothenburg experience is the räkmacka or shrimp sandwich, made with rye bread, fresh sea shrimps, mayonnaise and a soft-boiled egg. A popular place to buy seafood in Gothenburg is the Feskekôrka, or Fish Church, usually selling the catch of the day. But, conveniently, fresh shrimps can be bought throughout Sweden and if you're in Sweden can even be ordered online.


Järntorget in Gothenburg. Photo: Magnus Hjalmarson Neideman/TT

Experience the city with a book

What could be a better escape in these times than letting yourself be transported to another location and era through a book? There is plenty of untranslated Swedish literature that has Gothenburg as its main stage, if improving your language skills has been on your corona to-do-list.

If not, Simon and the oaks (1985) by Marianne Fredriksson is one beautiful example of a book, translated into English, and set in the Gothenburg of the mid-20th century. The book follows the Swedish man Simon Larsson throughout his childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. Larsson grows up with his adoptive, working-class parents, Karin and Erik. He befriends a wealthy classmate, Isaak Lentov, who has been forced to flee Nazi-Germany with his family. After Isaak's mother's illness requires that she stay in a mental institution, Isaak begins to spend more and more time with Simon's mother, who soon becomes a mother figure.

If you're more of a Nordic Noir type of person, you can try your luck with the works of Åke Edwardson. Edwardson is a Swedish author of detective fiction, and was previously a lecturer in journalism at Gothenburg University, indeed the city where many of his Inspector Winter novels are set. His first novel to be translated into English was Sun and Shadow, in 2005. The second, Never End, followed in 2006.

Cinematic Gothenburg

Gothenburg has not only been the stage to a number of novels, but, luckily, also to a multitude of series and films. One if the most recent and popular examples is the series 'Vår tid är nu', which is available on Netflix under the name 'Restaurant'.

Wait, isn't it set in Stockholm? Well, yes, or at least it pretends to be. The majority of the scenes were actually filmed in Sweden's second-largest city. Many of the interiors can been found in Haga, the neighbourhood described above. Other scenes of this post-war drama have been shot at, for example, the university library built in 1900, on Vasagatan, in the former working-class quarters of Majorna, in the castle of Nääs, in Änggården next to the Botanical gardens, at Hôtel Eggers opposite the central train station, and in many other hidden and less-hidden corners of Gothenburg.

If, again, you are looking for more suspense, give the Johan Falk films a try. The fictitious policeman can be seen chasing criminals through the city's streets, having a shootout in the shopping mall Nordstan and getting a nightcap in bar Notch on Viktoriagatan.


Gothenburg's central station. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

Sounds of the city

As most concerts and other large events have been cancelled, venues and artists have come up with ways to transport music, operas, dance and theatre to your living room. Gothenburg's concert hall, for example, is live-streaming its performances, providing digital visitors with a broad selection of classical and modern pieces by, for example, the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra.

Another not-to-miss sound is the voice of, arguably, Gothenburg's most famous singer-songwriter Håkan Hellström, who, through his songs, takes you through both his life and the city. Here you'll find a list of recommended tunes, in Swedish.

But, with Gothenburg's reputation of being one of the greenest cities in the world, with inhabitants having easy access to large parks, forests, lakes, the northern and southern archipelagos and wide ocean views, you might want to transport yourself to the country's west coast through a nature symphony.

YouTube and Spotify give access to ocean breaks and forest sounds, but if you want something more local and spring-like, try Fågelpodden, a night's worth of Swedish bird song as heard throughout Sweden, featuring robins, blackbirds and many other native and migrating species.

Night in the museum

Most museums in Gothenburg are still open to the public, which also means that not all of them have chosen to move their exhibitions online. Having said that: some actually did so anyway, enabling you to digitally wander these museums day and night from the comfort of your home.

A good example is Göteborgs Konstmuseum, which has digitalised some of its wonderful temporary and permanent exhibitions. Experience, for example, the contemporary '148 Works' by the Dane Trine Søndergaard. If you'd rather export yourself to the Renaissance and Baroque era, digitally visit Tryckt, an exhibition presenting prints from masters like Albrecht Dürer, Rembrandt van Rijn and Marcantonio Raimondi.

The adjacent Hasselblad Center even has digital guided tours of its new (contemporary art) exhibition, Feast for the eyes.

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TRAVEL NEWS

German train strike wave to end following new labour agreement

Germany's Deutsche Bahn rail operator and the GDL train drivers' union have reached a deal in a wage dispute that has caused months of crippling strikes in the country, the union said.

German train strike wave to end following new labour agreement

“The German Train Drivers’ Union (GDL) and Deutsche Bahn have reached a wage agreement,” GDL said in a statement.

Further details will be announced in a press conference on Tuesday, the union said. A spokesman for Deutsche Bahn also confirmed that an agreement had been reached.

Train drivers have walked out six times since November, causing disruption for huge numbers of passengers.

The strikes have often lasted for several days and have also caused disruption to freight traffic, with the most recent walkout in mid-March.

In late January, rail traffic was paralysed for five days on the national network in one of the longest strikes in Deutsche Bahn’s history.

READ ALSO: Why are German train drivers launching more strike action?

Europe’s largest economy has faced industrial action for months as workers and management across multiple sectors wrestle over terms amid high inflation and weak business activity.

The strikes have exacerbated an already gloomy economic picture, with the German economy shrinking 0.3 percent across the whole of last year.

What we know about the new offer so far

Through the new agreement, there will be optional reduction of a work week to 36 hours at the start of 2027, 35.5 hours from 2028 and then 35 hours from 2029. For the last three stages, employees must notify their employer themselves if they wish to take advantage of the reduction steps.

However, they can also opt to work the same or more hours – up to 40 hours per week are possible in under the new “optional model”.

“One thing is clear: if you work more, you get more money,” said Deutsche Bahn spokesperson Martin Seiler. Accordingly, employees will receive 2.7 percent more pay for each additional or unchanged working hour.

According to Deutsche Bahn, other parts of the agreement included a pay increase of 420 per month in two stages, a tax and duty-free inflation adjustment bonus of 2,850 and a term of 26 months.

Growing pressure

Last year’s walkouts cost Deutsche Bahn some 200 million, according to estimates by the operator, which overall recorded a net loss for 2023 of 2.35 billion.

Germany has historically been among the countries in Europe where workers went on strike the least.

But since the end of 2022, the country has seen growing labour unrest, while real wages have fallen by four percent since the start of the war in Ukraine.

German airline Lufthansa is also locked in wage disputes with ground staff and cabin crew.

Several strikes have severely disrupted the group’s business in recent weeks and will weigh on first-quarter results, according to the group’s management.

Airport security staff have also staged several walkouts since January.

Some politicians have called for Germany to put in place rules to restrict critical infrastructure like rail transport from industrial action.

But Chancellor Olaf Scholz has rejected the calls, arguing that “the right to strike is written in the constitution… and that is a democratic right for which unions and workers have fought”.

The strikes have piled growing pressure on the coalition government between Scholz’s Social Democrats, the Greens and the pro-business FDP, which has scored dismally in recent opinion polls.

The far-right AfD has been enjoying a boost in popularity amid the unrest with elections in three key former East German states due to take place later this year.

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