a distorting mirror
Transcription
a distorting mirror
FEBRUARY 2011 inflight magazine Oulu: Unearthing an Arctic treasure Copenhagen: A Love story The secret world of fashion industry Brussels a distorting mirror YOUR FREE COPY + FREE INSIDE CONTENTS / FEBRUARY Oulu: find out about the Arctic treasure in page 42 4 Editorial Staff Chief Editor: llze Pole e: [email protected] Editor Ieva Nora Fīrere e: [email protected] Translator, copyeditor and reviser: Kārlis Roberts Freibergs Design: Marika Štrāle Layout: Inta Kraukle Cover: Alamy 6 8 10 14 18 20 22 Baltic Outlook is published by SIA Frank’s House Stabu 17, Riga, LV 1011, Latvia ph: +37167293970 w: frankshouse.lv e: [email protected] Director: Eva Dandzberga e: [email protected] Advertising managers: Indra Indraše e: [email protected] m: +37129496966 Lelde Vikmane e: [email protected] m: +37129487700 Opinions expressed in this magazine are those of the authors and persons interviewed and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editors, Frank’s House, SIA. All rights reserved. No part of this magazine may be reproduced in any form without written permission of the publisher. Printed in UAB Lietuvos Rytas, Lithuania, phone +371 29 42 69 61 24 26 34 40 42 54 60 62 66 68 77 Thought The travels of unofficial ambassadors City Icons Bridges. St.Petersburg Airport Moscow, Domodedovo airport Agenda February 2011 Moscow Five places in one day Design Signs of spring Traveler A Secret world of the fashion industry. Agnese Kleina Interview DINERSart – handmade souvenirs Review Latest books, movies and CDs Your next destination Brussels. A Distorting mirror Interview Jon Webster. Reflections of a music veteran Live Riga Riga Jams Travel Oulu: Unearthing an Arctic treasure Travel Copenhagen: A Love Story 15 sheep Nagorno-Karabakh Region, Azerbaijan Cars Bentley Continental GS and a small dose of optimism from Detroit Gadgets New toys for the New Year Dining – Kaļķu vārti, Blue Cow, 1221 in Riga and A place where August never ends in Moscow airBaltic news BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 1 A message from the CEO Bertolt Flick, CEO airBaltic Dear Passenger, Isn’t it time to get away for a while – just a week or two, to leave behind the darkness of the grim Northern winter, its coldness creeping up your back, to move from windbeaten streets and icy sidewalks to a warm beach or sunny alpine slope?! airBaltic gives you the opportunity to do both. This time of the year, the countries of the Middle East are veritable oasis for the sun-seeking Northerner. Excellent resorts at affordable prices await you in Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, Turkey and Egypt, offering you oriental hospitality in exciting surroundings. In addition to just relaxing under a palm tree, have you ever done some deep-sea diving in the Red Sea? Or driven with a jeep over the rolling dunes of a sunbleached desert? Or visited a desert camp in the middle of the night, overwhelmed by the splendour of myriads of stars overhead? No?! The Middle East, the cradle of our civilization, also presents other attractions. Take the caves of Petra in Jordan, for example, or the pyramids outside Cairo in Egypt, or the magnificent Hagia Sophia in Istanbul – each one of these place is well worth a visit. And then we have Jerusalem, Balbeck, Massada, the Dead Sea, Luxor... Each winter, the Alpine mountains, be it in Austria, Switzerland, Italy or France, attract a multitude of tourists from near and far. Moving up by cable-car to altitudes close to 4.000 metres, taking in the solitude of wind-swept slopes covered by pristine snow, drinking warm Glühwein on sunny verandas, picking out warm pieces of cheese from kettles of fondue, rushing down steep slopes on skis or snowboards, listening to the tunes of brass bands or organs in a village church ... tourism in the Alps is getting value for money. And yes, there are also the mountains, close by and yet so far apart, wild and isolated, letting your thoughts wander, reflect on life’s meaning. airBaltic takes you to Zürich, München, and Wien, all three destinations close to Alpine resorts. airBaltic in cooperation with the International Air Traffic Association (IATA) has opened a Regional Training Centre for aviation professionals in Riga. IATA, having 230 airlines as members, represents the airline industry worldwide. airBaltic is proud to have been chosen as IATA’s partner, becoming responsible IATA sales agent not only for Latvia but also for Finland, Sweden, Poland, and Slovakia. Training sessions will start this spring, with over 40 different courses being offered during the course of the year ranging from Dangerous Goods to Airline Contract Law. BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 3 DETAILS / THOUGHT Text by Ivonna Veiherte, art exhibition organizer and gallery owner, Ivonnas Veihertes galerija The travels of unofficial ambassadors About a year ago, I read in the news that airBaltic had brought a self–portrait by Leonardo da Vinci, the so–called Lucanian Portrait, from Rome to Riga and then on to an exhibition in Tallinn. At that time, I thought, how did that famous painting get “brought” to Tallinn? As a piece of cargo? As a passenger with its own seat? In a special package or travel bag? Perhaps in some other manner? What were the owners’ requirements regarding insurance, humidity and temperature control? Recently, my gallery took part in an art forum in India. It was only then that I gained a sense of what is involved in transporting art works “in bulk” – starting with the How did it get “brought”? As a piece of cargo? As a passenger with its own seat? formalities that need to be carried out and continuing with the works’ careful packaging before they are shipped off. One of the most important aspects is finding a reputable and competent transport company that understands the requirements of shipping fragile and unique masterpieces. In truth, those who are entrusted with transporting such works should not be hardened warriors with nerves of steel, but rather sensitive art aficionados who are obsessed with the responsibility of their task. Even if a work happens to be insured, the complicated insurance systems rarely lead to losses being fully covered for such cases when a painting has been wrapped in plastic, for example, and during a months– long voyage at sea, has accidentally suffered damages as a result of exposure to humidity. Maintaining the proper temperature and humidity level is crucial if one opts to send a work of art on a long trip by ship, for example. Fortunately, there are not too many stories about paintings and other oeuvres being damaged in this manner. I heard of one case where a painting was so large that it didn’t fit through the door of a regular airliner’s cargo hold. The shippers had to find another plane that was big enough to carry the monumental work and fly it to its destination. There have also been times when a painting’s fragile, ornate picture frame has been dismantled by the exhibition organizer and taken onto the plane as hand luggage, with a special request to the stewards to stow it somewhere in the back where it doesn’t bother anybody. Glass objects are sometimes so fragile that they practically have to cradled in the carrier’s hands. Clearly art works should travel from country to country and from continent to continent, for that is how they can best fulfil their ultimate calling, which is to unite the people of the world. When I attend international art forums or meet privately with representatives of other art institutions, I usually feel as if I am representing not only my art gallery or Latvian art, but my country as a whole. I feel like an unofficial ambassador, especially if am in a far away land where Latvia’s name is hardly mentioned. Culture really does transcend language and other barriers; it brings people of different nationalities closer together. For this reason, works of art really do need to be incessantly packaged and transported from one place to the other. They need to be displayed for the whole world to see! BO DETAILS / CITY ICONS / ST. PETERSBURG Bridges - the backbone of St. Petersburg Fly to St. Petersburg with airBaltic from €59 TEXT By Sergei Timofeyev | Photo TASS St. Petersburg claims to have more bridges navigate the city’s waterways with boats and than any other city in the world – even more ferries instead. than Venice, Stockholm and Amsterdam. However, by the mid 19th century, over 130 bridges had been built. Today, the city Like spinal columns, these structures has more than 500 water-spanning structures link the various districts of the city into a made of various materials, including single whole. The bridges are, in fact, the genuine backbone of The central wood, cast iron, metal, stone, concrete and even aluminium. The St. Petersburg. spans of bridges have been constructed A number of them also serve as the palace in various styles, reflecting the drawbridges, which means that bridge are changing architectural trends of the one would do well to take note of regularly past centuries. their scheduled operations. Also known as bascule bridges, they raised over Initially, St. Petersburg’s bridges were a beehive of social activity, as are usually drawn up late at night, the Neva th after 1 a.m., to let ships pass River to let noted by one 19 century historian: “The lower classes of society in through. If you get carried away ships pass St. Petersburg are very fond of the with your partying or otherwise through bridges. They can spend days on lose track of time, then you may end chatting with one another and end up being stranded where you observing the barges pass by. For Russians, are until the early morning hours. bridges are much the same as forums were Since the foundation of St. Petersburg over for the Romans.” 300 years ago, a great deal of bridges have Although nowadays, the city’s bridges been built, although Tsar Peter the Great, no longer serve as social meeting places, the city’s founder, frowned heavily upon they have become an enduring symbol of their use – encouraging local residents to 6 / AIRBALTIC.COM St. Petersburg. The most famous of these is the Palace Bridge (Dvortsoviy Most), whose two central spans are regularly raised over the Neva River to let ships pass through. Linking the city centre with Vasily Island (Vasilevskiy Ostrov), it was inaugurated in 1916, at the height of the First World War. Two months later, the Russian Empire was no more – a somewhat ironic beginning for a bridge that was built to link the tsar’s Winter Palace with the residential and working-class districts of the city. The Palace Bridge’s unique drawing mechanism consists of powerful motors, monumental gears and thousand-tonne counterweights, which raise two spans that weigh about 700 tonnes. Traffic across the bridge is suspended each night at about 1:25 a.m., after which the central spans are drawn up at a 45-degree angle. The spans are lowered again at 4:50 a.m. and motor traffic resumes at 04:55, bearing cars with night revellers returning home for a welldeserved rest, as well as dutiful early risers heading to their workplaces. BO DETAILS / AIRPORT Fly to Moscow Domodedovo and Sheremetyevo with airBaltic from €59 Moscow’s Domodedovo Airport is the largest airport not only in Russia, but in all of Eastern Europe. Last year, Domodedovo’s volume of passenger traffic increased by nearly 20 percent compared to the year before, with more than 22 million people being served. However, Domodedovo’s large size and increasing business volume are only two aspects of an extremely versatile airport. Domodedovo – a growing hub in Eastern Europe text By Nikita Boldin | Photo Courtesy of Domodedovo airport 8 / AIRBALTIC.COM Domodedovo Airport is rapidly nearing its ambition Russia that is certified to service that type of aircraft. to serve as a modern traffic hub for the transfer of Serving about 60 000 passengers per day, Domodedovo passengers, as well as for cargo operations between the has drawn up an ambitious development plan for the Eurasian and Asia-Pacific regions. Already