Day 1 - Arriving in Stockholm

After another weather delay we’re finally in Stockholm.

8.5 hours later and we’re almost here
So lush
Never knew water was environmentally friendly
 
Customs here were no joke. Every person had to show documentation where they were going, how long and a return flight booked. If you didn’t have the three you weren’t getting in. Someone arrived and didn’t have internet service to pull things up to show the agent. Lesson learned – print everything for your trip!

For being an international airport it’s actually quite small
No need for a taxi, take the train
Just keep looking for the yellow signs…
And you are eventually in the station
114 mph – total commute time is 19 min
Welcome to the main downtown train station
Maybe the prettiest McD’s (outside outside of Paris)
And welcome to my hotel. A block from the station and adjacent to the church
The room won’t be ready for a few hours to let’s go explore, starting with that church
The Church of Saint Clare. Not bad for something built in 1572

   

The town has a few of these pedestrian corridors. Makes it great to window shop without fear of cars

So much architectural detail in the most generic of buildings

 

And so we reach the Royal Palace. Home to the royal family since the 13th century. It was torn down or burned down a few times but this building has existed as-is since 1770. While it was to be the home to the royal family after being rebuilt in 1770 the family never came back, choosing instead their new home (we’ll visit there at the end of the trip)

Look a little like something like Versailles? It’s not by chance
When rebuild the designer copied some of the French rococo design elements
Coming to the palace by horse and carriage? Pull up into the reviving hall and be welcomed by the king

 

Before we go into the royal home first we stop and check out their 500 year celebration exhibit

Not bad for being made from paper
Styles of the day (though not of paper)
Who didn’t have a basic tapestry hanging over their bed
From 1626 – the detail in mind blowing
1690 – made of tortoiseshell, ebony and ivory
Did I mention they “borrowed” ideas from Versailles?
Costumes from an opera in 1786
Imagine doing all the applique by hand
When the world is at your disposal you make a chandler to remind you it’s yours
“New” piece – from 1890s
Relief on ebony
Stairs to the bedrooms
1700s idea of central heat in a room
What the palace looked like before the fire of 1700’s
Post-rebuild, current palace
Literally copied from the hall of mirrors in Versailles
Why have real plants that can wilt and die
Instead, get gold-plated, wilted leaves
The Swedes are a twisted group. They have no problem highlighting their past with colorful stories
The Riddarholmen church. While mostly original from 1290s the black spire was put on it in 1830s after a fire burned the original wood one
Bathrooms here take smartphone payments. It’s a no-cash country
The original “old city”. More on this in the next post
The square also is home for the Nobel museum
So many open parks
TFI Friday’s in the center of this beautiful park

Room is finally ready. I must say, the view is not terrible.

11pm. After walking 8.2 miles today I’m calling it quits. A quick view of the ‘sunset’ over all of Stockholm. This time of year it never gets dark and the sun will be fully up at 2:30am

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