Anthony Sattin
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to The Sunday Times

In the hot night, lights from boats showed the course of the Bosphorus, the great waterway that separates Europe from Asia. And to my right, the sultan’s palace of Topkapi, the Byzantine basilica of Aya Sophia, and Sinan’s masterpiece, the Suleymaniye Mosque, were floodlit as though in a show of the city’s historical highlights. But behind me was an entirely different scene.
The top-floor restaurant/bar, named 360 for its views, was cool enough to have been airlifted straight out of east London or New York’s Meatpacking District. There was thick, fresh cherry juice in my vodka, and a fashionable crowd thronged the bar and scattered tables. Beside me was Sultana: neither a raisin, nor the wife of a sultan, but a very Turkish rap star. With her sweet, dark looks and glittering sheath dress, she has earned the anger of the Turkish censor with her lyrics about faltering male libido and tough city life.
Sultana could stand as a symbol of the city’s latest incarnation. Heir to old Stamboul, Constantinople and Byzantium, she is a daughter of the 21st-century city that some, in their rush to see Topkapi’s emeralds and find bazaar bargains, might overlook. But the old Ottoman capital is now one of Europe’s youngest and most exciting cities. And, like Sultana, it is determined to make itself seen and heard.
SIGHTS
Karakoy is the city’s main maritime terminal. The waterside warehouse beside the passenger terminal now houses Istanbul Modern, the city’s gleaming contemporary-art museum, which has become the showcase of a vibrant art scene that peaks in a biennial – catch it this year, from tomorrow until November 4 (www.istfest.org).
You can see more at two of the city’s best spaces – Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center and Galerist, which shows many of Turkey’s leading artists. Both are along the Istiklal Caddesi, formerly the Grand Rue de Pera, the artery of chic in 19th-century Istanbul, now fully revived after a period of decline. The city’s hippest hangout, the 360 Restaurant & Bar, is here beside Galerist. And the steeply sloping street, which begins up at grungy Taksim Square, ends down at Tunel, home to a clutch of bars and restaurants, and to Babylon, the city’s liveliest live-music venue. To take in the new sights of Istiklal, ride the old-fashioned funicular railway, which runs end to end every 10 minutes (7am-9pm). At night, it can turn into a bar crawl.
RESTAURANTS
A gastro revival is happening alongside the style one: 360 is at the forefront, as is the Istanbul Doors group, whose Vogue restaurant is a cross between sushi bar, fashion cafe and Turkish restaurant. Even the Istanbul Modern museum has a cool bar-restaurant where you can eat mezze and salads while watching cargo being loaded onto freighters outside. But if you want modern cuisine, try the delights served up by Mehmet Gurs at his Mikla restaurant, a temple to 21st-century gastro possibilities.
BARS
If the sun is shining, the locals will be out on a terrace, preferably overlooking the Bosphorus. Dulcinea is a favourite, up at the Taksim end of Istiklal Caddesi, where you’re likely to bump into one of the artists showing at the adjoining gallery. Or there’s Anjelique, one of a string of places down by the waterside at Ortakoy, with its eye-catching view.
SHOPPING
Once upon a time, we all wanted to go to the bazaar, but these days, Istiklal Caddesi and the streets of Nisantasi, particularly Tesvikiye Avenue, are the places to shop. Istiklal, the old fashionable street, may not have the cachet, but it does have stores such as Mavi, Turkey’s sought-after denim designer. More chic is Nisantasi. Its main street may be lined with international brands, from Accessorize to Zegna, but here you will also find Beymen, Istanbul’s answer to Harvey Nichols. However, the most fun is to be had searching out the smaller boutiques of local designers. Gonul Paksoy has made a name creating silk and cotton clothes, while a few doors along, Sema Paksoy makes chunky Ottomanesque jewellery. And even the bazaar district is changing – deep in its heart is Dervis, selling a modern take on that very Ottoman item, the hammam towel, now dished up in hand-spun organic cotton, along with extra-virgin olive-oil soaps and other bath essentials.
AND THE NOT SO MODERN
For all its contemporary buzz and new attractions, a visit to Istanbul is unthinkable without seeing at least some of the old. I spent days shuttling between past and present across the Golden Horn on my way to see the ancient hippodrome, the Byzantine mosaics and cisterns, the Orient Express-era Pera Palas Hotel, the Grand Bazaar and its Egyptian counterpart.
The 19th-century French poet Lamartine thought Istanbul’s beauty lay in “its ability to embrace contradictions; ancient and modern, mystical and earthly”. Sitting on the marble balcony of Sultan Abdul Aziz’s summer palace, now the Ciragan Palace’s Tugra Restaurant, tasting a brilliant modern take on the classics of Ottoman cuisine, while looking out over a Bosphorus busy with private yachts and dinner cruises, it was impossible not to agree.