today, nearly period up to 2020. This plan includes the construction 80 airlines are offering scheduled flights of a third runway, the further extension to Domodedovo, including 36 foreign, of the airport’s passenger terminal, the If you are 29 Russian and 12 carriers from the reconstruction of existing facilities and the wondering CIS countries. construction of new ones. what souvenir Domodedovo’s passenger lounge features In addition to the steady growth in its to bring business operations, Domodedovo has a approximately 150 shops, cafés and home from remarkable configuration that makes it restaurants, which offer Russian, Japanese, unique among airports. It is the only airport Italian, Indian and Uzbek cuisine. If you are Russia, then in Russia to be equipped with two parallel wondering what souvenir to bring home head to the runways that are positioned two kilometres from Russia, then head to the Bosco Sport Bosco Sport apart, thus making it possible to operate shop – the official outfitter of the Russian shop and them simultaneously, yet independently Olympic team – and get yourself a lovely get yourself Cheburashka. The funny, hairy little creature from each other. a lovely The airport is certified to accept nearly has big ears and a big heart. Cheburashka Cheburashka 200 types of aircraft, including passenger is an immensely popular character in airliners and cargo super giants. In 2009, Russian children’s literature and animated Domodedovo’s high-tech infrastructure allowed it to films. He has quite a cult following and was chosen as accommodate the Airbus A380, which is the world’s a guardian angel and mascot of the Russian Olympic largest passenger airliner, for the first time in Russia. team. You will be sure to take an immediate liking to At this time, Domodedovo remains the only airport in this loveable toy. BO Attirance spreads its global reach Nature never fails to impress us with its magnificent splendour, and to hearten us with its diversity of colour, shapes and smells. Each of us harbours an inner desire to experience the beauty and majesty of nature in its full glory. Natural beauty is genuinely uplifting, exuding a palpable joie de vivre and positive energy. Address: Maskavas iela 332b, Riga, LV1036, Latvia Telephone: (+371) 67139044 E-mail: [email protected] www.attirance.com Inspired by nature Attirance draws the best from the beauty and bounty of nature, presenting a superior line of plant oils, creams, flower extracts and refreshing aromatic oils. Since its foundation seven years ago, Attirance has created more than 260 different quality products, each with its unique shade of colour, pleasant aroma and attractive design, not to mention its beneficial effects on the mind and body. Attirance products can now be purchased in more than 50 different countries worldwide and will soon be conveniently available through the company’s online store. Attirance seeks franchise partners For the past three years, Attirance has been operating in accordance with a franchise business concept and is seeking master franchise partners for the opening of new Attirance stores in various different countries. Attirance’s franchise business system ensures successful sales of its high quality products, beneficial terms for Attirance’s partners, along with a helpful support system, attentive staff training and guaranteed profit-making opportunities within a relatively short period of time. Attirance has worked out a programme that has proven itself on a daily basis and that has helped company’s partners develop successful businesses. Attirance welcomes the opportunity to expand the network of mutually beneficial partnerships. DETAILS / LOCAL AGENDA FEBRUARY / 2011 Publicity photos Linda Leen: Concert of My Best Songs, Arena Riga, Riga / February 14, 20:00 © Camilo Echeverri Linda Leen is Latvia’s stage chameleon. Over the course of her ten-year career, she has expressed herself in various musical genres, starting with a debut in pop music and continuing with cabaret, academic, jazz and Etoile Ballet Gala, Latvian National Opera, Riga / February 21, 19:00 This gala event at the Latvian National Opera presents a rare opportunity to see world class dance stars from various ballet theatres perform on a single stage. Among them will be Isabelle Kylie Minogue: Aphrodite – Les Folies Tour 2011, Arena Riga, Riga / February 25 During a singing career that has spanned more than two decades, Australian pop superstar Kylie Minogue has sold more than 68 million recordings. She has been among the most played music artists on British radio stations and has released more than 50 singles, many of which are now known as international hit classics. Minogue’s new Les Folies Tour promises to be her grandest and most impressive to date. The singer will kick off a 41-concert itinerary in Denmark on February 19, in support of her latest album Aphrodite, which has already made the top of the charts in the UK. Riga will be Minogue’s fourth stop on an extended journey that will take her all across Europe, Asia and North America. “The reaction to Aphrodite has been absolutely incredible and has inspired me and my creative team to develop a new show that will take all of us on a euphoric journey of joy, excitement and glamour,” said Minogue last fall, shortly before the tickets to her concert tour went on sale. www.kylie.com 10 / AIRBALTIC.COM acoustic programmes, including performances with the country’s leading symphony orchestras. The Valentine’s Day Concert of My Best Songs has all the indications of being an epic show, featuring tunes that have spanned Leen’s entire professional career, and with the participation of the Latvian National Opera’s symphony orchestra. During the concert, Leen will also sing a number of previously unreleased songs, as well as duets from her album Divi (Two) with guest artists Alain Clark, Goran Gora, Arnis Mednis and Kārlis Lācis. As Linda Leen stated in the previous issue of Baltic Outlook: “I will try to make sure that this Valentine’s Day is an extra special occasion.” Tickets can be purchased through www.bilesuparadize.lv Ciaravola and Karl Paquette of the Paris Grand Opera Etoile, Lali Kandelaki of the Tbilisi Opera and Ballet Theatre, Alexander Katsapov and Zuzana imáková of the Prague National Theatre, principal dancer Marian Walter, prima ballerina Iana Salenko and soloist Dinu Tamazlacaru of the Berlin Opera, as well as Ulvi Azizov, a guest performer at venues in Prague, Bratislava, Kiev and Baku. The programme will feature such classical ballet pearls as pas de deux from Giselle, Don Quixote, Cinzano and Grand pas classique, as well as contemporary works by such top rated choreographers as John Neumeier, Jiří Kylián, Ben van Cauwenbergh and Levente Bajári. Tickets can be purchased through www.bilesuparadize.lv Kristina Orbakaite, Nokia Concert Hall, Tallinn / February 13, 19:00 Popularly known as the Princess of the Russian Stage, singer and actress Kristina Orbakaite has consistently shown a passionate devotion to her craft. It is possible that she has inherited her strict work ethic from her mother, the legendary pop diva Alla Pugachova. Orbakaite has 13 album releases to her name, along with numerous concert tours and several movie roles. February will see Orbakaite on a concert tour that will take her through the three Baltic countries, including Tallinn, Estonia, and Russia. www.kristinaorbakaite.com DETAILS / LOCAL AGENDA Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 8, conducted by Mariss Jansons, Concertgebouw, Large Hall, Amsterdam / March 4 and 6 The world class acoustics at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam are so advanced that one can hear even the quietest whisper. On March 4 and 6, the celebrated Latvian conductor Mariss Jansons Saxophonia international saxophone music festival, Riga / From February 11-20 This year’s opening concert will be hosted by the renowned Sinfonietta Riga orchestra, which will perform oeuvres by Philip Glass, Bob Mintzer, Frank Martin, and Kurt Weill on February 11 at the Large Guild Hall (Lielā ģilde). Other notable participants include the Latvija choir, the Riga Saxophone Quartet, the Rolf Erik Nystrom Trio and the Deniss Paškevics Trio. The closing concert on February 20 at the Large Guild Hall is not to be missed, with a performance by legendary American jazz saxophonist Joshua Redman, Reuben Rogers (bass), Gregory Hutchinson (percussion). www.saxophonia.lv Mariss Jansons will conduct a performance of Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 8, with the participation of the renowned Latvija choir from Riga, the Royal Concertgebouw orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Choir, the Netherlands Radio Choir and a number of outstanding soloists. This all star concert is sure to be one of the main musical events of the winter season in Amsterdam. www.concertgebouw.nl DETAILS / AGENDA In association with www.anothertravelguide.com Publicity photos and courtesy of Design Hotels, Carolina Nitsch Contemporary Art and Hauser & Wirth Paris Eastern Women Seen by Christian Lacroix, Musée du Quai Branly / From February 8 to May 15 Also called an ode to women from the East, this exhibition is currently being held at the Musée du Quai Branly, which specializes in the © Louise Bourgeois Trust and Tracey Emin London Louise Bourgeois, Tracey Emin: Do Not Abandon Me, Hauser & Wirth London / From February 18 to March 12 Modern art aficionados will be able to view 16 drawings that were jointly created by controversial British contemporary artist Tracey Emin (b. 1963) and legendary FrenchAmerican artist and sculptor Louise Bourgeois, who died at the age of 98 in May of 2010. The objects, printed with archival dyes on cloth, present an intimate message about identity, sexuality and loss, themes that have been at the forefront of works by these two artists. The oeuvres date from the last two years of collaboration between both women. In the first stage of their joint 12 / AIRBALTIC.COM Fly to London with airBaltic from €20 project, Louise Bourgeois painted slightly diffuse female and male torsos with gouache paints on paper. The works were printed onto cloth and sent to Tracey Emin, who completed them with lines and texts, and then reprinted them at a studio in Manhattan. Emin is credited as the author of this series, while Bourgeois is listed as the initiator. The artists first met only three years ago, a fact that Bourgeois regretted, having wished that they could have begun their collaboration earlier. Bourgeois was pleased with the final result, saying that the drawings appeared to have been crafted by the hands of a single artist, therefore looking very natural. Vienna The Brilliance of an Era. Art Nouveau Jewellery from Europe, Leopold Museum / From February 25 to June 20 15 Old Bond Street www.hauserwirth.com This interesting display at the Leopold Museum in Vienna is one of the largest ever to be devoted to Art Nouveau jewellery. Most of the 220 exhibit pieces have been provided Fly to Paris with airBaltic from €49 “dialogue of cultures.” The showing presents a colourful display of 150 traditional folk costumes and other attributes from various part of the Middle East, including northern Syria and the Sinai Peninsula. The curator is French fashion designer Christian Lacroix, who offers a unique perspective of clothing as a form of art, highlighting such details as needlework, ornaments, colour and texture. The exhibition begins with a 13th-century dress once worn by a small girl and found at an archaeological excavation site in Lebanon. Like a genuine fashion show, it ends with five brightly embroidered white costumes. The presentation reveals an array of surprising facts that are little known to Westerners, such as the incredibly lavish and diverse wardrobe worn by women of the nomadic desert Bedouin tribe. 37, quai Branly 75007 www.quaibranly.fr Fly to Vienna with airBaltic from €49 by the Hessian National Museum in Darmstadt, which owns an impressive collection of Art Nouveau items fashioned by Dutch royal jeweller Karel A. Citroen. The highlight of the show is a brooch crafted for French actress Sarah Bernhardt, with a design based on sketches by Czech artist Alfons Mucha. The exhibition concentrates on the evolution of Art Nouveau jewellerymaking in Vienna, which bears a particular signature that distinguishes it from jewellery made in other parts of Europe during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1930, a group of visual artists named Wiener Werkstätte propounded the view that jewellery-making as an art form should not focus on flashiness and wealth, but rather on the personality of its intended wearer. Therefore, instead of gold and diamonds, the jewellers of this art community worked with semi-precious stones and silver, stating that the main value in a piece of jewellery lay in its design and execution. MuseumsQuartier Wien 1070 Vienna, Museumsplatz www.leopoldmuseum.org DETAILS / AGENDA Stockholm Nobis Hotel The owners of the recently opened Nobis Hotel in Stockholm hope that it will soon become a modern-day landmark of the city. Located on Norrmalmstorg Square, this sixstorey design hotel has 201 rooms spread out among two historical stone buildings from the late 19th century. Indeed, the entire district consists of stone edifices that sprung up in this part of Stockholm during Sweden’s Industrial Revolution. The hotel’s interior drew its inspiration from the city’s hazy and subdued winter light, being designed by the Swedish architect and design company Claesson Fly to Stockholm with airBaltic from €39 Koivisto Rune. No colour contrasts or conspicuous luxury details here, only peaceful comfort brought on by such natural materials as wood, wool, leather and stone – which acquire an additional patina with age. The reserved elegance of the hotel’s brown, greyish, beige and white tones is mixed with a bit of technological mischief. For example, guests have the option of checking in with their cellular phones, when they can then use to unlock the door to their room. Norrmalmstorg 2-4, Box 1616 111 86 Stockholm www.designhotels.com/nobis_hotel Self Portrait 1975, © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundatio Berlin Robert Mapplethorpe: Retrospective, C/O Berlin / Until March 27 This retrospective in Berlin presents 187 works by American photographer Robert Mapplethorpe (1946-1989), featuring his early Polaroids and later still-lifes, as well portraits of Andy Warhol, Patti Smith and other celebrities, not to mention his legendary male nudes. The scandals associated with Mapplethorpe’s explicit and Fly to Berlin with airBaltic from €39 homoerotic content are only secondary, with the emphasis in this exhibition placed on his adept compositions and technical perfection. Mapplethorpe’s flawless technique and seemingly detached view of his subjects masked the artist’s turbulent, inner passions. He died prematurely of complications brought on by AIDS at the age of 42. Oranienburger Straße 35/36 www.co-berlin.com DETAILS / MOSCOW TEXT By Nikita Boldin | Illustration by Inga Briede Moscow. Five places in one day > 1 Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow the Swedish Acne-brand uniforms worn by the / Moscow House of Photography waitstaff are practically beyond reproach. Ulitsa Ostozhenka 16 | Metro station: Kropotkinskaya www.mdf.ru > 3 Café Pushkin Since opening its doors 15 years ago, the Moscow House of Photography has grown to become Russia’s largest museum of photographic art. To date, it has amassed 80 000 original film negatives and positive prints in its continually growing collection. Since the end of 2010 the museum is situated in a new building, sharing it with Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow. > 2 Strelka bar Bersenevskaya Naberezhnaya 14, Building No. 5a Metro stations: Borovitskaya; Polyanka www.strelkainstitute.com The Strelka bar is one of the most pleasant places to go out for a drink in the Russian capital, offering a stupendous view of the Moscow River and Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. Although Strelka opened its doors only recently, it has already earned a hardcore following of regulars, who seem to have accorded it an almost cult-like status. The interior, the atmosphere, the cuisine and even 14 / AIRBALTIC.COM Tverskoy Boulevard 26a | Metro station: Pushkinskaya www.cafe-pushkin.ru Pushkin is Moscow’s Number 1 restaurant. Even its conversion into a popular tourist destination has not managed to spoil the fact that Pushkin still offers the best Russian cuisine in the city, as well as outstanding service. If you don’t feel like dining in the restaurant, then you can step into the adjacent café and pastry shop, which offers a variety of homemade sweets and pastries, as well as the opportunity to order dishes from the restaurant’s menu. Try the sauerkraut soup, which is delicious at any time of day. > 4 Shop & Bar Denis Simachev Stoleshnikov Pereulok 12, Building No. 2 Metro stations: Pushkinskaya; Teatralnaya www.denissimachev.ru Stoleshnikov pereulok is Moscow’s equivalent of Bond Street in London. Here one will find such Western luxury brands as Chanel, Christian Louboutin, Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton and many more. However, in the early 2000s, successful designer Denis Simachev added a new touch by setting up a shop and bar/club, where one can purchase “Russian exotica.” It was Simachev who came up with the idea to manufacture a T-shirt bearing the portrait of Vladimir Putin (which one can purchase for a mere 13 600 RUR or 340 EUR). The bar serves daytime meals and becomes a nightclub during the evening hours. Be prepared for face control at the entry on weekends. > 5 Bolshoi Theatre Teatralnaya Ploschyad 1 | Metro stations: Okhotniy Ryad, Teatralnaya | www.bolshoi.ru This fall, Moscow’s famous Bolshoi Theatre is scheduled to reopen its doors after receiving an extensive facelift. A grand gala concert will take place on October 2 to celebrate the occasion. In the meantime, the Bolshoi’s opera and ballet performances are being held on the New Stage in the adjacent building. Try not to miss the showings of Alban Berg’s opera Wozzeck (directed by Dmitri Tcherniakov), as well as the ballet evening featuring Rubies (choreographed by George Balanchine). BO Secret Love Austrian enamel jewellery specialist FREY WILLE believes in the joy of living the good life; and this philosophy is never more prevalent than at Valentine’s Day. This special occasion fills the heart with love. How better to express this love than with the appropriately named Secret Love collection from FREY WILLE. This successful collection stands for unforgettable moments in love. 1 3 9 DESIGN © FREY WILLE 2 4 5 7 6 8 1. Pedant Luna Piena | Rings: 2. Diva 3. Ultra | 4. Earrings Cabochon | Clasp Bangle (S/M/L): 5. Contessa | Bordered Bangle (M/L): 6. Diva 7. Miss | 8. Watch Rectangular | 9. Pedant Grand Cascade Gold sits delicately alongside blacks, greys, baby pinks and various candy colours. Precious and elegant, this is FREY WILLE at its loving best. The FREY WILLE artists emphasize the feeling of luck, love and joy in every design. With its unique diversity of colours the Secret Love collection is testament to immaterial values that money can’t buy. With its pastel coloured, delicate tones and hues, this design counteracts the sheer, bright, colourful nature of the original Secret Love collection. www.frey-wille.com vienna, austria Rīgā: Vaļņu ielā 10 | Tel. +371 6 72 13 017 Details / FebRuary American inventor Thomas Edison was born in Milan, Ohio. Throughout his lifetime he acquired over 1,200 patents including the incandescent bulb, phonograph and movie camera. Best known for his quote, “Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration.” By the way, Alexander Graham Bell applied for his patent on the telephone, an “Improvement in Telegraphy,” on Valentine’s Day, 1876. Photo Corbis February www.historyplace.com Thomas Edison’s Patent Application for the Light Bulb. Source: America’s Historical Documents 11th of February, 1847 „Gravitation is not responsible for people falling in love.” Museum of the Twentieth Century (Museo del Novecento ) This new museum opened its doors at the end of 2010 in the Piazza Duomo, right in the heart of Milan. It is housed in the Palazzo dell’Arengario, which was built during the Mussolini period and refurbished over a three-year period under the direction of architects Italo Rota and Fabio Fornasari. As its name suggests, the Museo del Novecento is devoted to the discovery (and rediscovery) of 20th century art. The current exposition has more than 400 oeuvres by a number of world famous artists, including Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Georges Braque and Wassily Kandinsky. Its principal focus, however, is on Italian art, featuring the works of such prominences as Amedeo Modigliani, Giorgio Morandi, Giorgio de Chirico, Lucio Fontana and others. Entry to the museum will be free until March 1. Palazzo dell’Arengario, piazza Duomo www.museodelnovecento.org Albert Einstein Verona The Italian city of Verona, where Shakespeare’s lovers Romeo and Juliet lived, receives about 1,000 letters addressed to Juliet every Valentine’s Day. Go out ice skating! According to studies Finns were the first to develop ice skates some 5,000 years ago from animal bones. This was important for the Finnish populations to save energy in harsh winter conditions when hunting in Finnish Lakeland. The first skate to use a metal blade was found in Scandinavia and was dated to 200 and was fitted with a thin strip of copper folded and attached to the underside of a leather shoe. DETAILS / DESIGN Text by Santa MeikulAne | publicity photos Signs of spring Simply for inspiration Wink, design by Bruno Ninaber van Eyben Wink is a vase with a natural tension: it seems to have been pinched together at the top. The designer himself describes this vase as a bucket that’s been pinched together. i www.ninaber.nl Deukbeker, design by Rob Brandt Inspired by the familiar Dutch plastic coffee cups that you just have to squeeze, if only to hear their crackling sound, this “crushed” cup was born. Ceramicist Rob Brandt has been making these with pleasure since 1975. Capri Multi, design by Busk+Hertzog i www.robbrandt.com A chair with strong and expressive design. Launched for the first time ever at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile 2010, the Capri Multi provides perfect comfort in a new definition of the lounge chair. With its four legs in chrome and relatively small size, the Capri Multi is meant for break out areas, small meeting areas and waiting areas. It provides a strong alternative in the hospitality sector as a comfortable chair for rooms and other spaces. The Capri Multi is made of high-quality moulded foam, with a chromed base. i www.busk-hertzog.dk Pinch, design by Jos van der Meullen At regular intervals, the designer harvests the wood with which he makes these small, unique monuments. The memo holders are perfect for keeping your favourite photos prominently on display. i www.josvandermeullen.com Penny table, design by Busk+Hertzog This nice little side table goes well with Busk+Hertzog’s other collections of furniture. Although its strong vertical lines are designed to match the stitching of the award-winning Plasma benches, the table looks as beautiful alone as with the company’s lounge chairs and sofas. The material is of lacquered steel and is available in black and white, as well as in black chrome and chrome. i www.busk-hertzog.dk 18 / AIRBALTIC.COM Pure, design by Willem Noyons This carafe’s design arises from that of a glass, which is of the same height as the designer’s hand. The glass’ upper and lower diameters are related to its height in accordance with a measuring system developed by the Benedictine monk Dom Hans van der Laan. The beauty of the pieces comes from their pure proportions. i www.noyons.com DETAILS / TRAVELER Agnese Kleina, fashion journalist The secret world of the fashion industry Text by Anete Kukite | Photos Courtesy of Agnese Kleina Agnese Kleina is the editor in chief of a Latvian interior design magazine, as