Anthony Sattin travelled as a guest of Kirker Holidays
Getting there: fly to Istanbul with BA (0870 850 9850, www.ba.com) from Heathrow; EasyJet (www.easyjet.com) from Luton; and Turkish Airlines (0844 800 6666, www.thy.com) from Manchester, Stansted and Dublin.
Where to stay: the Ciragan Palace Kempinski (00 90-212 326 4646, www.ciraganpalace.com.tr; doubles from £200) is the grandest hotel along the Bosphorus, with an excellent pool. The 65-room Four Seasons Istanbul (212 638 8200, www.fourseasons.com; doubles from £208), in a former prison up by the Aya Sophia, is one of the city’s best. The A’jia Hotel (216 413 9300, www.ajiahotel.com; doubles from £199), at Kanlica, halfway along the Bosphorus to the Black Sea, is an elegant remake of an old yali (a wooden mansion) gutted by fire. Or try the Empress Zoe (212 518 2504, www.emzoe.com), with a courtyard and spotless doubles from £71.
Tour operators: Kirker Holidays (0870 421 1201, www.kirkerholidays.com) has three nights, B&B, at the Ciragan Palace Kempinski from £974pp, with flights from Heathrow or Manchester, and private transfers. Or try Original Travel (020 7978 7333, www.originaltravel.co.uk) or Savile Tours (020 7923 3230, www.saviletours.com).
Contact details
360: Misir Apartimenti 32, 309 Istiklal Caddesi, Beyoglu (00 90 212-251 1042, www.360istanbul.com)
Anjelique: Salhane Sokak 510, Ortakoy (327 2844) Babylon:Seyhbender Sokak 3, Tunel (292 7368, www.babylon-ist.com)
Dervis: 3335 Keseciler Caddesi, Kapalicarsi (528 7883, www.dervis.com)
Beymen: Abdi Ipekci Caddesi 23/1, Nisantasi (343 0404, www.beymen.com.tr)
Dulcinea: Meselik Sokak 20, Taksim (245 1071, www.dulcinea.org)
Galerist: 311 Istiklal Caddesi, Beyoglu (244 8230) Gonul
Paksoy: Atiye Sokak 3/1,Tesvikiye (236 0209)
Istanbul Modern: Meclisi Mebusan Caddesi, Karakoy (334 7300, www.istanbulmodern.org)
Mavi Jeans: Istiklal Caddesi 117, Beyoglu (282 0424, www.mavijeans.com)
Mikla: Marmara Pera Hotel, Mesrutiyet Caddesi 167/185, Tepebasi (293 5656, www.istanbulyi.com)
Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center:276 Istiklal Caddesi, Beyoglu (293 2361)
Sema Paksoy:Atiye Sokak 9, Tesvikiye (219 3941)
Tugra Restaurant:Ciragan Palace Kempinski Hotel, Ciragan Caddesi 32, Besiktas (259 0394, www.ciraganpalace.com)
Vogue:Spor Caddesi 92, BJK Plaza, A-Blok, Besiktas (227 2545, www.istanbuldoors.com)
What a city ,food and people in Istanbul. My 5th time in Istanbul you know what I love to waking up in the morning with sound from minaret....Love it
Mustafa , London, uk
I could not help but notice that you put the Suleymaniye Mosque right next to the Hagia Sofia in your article. I think you meant to say the Sultanamet Mosque. The Suleymaniye Mosque is on the other side of the Grand bazaar. The entire region is named Sultanamet after that mosque.
Chris Christensen
Amateur Traveler podcast
http://AmateurTraveler.com
Chris Christensen, San Jose, CA
evan - dont knock it until youve seen it europe's coolest capital is spot on for istanbul. also the most beautiful city i have ever seen. watching the sunset overlooking the boshphorous is truly amazing.
clark, cannes, france
"Europeâs coolest capital..." Istanbul, a capital?
cp, London,
Evan from California will have posted his comment based on a recent trip to Istanbul I presume?
Ayse, Istanbul,
Well i am a student in new york and i have been to turkey a year ago and i love turkey .. it is really a great country! i think everyone MUST see this city!!..
Roxy, new york, new york
must be seen! istanbul is absolutely an attractive city full of history, nature and culture.. warm people, scrumptious food and excellent sea view of bosphorus. ...and cheap shopping opportunity for high quality seekers :)
selay, london, uk
Only you Brits could define Istanbul as Europe's coolest capital..... Europe's? And I thought it was an Asian, Muslim country! As displayed so many times in their attitude towards the EU, the Brits have no idea what Europe is.