well as an active fashion blogger. Her blog www.whimsicalagnesiga.com is widely followed by fashion lovers. She herself calls it “a journalist’s chronicle of befriending fashion while trying to outrun it.” Kleina attends fashion shows all over Europe. You travel to other cities to attend fashion shows. How much of this is work and how much of it is just a hobby? It is a hobby that takes a lot of work. I put a lot into my blog, and through my blog I have already been able to attend two fashion weeks in Paris. I was invited to help some Latvian designers display their collections in a showroom. What does attending a fashion show involve and what do you, as a spectator, get out of it? For me, attending a fashion show is much more than just dressing up nicely and sitting in the front row like a pretty-looking accessory. If that was all that I did, then I would only see the surface of what goes on in the industry. Both times when I was in Paris, I spent the whole week at various fashion events, from early in the morning until late in the evening. It was like going to work. When you take part in the showrooms, you really 20 / AIRBALTIC.COM see how the fashion business works. You see how hard it is to make a name for yourself. You really have to struggle to present yourself successfully in a market that is already oversaturated. I dress up for every fashion show that I attend, because each show is a celebration, with music, performances and a special set design. The show might last only last 15 minutes, but is a real celebration of fashion. Ordinary mortals can find it quite difficult to obtain access to such events. You need an invitation or press card. Occasionally, if you dress up really colourfully, then you might get let in simply because you look interesting, and can add something to the overall atmosphere of the show. The fashion world is very much like a royal court. Sometimes you have to play by the rules, but sometimes you can get in by breaking them. If you get invited to a fashion party or reception, then don’t stand alone the corner of the room. Try to make conversation with the other guests and expand your circle of contacts. The more you meet with people and leave an impression, the greater your chances of getting a personal invitation from a designer to attend his or her next show. Both the designers and their PR firms want the front rows where the audience sits to be filled with attractive, prominent and interesting people – almost like a colourful accessory to the show on the catwalk. What fashion oases do you recommend visiting in Europe? In London, there are three markets worth visiting – Portobello, Spitalfields and Brick Lane. In Paris I would recommend two interesting vintage or second hand stores on the rue Tiquetonne: Episode and Kiliwatch. Episode (12-16 rue Tiquetonne) has decently priced items. Kiliwatch (64 rue Tiquetonne), on the other hand, is called a „second hand store for the bourgeois middle class” by Parisians, due to its high prices. Nevertheless, the quality and selection of the clothing is quite good there. The store is always crowded with people, and photographers can often be seen standing at the entrance, ready to take street style photos of anyone who catches their eye. In Riga there is a similar atmosphere at the following three vintage stores – Pērle (Tērbatas iela 65), Retrospectro (Z. A. Meierovica bulvāris 12) and Bonēra (Blaumaņa iela 12a). The fashion world is very much like a royal court. Sometimes you have to play by the rules, but sometimes you can get in by breaking them The exciting thing about markets and vintage stores is that you never know what you will find, since each item of clothing is one of a kind. It is also interesting to speak with the store owners themselves, whom I have gotten to know personally in Latvia. Once I went to a flea market in Paris at the Porte de Clignancourt (les Puces de Saint-Ouen), with a small still life of a snow-covered spruce tree pinned in my hair. The bored salespeople expressed their compliments, then started to ask me where I am from and what I do. Small talk like that helps you get to know the people of the place that you are visiting. I got a better feel of the spirit of Paris that way. The atmosphere is always more personal when you get into a conversation with the locals. It adds extra value to your visit, be it at the marketplace or at a store. BO DETAILS / SHORT INTERVIEW Text by Anete Kukite | photos Courtesy of DINERSart DINERSart – handmade souvenirs and accessories by Latvian artists A new series of unique bronze zodiac pendants made by DINERSart and designed by Roberts Diners has been available on airBaltic flights since the fall of 2010. The DINERSart creative workshop was founded by the well-known Latvian sculptor Roberts Diners and his mother, artist Lilija Dinere, who explains how DINERSart came to cooperate with airBaltic in the manufacture of these chic new souvenirs as representations of Latvian art. How did DINERSart come into being? I work as a book illustrator, painter and graphic artist, while my son Roberts has always been interested in making sculptures from a combination of different materials. It’s not too often that members representing different generations of the same family can work together on joint artistic projects, each in a different sphere, thus complementing each other. In our case, sculpture is integrated with painting and other forms of art. We began our joint project with airBaltic a year ago, when the airline announced that it would like to cooperate with Latvian artists in the production of souvenirs that are different from those that one usually finds in the shops of Riga’s old town and city centre. At first, we made hand-painted silk scarves. Each is one of a kind, with its own story to tell. Then, in cooperation with Agita Krastiņa, airBaltic’s inflight service manager, we decided to create a line of modernized zodiac pendants. They are presented in a small display box, from which the passengers can select the zodiac sign of their choice. What are the latest DINERSart creations? The patinated bronze zodiac pendants came out last year and are among Robert’s latest works. Their design was drawn from the 12 traditional astrological signs and combined with Roberts’ individual artistic style. The artist managed to insert a dose of humour into his creations, imbuing each symbol with an additional sense of individuality. The zodiac pendants are offered together with a durable and natural leather strap, which means that they can be worn right away. Each pendant also comes in its own gift box, where it can be stored while it is not being worn. BO For more information about DINERSart accessories, please consult your onboard menu card or look at www.dinersart.lv. 22 / AIRBALTIC.COM DETAILS / REVIEW Text by Pauls Bankovskis | Publicity photos Nathan Myhrvold, Chris Young, and Maxime Bilet. Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking The Cooking Lab, 2011 It took 2400 pages to incorporate the vast wealth of knowledge imparted by the chefs of such world famous restaurants as el Bulli, Fat Duck and Alinea. Their specialty is molecular gastronomy, which the book’s authors prefer to call “modernist cooking.” Although many of the book’s recipes would be very difficult to try out at home (unless you had access to enzymes, centrifuges and other laboratory contraptions), a number of the chefs’ observations and recommendations could prove useful in any household. Furthermore, the book’s authors provide a fascinating insight into the processes that occur to foods when they are boiled, fried, smoked and frozen. The most enterprising Laima Slava (comp.) Auseklis Baušķenieks Neputns, 2010 Auseklis Baušķenieks (1910-2007) was one of Latvia’s most popular and unusual 20th-century artists. His ironic sense of humour was a hallmark of his works, and the pointillist technique that he adopted made his paintings instantly recognizable – as well as easily distinguishable from the works of other painters. While Bauš[ķenieks could not quite be called an avant-garde dissident, his works did betray a palpable opposition to the absurdities of daily life in Soviet-occupied Latvia. Baušķenieks’ paintings were crafted to put a smile on people’s faces, while simultaneously inducing them to deeper reflection. This volume provides an extensive retrospective of the artist’s long and illustrious career. www.neputns.lv 24 / AIRBALTIC.COM readers might go ahead and follow the book’s directions for frying mussels in their own juice, or for boiling a salmon in its vacuum packaging. However, a further measure of determination will be needed to purchase this extensive volume, for once it becomes available in bookstores later this year, it will be offered for a hefty list price of approximately 600 USD. www.modernistcuisine.com Lithuanian Folk Songs in the United States Folkway Records, 2010 Last year, Folkway Records (the non-profit record label of the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC) released a compilation of Lithuanian folk songs sung by first and second generation immigrants to the United States. The a capella recordings were made only ten years after the end of the Second World War, in 1955, and are replete with the unique tonality of Lithuanian folk music that has fascinated both ethnomusicologists and folk music lovers alike. The lack of instrumental diversity in this CD does not limit the excitement generated by the varied vocal performances of the traditional folk singers, who passionately recreate the songs of an occupied homeland that a number of them have only recently fled. British Cinema Classic B Film Collection, Vol. 1 (Tread Softly Stranger / Siege of Sidney Street / Frightened Man / Crimes at the Dark House / Hooded Terror / Girl in the News). VCI Entertainment, 2008 This DVD release of old and obscure British crime movies (1938-1960) features the Siege of Sidney Street (1960), which is based on a true event that happened 100 years ago in London. On January 3, 1911, a group of selfproclaimed anarchists from Latvia holed themselves up in an apartment after a botched robbery at a jewellery store. When the police came to arrest them, a six-hour gun battle ensued, leaving both criminals, as well as a fireman, dead. The police operation was headed by home secretary Winston Churchill, who later became prime minister and led the United Kingdom during the Second World War. The perpetrators of the gunfight had fled to England from Latvia after the failed 1905 Revolution. The event shocked the city’s inhabitants, giving rise to discussions about reviewing Great Britain’s immigration policies and imposing tighter entry controls. Olga Shishkina. Con Brillio ERP Music, 2010 The gusli is considered to be one of the most ancient Russian musical instruments. Similar to the zither or psaltery, it is closely related to the Latvian kokles, Lithuanian kankles, Mobile micropayments Flattr.com Bloggers and social network users usually don’t earn any money while online. Some of them do receive the occasional donation, but most don’t make a living off of their hobby. One might think that they simply fritter their time away, with little tangible results. The creators of the Flattr website are determined to change this scheme of things by asking Estonian kannel and Finnish kantele. It roots go back about 1000 years, although some claim that they extend even further, to Ancient Greece and China. Aged only 25, Olga Shishkina (born in 1985 in Leningrad, now Saint Petersburg) is already a virtuoso player of all of the aforementioned instruments. She has performed in a variety of concert venues, including acclaimed opera recitals, together with prominent folk music ensembles and symphony orchestras. However, Shishkina’s passion for the gusli is not restricted to playing it. She also produces classical music recordings, and this new Estonian release provides a splendid insight into her skills and talents. users to share not only their content (photos, video films, diary entries, etc.) with their fellow internet users, but also some of their cash. Users voluntarily donate a small monthly fee that they set for themselves. This fee is then distributed evenly among all of the other user sites that they choose to access. They, in turn, can also receive donations when other Flattr users click on their profile. www.flattr.com YOUR NEXT DESTINATION Text by Una Meistere Photos by Ainars Erglis Brussels, a distorting mirror 26 / AIRBALTIC.COM YOUR NEXT DESTINATION Bad luck, somebody has already taken the Anothertravelguide brochure about Brussels, but don’t worry, all the information is also available at ANOTHERTRAVELGUIDE.COM in cooperation with airBaltic. BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 27 YOUR NEXT DESTINATION The flea market at the Place du Jeu de Balle It seems that the entire aristocracy of Brussels gathers here, strolling among the mountains of goods It’s late afternoon, the moment in Europe when it’s hard to tell whether it’s still day or already evening. For perhaps twenty minutes I’ve been standing in line at the legendary Brussels eatery Maison Antoine. Dampness begins to bite through my scarf. Nearby, a man has improvised a little market, hanging out rows of second-hand jeans. The queue isn’t long, with only maybe eight people in front of me, but it moves very slowly. That’s hardly surprising, considering that once they get service everyone seems to shop as if they’d been starved for a month, snapping up five, six or eight bags of frites each. In terms of food and drink, Belgium is renowned for three things – beer, moules (mussels) and chips or French fries (frites). The eatery – actually no more than a kiosk, at Place Jourdan I – has been here since 1948, when Antoine Desmet began cooking in a shack left behind by the occupying Germans. It is no longer a mere shack, however, but a construction of marble, metal and glass. Maison Antoine is open every day (and into the night – until one in the morning and two on Fridays and Saturdays), and there’s almost always a queue. Potatoes are cut and fried on site (concessions to modernity mean that it’s now and electric process), then served in wax paper bags with your choice from among the umpteen sauces. One can also obtain meats grilled on skewers or shrimp croquettes. The sauces are not what matters here, though. Chips may not be my favourite food and I surely cannot say if the frites at Maison Antoine truly are the best in the world, but a visit here is definitely not to be missed. Everybody queues up – aristocrats and eurocrats, clerks, students, and plebes, gays and families with children. After getting their frites, they take them (in copious quantities) to one of the surrounding cafés – eating Maison Antoine’s food is permitted in all of them as long as you buy a beer (or juice, or wine). The view is unbelievable – there’s nary a free table in any of the nearby cafés and every table bears the wax paper bags and beer. In the 28 / AIRBALTIC.COM An oyster man at the Place Sainte-Catherine summer, the benches in Place Jourdan are also occupied by potato eaters – though tradition says one should really eat frites whilst standing. I recently read that Maison Antoine takes in about 3,500 dollars a day, which judging from the eternal queue does not seem incredible. Another square that draws people for culinary reasons is Place Sainte-Catherine. Near the church there one can almost always find a man selling oysters. There’s a striped screen and a green chequered table, but no tables to sit at and no chairs. Diners manage as best they can. The oysters are shucked in front of you (half a dozen run 8 to 16 euro, depending upon the variety) and are placed on a plate with ice and lemon. A glass of white wine for only 2 euro and nothing more is needed to achieve bliss. Across from the oyster stand is an equally famous eatery called La Mer du Nord (rue Sainte-Catherine 45). Somewhat more civilised, it is a former fish shop that has been transformed into a restaurant specialising in so-called finger food. Unlike “the oyster man,” La Mer du Nord also has quite an extensive wine list. On the left side of the Ste.-Catherine church you can also find the sole remaining pissoir in Brussels, by the way. In what is today Europe’s capital, such places were constructed only in 1845 for moral and hygienic reasons. Until then, as in many another city, people took care of there needs in the street. Though the location of this relic may strike us as strange today, back then it was common to build them in well-trafficked places – near schools, churches, and market squares – to educate the public. The atom, flea markets and art nouveau Despite the clichés, it would be a bit foolish to consign Brussels to its stereotype as a city meant only for eurocrats and clerks, its sole tourist route running from Grand-Place and the MannekinPis (the fountain with its statue of a urinating boy) and ending at the European Parliament. EU bureaucrats and their families actually make up only about a tenth of the population. The symbol of the city for most locals is the Atomium, the premier insignia of modernism. Andre Waterkeyn’s 102-metre tall Atomium weighs 2,400 tonnes and is one of the most imposing sculptures/ installations ever constructed. It can also be seen as a symbol of the intense faith people in the mid-20th century placed in science and progress. Today it offers a unique panoramic view and serves YOUR NEXT DESTINATION The Grand-Place The Maison Antoine as a special attraction, especially if you are travelling with children. Another symbol of Brussels is certainly the classic art nouveau architecture of Victor Horta. The very first art nouveau building in Brussels, designed by Horta, was built in 1893 – the famous Tassel (6, rue Paul-Emile Janson). This was followed by his masterpiece, the Solvay mansion, in 1894 the Van Eetvelde mansion in 1895, and many another stunning building into the new century. One of Horta’s most significant innovations was building rooms around a central atrium, allowing far more natural light to enter than in other, more traditional late 19th-century houses. Soon after the First World War Horta began a yet more grandiose project, planning the Palais des Beaux-Arts that is now the Bozar arts centre. It was meant to be part of his even more ambitious vision for an urban development project called the Mount of the Arts. The plans hit a snag because the King did not want his view of the city obscured. Because of this the buildings were designed under strict height restrictions, mostly below ground. Horta’s dream was to build the first cultural centre in Europe in which the most diverse arts would find a home under a single roof. The doors of the Palais des Beaux-Arts were opened in 1928, with three concert halls, exhibition space, lecture halls and one of the best shops for art books in Europe. The building has eight levels and when you move from space to space you may not even realize that in reality you are climbing a hill called the Mont des Arts. is a place where one can acquire most anything on earth – from rare old pearls to sheer junk. Most things here are arrayed on the cobblestones, and patrons practically crawl about examining the wares. The comparison may be odd, but on Sundays the area around the Place du Jeu du Balle reminds of the Marais in Paris in some way – all of the little shops are open, everything is slightly shabby and somewhat alternative, and the neighbourhood seethes with life. This is especially true if you head for rue Haute nearby, one of the oldest streets in Brussels. On Sundays, people pretty much promenade here – some seeking a late breakfast in one of the countless cafés and others visiting the colourful shops. The more you wander around Brussels, the more it seems the city is like a carnival mirror – it is a city of many faces, most of them invisible at first. In a sense the metropolis consists of nineteen separate towns, each of them with a different rhythm and atmosphere. The area around rue Antoine Dansaert, for instance, is the epicentre of Belgian design and style. Though Brussels is certainly no Paris, London or Milan in the atlas of European fashion, it does have a concentrated, crazy creative energy that can infect you like a virus. In that sense the fashions themselves are also viral, and once you’ve fallen for them there is no cure. Furthermore, the signature designs of the Belgians cannot possible be confused with those of other designers due to their strong aesthetic qualities and peculiar harshness. Belgian design offers a kind of anonymity – it bears no familar logos – but it is simultaneously instantly recognisable. In the 1980s rue Antoine Dansaert was a rather obscure street. It was not notable for anything in particular until 1984, when Sonia Noël opened the first store featuring Belgian design – Stijl. By now, Stijl has become a required destination for connoisseurs. There’s a reason for that – almost anyone who knows fashion beyond the big names like Chanel, Dior and Saint-Laurent has heard of the “Antwerp Six” – Walter Van Beirendonck, Ann Demeulemeester, Dries van Noten, Dirk Van Saene, Dirk Bikkembergs, and Marina Yee, and of the triumph of Belgian design in the 1980s. Sonja herself can also be dubbed a legend, since she was the first to invest in Belgian design by creating a space where its brightest stars could be displayed – both the classics and rising stars. When I first came here seven years ago, Sonja took me upstairs to a room full of samples and told me about the triumph from an insider’s point of view. Design and the flea market Brussels is famous for its antique shops, too, and if you are here on a Saturday or Sunday it would be almost unforgivable not to go to the renowned Place du Grand Sablon, where there is an antiques market on weekends from nine in the morning. It seems that the entire aristocracy of Brussels gathers here, strolling among the mountains of goods and greeting the purveyors like old friends. It seems, too, that those who shop here are true connoisseurs of what’s on offer – and so much is on offer, from Louis IX period chairs to fully certified objets d’art. At the heart of the market an old woman sells escargots that you can enjoy with a glass of white wine. The legendary Brussels flea market Place du Jeu de Balle in the former working class district of Marolles is very different from Place du Grand Sablon. Chaotic and full of all sorts of freaks, this BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 29 YOUR NEXT DESTINATION In 1984, Stijl became the first Belgian designer store in Brussels and has practically become an obligatory stopping point for fashion connoisseurs Belgian fashion designers are characterised by their strong personalities “Back then nobody knew about the designers we talk about today,” Sonja said. “In the 1980s Belgium announced a campaign with the goal of promoting Belgian design. Belgium has always had an advanced textile industry, but its costs were rising steeply at the time; due to globalisation, commercial brands were seeking cheaper labour around the world – primarily in Third World countries. The industry was in steep decline, and with its special “Textile Plan” the government attempted to restore its former status. One of the ideas was to promote young designers who had recently graduated from the institute of design. A competition called the Golden Spindle was set up. Anyone could participate – but only the best would be selected, of course. The jury included celebrities like Jean-Paul Gaultier and Romeo Gigli, guaranteeing international resonance. The Golden Spindle was won by one designer after another -- Ann Demeulemester, Dirk Birkemmbergs, Dirk Van Saene... “The world began to talk about the ‘big six,’ but it’s really something of a myth. The myth was born when the winners of the competition were invited to participate in the London fashion show Olympia. They shared expenses because it was cheaper. Though their collections were actually totally different from one another, it was in London that the phenomenon of the six took hold. And though that era is formally over and each has gone his or her own way (Marina Yee, for example, has left the fashion industry entirely), the legend continues to follow them.” Despite the differences in their styles, however, it’s impossible to deny that they do have some things in common. Belgian fashion designers are characterised by their strong personalities – by the power of the vision with which each sees fashion. It must also be said that despite globalisation and a sometimes thorny struggle for survival, most Belgian designers still retain their independence. 