Daniel, Milan, Italy
Anthony, thank you for your article, I agree that Istanbul is the coolest city in Europe. I just wanted to add one thing, Beymen in Nisantasi is a great shop but it is not Istanbul's answer to Harvey Nichols as there is already a Harvey Nichols in Kanyon shopping center in Istanbul. Thank you.
Name Withheld, London,
I think that "europe's coolest capital" is not even enough to describe this city. "World's Coolest City" is more fitting.
Go there, and not only you can drink and eat first quality drinks and food at reasonable prices in astonishing surroundings dating way back to the romans, but you can enjoy the quality of life of pre-EEC Europe: slow life, no stupid laws, smoking everywhere, plus the service is one of the best in the world, whether you are in a pub enjoying a beer or in a 5-star hotel.
I went there myself, a spaniard, for 15 days and fell so in love with the city, the country and the people there that not only I thouhgt I could live there for the rest of my life, but I HAD lived there for my whole life.
Carlos Eldeloshue Voslargos, London,
Two facts:
Istanbul is an amazing city
Istanbul is not the capital
Name Withheld, New York, USA
I´ve been there last February with my girlfriend, from an islamic country. Even her was suprised the way we were treated in one of the "coolest" restaurants in town just by giving a kiss in the face. Also being assaulted by a taxi driver, said to be a former Fenerbache goalkeeper, is not cool. Four stars hotels seem to have one: uncool as well. Everything else is cool.
AS, Braga, Portugal
Evan, have you ever been to Istanbul ?? As an American, have you ever been out of America ??
I had preconceived ideas about Istanbul (been to Turkey many times on Holiday but never to Istanbul). Went to Istanbul in 2006, it is one of the most amazing places I have ever been to. Just such a heady mixture of East meets West. Lovely culture, architecture, people etc etc. Knowing the Turks as I do, they are a very ambitous, determined and eager to please race. I wouldn't write off what they are capable of achieving.
Mike, Casablanca, Morocco
Lovely article! Personally, I would prefer more of Tarabya and Bosphorus, but Istanbul is so vast, so immense!
Cool? I don't know! I always found Istanbul passionate, strormy and overwhelming! Perhaps with a view over the centuries past I would find Istanbul 'cool' too! To me Istanbul's best description is her most accurate name: Nova Roma. Walking in Aksaray, I think I would soon find myself in Laterano!
And you are right in mentioning Stamboul among the city's historical names; Alexandros Papadiamantis, the greatest Modern Greek author, used that name too at the end of the 19th century - in striking difference with today's Greek nationalists who idiotically insist on 'Constantinopolis'.
Papadiamantis' Xepesmenos Dervisis ('Befallen Dervish' - a wondrous 5-page long novel written in 1896) must have probably crossed 'cool' Stamboul too! Concluding, as Papadiamantis suggests in the novel's last line, that 'Bu Dunya Cark Felek' - this world is a sphere that turns around!
Prof. Dr. M. S. Megalommatis, Cairo, Egypt
Hmmmm...As far as i can remember Istanmbul is not even a capital...So how can it be the coolest capital of Europe dahh...
John, Leeds,
Well, I was there in Summer this year and U got so surprised with the beuty of town. I am impressed with blend of east and west. Nice cafés, shops, Malls and restuarants and last but not the least the weather. Its an amazing place and i reckon everone should visit it ...
noumaan, aarhus, denmark
Having been to Istanbul only twice, both in the last year, this obsession with modern and cool does the city no justice. Clearly there is money now in Turkey, and inevitably there will be modernisation and all that comes with it, but a visitor of culture and intellect will be far too busy to bother with jean shops and vodka bars.
Lester Wilson, London,
Istanbul is not a European city, and it doesn't need to designate itself as such in order to be attractive, does it? I have spent a lot of time there, and there is much more to it than expensive hotels and boutiques. Gag me.
Contrary to how it is portrayed in the western elitist press, Istanbul is a city that is accessible to travelers of all economic levels. Istanbul is one of the most fascinating and historic cities on Earth, and the best parts of it reflect the past, in my opinion. You really should go, and enjoy the famous Turkish hospitality.
Brendan Kilcoyne, Cary, North Carolina USA
i think that "europe's coolest capital" is slightly ambitious, lol.
evan, california, california
nice
nick, newyork,
first of all Thanks to Anthony and for his explaination of the, my own view, best city, Isatnbul. I am myself from Istanbul and i believe that Istanbul will be great city ones ıt's finished. The city is in transition now and as Anthony said it is determined to catch the modern cities in the world and to make itself the best..Istanbul aÅso is inimitable as it has the waterway which seperate Asia from Europe. Everyone shoul see this city, now or later..
kamuran, london,