30 / AIRBALTIC.COM “That’s one of the principal differences between them and their colleagues elsewhere, who work under the wings of large groups and whose work is often influenced by commercial strategy. There’s also a philosophical difference – Belgian designers feel that their clothes can be worn all of the time. They don’t divide their collections by evening wear and daytime clothing, or sportswear and classic dress. One could call it a radical approach to fashion. This especially applies to theose who are Flemish – they have an innately mutinous attitude toward the classic ways of wearing fashion,” Sonja says. In Brussels this autumn, I met Sonja again – in her newest store, which has only very recently opened its doors. It’s called Haleluja and is located at Nieuwe Graanmarkt 6 – more than a shop, it is a hymn to eco-fashion and socially responsible design in all its aspects. Some of the clothing is made with 100% natural and chemically untreated materials – organic cotton, wool, soy, and milk. Other items rely upon recycling as a philosophy. Sonja says that to her mind, Haleluja is the future of fashion. The idea for the store came into being in recent years, watching the debuts of brilliant young designers whose threshold for ecologically friendliness is set as high as their bar for quality and design. Haleluja also serves as a showroom for new European designers, testifying to the fact that “green fashion” is not only environmentally friendly and socially responsible but also fashionable, “in,” and simply cool. When I ask Sonja who, to her mind, is the brightest star in the firmament of Belgian fashion at this instant, she says without hesitation – Tim Van Steenbergen, calling him the best kept secret in the world of Belgian design. Tim is from Antwerp and began his career at the eyewear brand Theo. By now he has designed costumes for several productions at La Scala and has a collection one can view at Stijl. Just around the corner, about ten paces from Haleluja, the concept shop Mapp not long ago opened its doors at Leon Lepagestraat 5. This is a place for mostly new but already known designers. The cream of the acme, perhaps – the work of Alexander Wang, Henrik Vibskov, and Chistophe Lemaire can be found here. This is also where you can find diverse but fantastic CDs, books on style, and a wide selection of alternative niche magazines. YOUR NEXT DESTINATION The Kat en Muis childrenswear boutique Right around the corner – about a hundred metres further, in a historic building, at rue de Flandre 114, is the flagship store of Maison Martin Margiela – the first in the chain’s global empire of design. Like the white logo of the brand, the shop, too, is white – its interior is white and there is no sign – simply a white doorbell. The heart of Belgian fashion Those who wish to seek out the true soul of Belgian fashion and style should get on a train at the central station and head for Antwerp, 50 kilometres away. It is the cradle of the Belgian style and a new, as yet uncrowned capital of European fashion. The Royal Academy is at the very heart of it – that’s where “the six” got their start, as did many others well-known in the fashion world. The museum of fashion under its wing – MoMu – is no less well-known, though it opened only in 2001. It has already hained renown for superb exhibitions and its excellent bookshop. Belgian design is definitely not cheap, but those in the know have a secret – the fashion houses hold periodical fashion stock sales where one can get the previous season’s clothing at half price or less. The next stock sale will take place in April; for further information see www.ffi.be/en/mod_news About 20 kilometres from Antwerp one can find yet another pilgrimage site for fans of Belgian fashion – Depot Pierre. Once you follow the directions at the website (www.depotpierre. be), winding through the small, industrial town, you will arrive at the outskirts and find a nondescript parking lot. Its owners are graduates of the Royal Academy of Art. They know most of the Belgian design world personally and they buy the previous season’s items directly from the warehouses. The selection is incessantly changing and with luck you can find truly incredible bargains here. The shop is open on Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 2:00 pm to 6 :00 pm. The proprietors are the very essence of hospitality and will give you directions to the next great secrets of the Belgian fashion world. In the end you will feel like you’ve been given a puzzle on a scavenger hunt. One path leads to another with lightning speed. The only decision you have to make is to let it happen. BO YOUR NEXT DESTINATION If you have in Brussels one day Definitely visit the Royal Museum of Fine Arts (Musee Royaux de Beaux-Arts de Belgique), which is certainly the best known and richest of Belgium’s museums. The entrance with its allegorical sculptures representing the fields of music, architecture, sculpture and painting leads you into the main museum building, designed by architect Alphonse Balat and constructed as the Palace of Fine Arts with the personal support of King Leopold II. Completed in 1887, it’s the home of the Museum of Ancient Art. There are also the Modern Art, the Antoine Wiertz, the Constantin Muenier and, since 2009, the Belgian surrealist master, Rene Magritte’s museum (Magritte Museum, rue de la Regence, 3; www.musee- magritte-museum.be) under the aegis of the Museum. If you take your children to Brussels with you, a visit to the Belgian Comic Strip Centre (Centre Belge de la Bande Desinee, rue des Sables 20) is a must, even more so, for its location in a very special building – a warehouse designed by the most famous Belgian Art Nouveau architect, Victor Horta. Plus, you can find out about a special art form here that typifies Belgium – the comic. The art of the comic developed rapidly in Belgium prior to the Second World War and flourished noticeably in the 1950’s. There are two recognized “schools” of comics – the French and the Flemish. The most important author among the French comics, is Herge, who created the legendary Tintin, whereas the Flemish school’s most well known name, Willy Vandersteen, created Spike and Suzy (Suske en Viske). Enjoy a lunch at L’Idiot du Village (rue Notre-Seigneux, 19). This little restaurant in a small side street in the Marolles District has been at the same site for 20 years now and long ago transformed from a fashion weakness into a fashion classic. With a slightly kitsch, but unbelievably cosy interior full of antiques, it has a great, family atmosphere and meals prepared with loving care. In the evening, head for Belgium’s most famous opera house, La Monnaie. The Belgian Royal Opera has distinguished itself since the time of its director Gerard Mortier for its experimentation. He transformed La Monnaie into one of Europe’s, and definitely also the world’s most innovative opera theatres. It was at Brussels’ La Monnaie that the idea came about to invite Italian director Romeo Castellucci to produce Richard Wagner’s farewell opera, Parsifal, with Wagner’s masterpiece being his debut in opera direction. Don’t miss the opportunity of seeing it! Performances take place on 3rd, 6th, 8th, 11th, 15th, 17th and 20th February. If you can spare the energy and want to sample some night life – Brussels’ famous L’Archiduc (rue Dansaert, 6-8; www.archiduc. net) jazz club with its art deco interior, almost unchanged since opening in 1937, is open till five in the morning. around it are also open on Saturdays. Take lunch at the stylish and comfortable Cantine de la Ville (rue Haute 72; www. cantinedelaville.be) with its tasty food and very reasonable prices (vegetable soup for 6 euros). Brussels is renown for its antique shops, with a visit to the famous Place du Grand Sablon antique market being a local weekend ritual. Right next to the Sablon Church, it opens every Saturday and Sunday at 9.00am. Later take a leisurely stroll to the L’Orangerie du Parc D’Egmont (Parc d’Egmont; www.restaurationnouvelle.be) – one of the best kept local secrets. Secret, because if you didn’t know about it, you couldn’t imagine there was a park in this little street among the classic Brussels buildings, not far from the Palais de Justice. There is a restaurant in its neoclassicism style orangery, the terrace of which is one of the most desirable places in the city in summer. The panorama with the green park behind the large windows is also magnificent at any other time of the year too. Brunch is served here on Sundays from 11.30am until 3.30pm (price per person – 25 euros). One of the main city museums, Bozar or the Palais de Beaux – Arts ( 23, rue Ravenstein; www. bozar.be), located in a building designed by that famous Belgian Art Nouveau architect, Victor Horta, is open on Sundays until Sunday in Brussels Sundays are the days for heading for the legendary Brussels flea market at Place du Jeu de Balle. The earlier you arrive, however, the more likely you’ll go home 32 / AIRBALTIC.COM with a real treasure. Don’t miss an amble down the nearby rue Haute, one of Brussels oldest streets. The colourful little stores and antique shops 6pm. On the 18th February Bozar opens its doors to an extensive retrospective by Luk Tuymans, a famous Belgian, one of the most highly respected artists of the 21st century. Don’t leave without dropping into the Bozarshop – the most comprehensive art and design bookshop in Brussels (www.bozarshop.be) in the wings of the Bozar. Open each day from 10.00am – 10pm. Time for dinner at the Belga Queen (32, rue du Fosse-auxLoups; www.belgaqueen.com), a restaurant in a former 18th century bank building which should be visited, if only for a peek at the interior. If you are in Brussels for three days You’ll find Antwerp, the cradle of Belgian design (and the diamond industry) only 50 kilometres or a 40 minute train ride from Brussels. A city where a fashion phenomenon was born in the mid 1980’s, the like of which was never before seen in fashion history – “The Antwerp Six” (Dries Van Noten, Ann Demeulemester, Martin Margiela, Dirk Van Saene, Dirk Birkemmbergs, Walter Van Beirendonck). The “Six” made fashion an inseparable part of Antwerp and part of the general image of Belgium. Among other things, it’s one of the few cities in the world offering its guests not just an excursion along the paths of its all time most famous resident - Rubens, but also the so-called “Antwerp Fashion Walk/ Map”. The latter includes the city’s better known museums and galleries, as well as Belgian fashion designer shops, the majority of becoming tourist destinations in themselves. Shops, well worth a visit for a taste of Belgian design: Ann Demeulemeester, Verlatstraat 38; Coccodrillo, Schuttershofstraat 9; Louis, Lombardenvest 2; Dries Van Noten Het Modepaleis, Nationalestraat 16; Walter, St. Antoniusstraat 12; Elasa, Nationalestraat 147. It’s certainly worth arriving in Antwerp by train. The station building which, from the outside, looks more like a palace than a railway station, is also known as the “train cathedral” and was designed by architect Louis Delacenserie. It was built from 1895-1905 and 20 different types of marble and stone were used in its construction. The author of the metal and glass cupola over the train platforms was Clement van Bogaert. Regardless of how the 21st century traveller now travels, arriving here you really feel that time has stood still for a moment and that a bulky retro style suitcase would be the most appropriate accessory. This year Antwerp was also named the European Youth Capital. This event will be celebrated in the city from March to the 20th November, with a grand Pop Up Festival taking place on 5th March at the Antwerp Railway Station building (www.aeyc2011.be). Fly to Brussels with Direct flights from Riga starting from EUR 39 From Scandinavia and Eastern Europe via Riga starting from EUR 69 Earn 5 BalticMiles Points for each Euro spent BalticMiles partners in Brussels: airBaltic, Avis, Sixt, Radisson Blu, airBalticTravel, Language Direct OUTLOOK / INTERVIEW Reflections of a music industry veteran Text by Guna Zucika | Photos Corbis and Courtesy of Jon Webster Freddie Mercury Performing at Wembley, 1986 Jon Webster is probably one of the bestinformed people on the planet about the music industry in Great Britain. For the past 35 years, he has worked for only two people – himself and Richard Branson, the famous British billionaire entrepreneur, who founded the legendary Virgin chain of music stores and recording label. Webster is a regular and sought-after speaker at music industry conferences all across the world. 34 / AIRBALTIC.COM The building on 26 Berners Street in London’s West End is familiar to anybody who has had anything to do with the music industry in the UK, as it houses a number of important organizations from that field, including the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors, as well as the Music Publishers Association. It is also the place where Webster now works as the CEO of the Music Managers Forum, and where his extensive experience in the music industry serves him well. “I grew up in Portsmouth on England’s southern coast. I was very fond of music and when the time came to decide which university I would attend, I made my choice based on one sole criterion – the city had to have a Virgin record store. I had yet to set foot in such OUTLOOK / INTERVIEW a store and was very eager to finally do so,” Webster recounts. That was in 1972, when only five cities in Great Britain met his strict and strange university attendance standards. Webster opted for Birmingham. “As soon as I arrived in the city, I headed straight to the Virgin store. The feeling was indescribable. I was so happy!” During the three years that Webster spent in Birmingham, he organized concerts at his university and started to write music reviews so that he could obtain free records. “After finishing university, I didn’t have the faintest idea about what I would do and where I would work. On the last day of my studies, I paid a visit to the Virgin record store that I had come to like so much. There, I saw an advertisement announcing a job vacancy at a Virgin shop in Hull, a small town on England’s east coast. To be honest, that wasn’t the greatest place to live in. Nevertheless, I opted to go there and work for awhile, until I decided what I really wanted to do with my life. Since my mother was employed at a bookstore, I did have some ideas about retail trade. As things turned out, I have never worked anywhere outside of the music industry since then.” Webster spent six years working in the Virgin record store network, starting as a storekeeper’s assistant and continuing as a store manager, until he became the main purchase consultant for all of the company’s stores in the UK. String of hits “At that point, I felt that I had no further room for advancement. When I announced my intention to part ways with Virgin, Richard Branson’s business partner Nik Powell asked me why I wanted to leave and what I planned on doing. I told him that I wanted to work as a sales manager in a recording company. Three months later, I got the job that I had coveted, at Virgin Records.” Shortly after starting work in his new capacity in 1981, one of the first songs that Webster sought to promote was Virgin’s first smash hit, Don’t You Want Me by the Human League. The song reached Number 1 on the UK pop charts. As Webster, recounts: “At first, Virgin Records had a hippy image, yet it also released punk music by such bands as the Sex Pistols. Then, starting in the 1980s, it experienced great success with a number of pop and rock groups. In 1982, we had a number of very good and successful groups under our wing, including Simple Minds, Japan and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. That was also the year when Culture Club became an overnight sensation, filling all the big arenas, followed by Genesis, UB40 and Heaven 17.” For a while, Virgin Records became the top recording company in the UK. Webster continued to climb the company’s career ladder, becoming Virgin’s director of international relations, and later the head of the recording company itself. In 1989, Virgin Records released Phil Collins’ fourth studio album ...But Seriously, which was a worldwide hit, partly because several of its songs addressed such sensitive political and social issues as homelessness. In Webster’s opinion, the serious themes in Collins’ material were the main reason why the album was unjustly denied that year’s BRIT music award. Alternative music award He therefore came up with the idea of founding an alternative award, the Mercury Music Prize (now the Barclaycard Mercury Prize). Jon Webster Technology is developing at breakneck speed. It may seem peculiar, but some things that we now take for granted have been around with us for only a very short time “I was inspired by the Book Council’s campaign to choose the 20 best young authors of the year in Great Britain. The idea of the Mercury Music Prize was to have independent professionals choose the year’s best album in Great Britain and Ireland. I went with that idea to the BPI, which is the UK’s record industry trade body. They told me to get back to them once I got some sponsors. After I found some sponsors, they told me that they wanted the prize to be awarded under their stewardship. Naturally, I turned their offer down.” “Of course, any award is subjective, since it is chosen by people who are subjective. The first Mercury Prize was awarded in 1992 to Primal Scream. Many of the subsequent winners have been relative unknowns, BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 35 OUTLOOK / INTERVIEW whose careers have received a boost from the free publicity and increased interest in their work.” When Richard Branson sold Virgin Records in 1992, Webster decided to quit the company, but continued to assist it as a consultant, or, in his own words, “to work as an intermediary between the company’s new management and the music artists and their management.” “I continued to work with Peter Gabriel, UB40, Genesis and Mike and the Mechanics. I had already established a very good relationship with the manager of Genesis, whom many people seemed to fear. Peter Gabriel’s manager was also a tough cookie, so to speak, and UB40 simply refused to talk to anyone else besides myself.” Webster oversaw the marketing for these acts and helped them to develop their international profile. Challenges of digitalization In 2005, after 13 years of working for himself, he was appointed Director of Independent Member Services at the BPI. In 2007, he embraced the artist-centric future when he became CEO of the Music Managers Forum (MMF). “I have always been convinced of the need for such organizations as the BPI and the MMF. They present the cheapest and most effective way to address the industry’s needs and problems. It would be much more complicated and expensive for each recording company to go out on its own, when many of the companies share the same challenges. “Our second function is to provide training and courses, which is really important right now, at a time when digitalization is changing the way that the music industry operates. You need completely different business models.” Regarding the challenges of digitalization, Webster says: “People tend to forget that the Industrial Revolution, which began in the 18th century, is only half-way completed. The process is still going on. For example, it took 18 years for the Sony Walkman to capture 10 percent of the market. It only took three years for Ipod to do the same. Technology is developing at breakneck speed. It may seem peculiar, but some things that we now take for granted have been around with us for only a very short time.” Another consequence of digitalization is that many more albums are being recorded than before, and that many of these would probably not have been recorded previously. “Anyone can sit by the computer in their bedroom, and sing: ‘My baby, she just left me and I’m feeling so blue!’ It is so easy to make such recordings and to post them on the internet, making them available to anybody who cares to view them. There is a lot of music out there, but that doesn’t mean that it is all good, as there are no quality controls.” Harder to make it big With the decline in recording sales and corresponding budget cuts at recording companies, musicians are given mush less time to prove themselves. If their first recording isn’t commercially successful, then they may not get the chance to record a second album. And even if their first album has been a money-maker, there is no guarantee that the second release will attract the same amount of interest. That makes it much more difficult for music groups to establish a long-term career: “One of the most pertinent questions in the music industry today is: Who will be tomorrow’s stadium fillers? Sure, there are a few groups who play the large stadiums and bring in considerable revenues, but who will follow them?” Such current-day stadium fillers and music giants as U2 or REM had the luxury of building their careers incrementally. Their breakthrough albums, with which they achieved worldwide fame, were either their third or fourth studio recordings, which gave them the time that they needed to mature and develop. “I suppose that if U2 were to start their career today, then things would be much more complicated for them. Nowadays, a group in a similar situation, with only limited acclaim for their first albums, might easily decide to throw in the towel very early in their career. The band members would probably break up and go their separate ways. But look at how long U2 and REM have lasted. They were founded more than 30 years ago and are still going strong. That might not have happened today. Kind of strange, isn’t it?” BO OUTLOOK / PROMO Blowin’ in the Wind: Windmills in the Baltics In order to see the essence of things, the connections between them, the right point of view and knowledge is necessary. The right kind of illumination lets us discover new opportunities. This is the case in life, business, and the environment. In the Baltics, there are so many nuances and tiny, valuable details. We’d like to help you see them. Now and henceforth we will illuminate the things, places, and phenomena around us. Let’s switch on the green light, so we can discover the Baltic environment. These will be stories about the forests, skies, wind, and water. Let’s begin with the wind and wings. Yours, Estonian, Latvian & Lithuanian Environment (ELLE) OUTLOOK / PROMO 38 / AIRBALTIC.COM The windmill is an integral part of any pastoral landscape. Gently turning in the breeze, these mills possess a stark beauty that immediately draws the eye, inviting a moment of quiet contemplation. Surely this is thanks to the huge rotating blades, called vanes or sails, that crown a windmill and harness the invisible energy of the wind. A soft whoosh can be heard as the sails cut through the air, and perhaps the attraction of windmills is their close approximation to the freedom of flight, the aerodynamic perfection of birds or airplanes soaring types of windmills are smock mills, with octagonal or hexagonal sides constructed of horizontal wooden boards and topped by a rotating cap, which could be adjusted to the direction of the wind; tower mills, with cylindrical stone or brick foundations gradually sloping upward to the adjustable wooden cap; and post mills, the oldest type of mill, where the entire body can be swiveled around a single vertical pole or trestle, in order to meet the wind. The Baltic states have never had any lack of windmills, through the atmosphere. Although windmills have now become mere symbols of the past, evoking romantic images of simpler times, they historically had specific functions and were an important element in the life of agricultural economies. Since as early as the first century AD, windmills were used to convert wind energy into useable power. The rotational motion generated by windmills was used to turn machinery that crushed and ground grain into flour, pumped drinking water from underground, ensured the operation of sawmills and smithies, and drained excess floodwaters from areas below sea level. In order to perform these functions, the turning blades must transfer their captured energy to an elaborate rotating mechanism housed inside the body of the windmill. The shape and structure of this body can be very diverse, depending on the era when it was built and the final use that it guarantees. The three main many of which were built completely of wood—another natural resource, like the wind, that has always been in ample supply here. The region has always had a strong agricultural economy, and windmills were employed to crush the wheat and rye that was later turned into the region’s famous black and rye breads. With the advent of industrialized farming, however, and particularly the introduction of new sources of energy like steam, diesel power, and internal combustion engines, windmills were abandoned and replaced with other, more modern machines. The final stroke came with the advent of collective farms in the Soviet period, when mass production demanded only the most efficient resources. Today, most formerly functioning windmills have either disappeared or fallen into disrepair. But a recent resurgence of interest in these historical structures has led to a movement to repair their soaring sails and patch up their stately brick, stone, and wooden bodies. OUTLOOK / PROMO Using resources available from historical preservation their wedding day. The most popular windmills are societies and European Union regional development found in Darbenai, Obeliai, Šeduva, Telšiai, Stultiškiai, funds, these enthusiasts have transformed windmills Stačiūnai, and Šiauliai. into museums, workshops, and even cafés. The In the upper reaches of the Baltic States, the coastline is revitalization of these formerly indispensable elements broken up into numerous small islands. These, of course, of past economies—similar in this regard to water belong to Estonia, the northernmost of the three Baltic towers and lighthouses—has also led to a boom in countries. These islands were naturally extremely windy, windmill tourism. and therefore ideal locations for windmills. The largest Visitors to the Baltic states have numerous options for Estonian island, Saaremaa, had of the most windmills, visiting recently revitalized windmills and seeing how most of which were built in the post mill style so they they once worked. In Latvia, windmill enthusiasts must could be easily rotated to meet the swiftly changing look no further than the Latvian Open-Air Museum, a coastal wind currents. At one point, Saaremaa and fifteen-minute taxi ride from central Riga. The museum its neighboring island, Muhu, had more than eight is home to four restored windmills, dating from the hundred windmills. The highest number of preserved nineteenth century, which were transported to the windmills can be found in the village of Angla, where museum starting in the 1930s. Each of the mills was five historical mills are arranged in a row on a hillside constructed in a different style and used for different that held up to nine windmills as recently as the 1920s. ends. They include a six-sailed smock mill, Today, we are seeing a new type of windmill Today, with a stone foundation, wraparound appearing on our landscapes. These are wind terrace, and wide sails that powered multiple turbines, which convert wind energy into most grindstones; two early examples of post mills, electricity. Unlike their low-lying predecessors, formerly with a tall oak pole situated inside the mill’s functioning wind turbines can reach heights of up to square wooden body; and a smaller mill with windmills ninety meters. The blades are rotated by a rounded, thatched body and eight wooden special computerized motors, and turn have either at speeds up to 320 kilometers per hour. sails, light enough to be turned by hand. Latvia’s most famous windmill can be found in disappeared Though wind turbines present several distinct or fallen Drabeši, near the city of Cēsis in the territory advantages—they capture free wind energy of the Gauja National Park. Built in 1852, the into without depleting resources or producing Drabeši windmill has a sloping stone tower harmful byproducts like greenhouse disrepair foundation and an adjustable wooden cap, as gases—they can also have a downside: wind well as several windows to illuminate the fourturbines can be noisy, they create flickering story interior. The interior and grounds of the windmill shadows on the surrounding landscape, and multiple is now a museum, with information about the history turbines are needed to produce the required amounts of the windmill and the Drabeši Manor, to which it once of electricity, resulting in the expensive construction of belonged. Visitors can examine the fully renovated sprawling wind farms. grinding equipment and machinery, as well as other Though they possess both positive and negative authentic tools and implements, in order to get a better aspects, wind turbines, like the windmills that preceded idea of how the windmill functioned. them, are best constructed in areas with strong wind Farther south, the long western coastline of Lithuania currents, as well as coastal regions such as the Baltic has provided the country with an ample supply of wind states. And they are increasingly becoming a fixture blowing in from the open sea. This wind energy was in our rural landscapes. Perhaps future generations naturally harnessed by windmills, particularly in the will transform the wind turbines of the present day western and northern regions of the country. Of course, into museums and exhibits, using them to understand in order best to capture the wind, these windmills were how people lived in the early twenty first century? If built atop the highest hills in the country, and therefore they do, they will continue to be amazed by the same are starkly reminiscent of castles perched above the thing that enchants us about windmills: their sleek, surrounding landscape. This romantic grandeur also aerodynamic form and their contribution to sustaining makes windmills a favorite stop for young couples on the communities that built them. BO BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 39 Riga Jams at the Saxophonia Festival Text by Rihards Kalnins PhotoS Courtesy of Latvijas Koncerti The saxophone is forever linked to our definition of cool. Think of jazz legend Charlie Parker, blaring away onstage at a smoky club, or former U.S President Bill Clinton, dressed in dark shades and playing his smooth tenor sax for voters, or even cartoon character Lisa Simpson, jamming on her oversized instrument with her sunglasses-and-beret-clad idol, “Bleeding Gums” Murphy. The saxophone evokes images of hot jam sessions, crowded bars, moonlit nights on rooftop terraces, and, most above all, that characteristic wail—the coolest sound in music. 40 / AIRBALTIC.COM But the cool tones of the sax don’t just have a place in jazz and popular music. The saxophone is also an integral part of symphony orchestras and other classical ensembles, and composers from Claude Debussy to Philip Glass have written a wealth of music showcasing the instrument’s distinctive sound. Since the early twentieth century, the sax has been featured as an important solo instrument in performances by prestigious orchestras all over the world. The primary reason for this widespread use of the saxophone is the instrument’s great versatility and its expansive range of tone and timbre. In honor of this most versatile of instruments, the city of Riga hosts a biannual festival called Saxophonia. This year, the festival will be held from February 11–20 at musical venues all over the Latvian capital. Saxophonia will show off the wide range of styles and the diversity of genres in which the saxophone can be played, by presenting concerts of classical and symphonic music as well as jazz and pop. The festival will also feature world premieres of original compositions, and offer the inventive pairings of disparate ensembles which have become the trademark of local music festivals. The founder of the festival is Artis Sīmanis, a member of the Riga Saxophone Quartet and rector of the Latvian Academy of Music. His classically trained quartet will perform on February 12 at a concert featuring the renowned State Choir Latvija, led by conductor Māris Sirmais, and the classical organist Kristīne Adamaite. The concert is also the world premiere of an original composition by Latvian composer Kristaps Pētersons, entitled Hell, with excerpts from Dante’s Divine Comedy. The venue for the premiere might therefore come as a surprise: St. John’s Church, in Old Riga. But this unique merging of the saxophone, church organ, a classical choir, a medieval church, and a work called Hell will certainly make for a memorable evening. In addition to Sīmanis, Latvia’s other great saxophone virtuoso is Deniss Paškevičs, whose high-flying musical explorations have made him the country’s premiere jazz musician and a respected musical educator. At this year’s Saxophonia Festival, Paškevičs will perform with his own sax trio, beneath video projections of paintings by Latvian artist Vilnis Heinrihsons, in an audio-visual performance aptly named “When Two Worlds Meet.” Saxophonia will also offer performances by other local Latvian soloists and ensembles, including the all-female quartet n[ex]t, the piano-sax-and-marimba crossover group Xylem Trio, and the talented young soloists Gints Pabērzs and Arvīds Kazlausks. The Saxophonia Festival regularly features guest musicians from abroad. This year is no exception. In February, audiences in Riga will be treated to concerts by the Rolf-Erik Nystrøm Trio from Norway. Nystrøm has played the sax in many different ensembles, performing everything from classical to jazz to folk, but this is his first group with traditional-music vocalist Unni Løvlid and West African guitarist Becaye Aw. On February 20, the festival will offer its final concert, with the worldrenowned Joshua Redman Trio from the United States. Born in California and currently residing in New York City, the Grammy-nominated Redman has been heavily influenced by the jazz and bebop greats, such as John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman, and is widely considered the modern-day incarnation of these legendary jazz masters. Since the early nineties, Redman and his various ensembles have performed with musicians ranging from Dave Brubeck and B.B. King to The Rolling Stones and Stevie Wonder. Riga’s Saxophonia Festival mimics the diversity of its honored instrument by offering a range of venues for performances. Besides St. John’s Church, concerts will be held at Spīķeri Concert Hall near the Central Market, in a red-brick warehouse dating to the mid-1800s; the medieval Great Guild concert hall in Old Riga, whose history stretches back to the fourteenth century; and the Great Hall of the esteemed Latvian Academy of Music, where many of the local performers received their formal training. But by far the most intimate venue will be the trendy bar and club Piens, on the outskirts of central Riga, where guests and performers will gather for a large open jam session on February 17 at nine p.m. Though at first glance the saxophone doesn’t seem characteristic of the Latvian capital, closer inspection proves that Riga is in fact very similar to this most Riga Saxophone Quartet versatile of instruments. Riga’s long and diverse history, vibrant bicultural population, lively mix of architectural styles, and openness to change and future possibilities all combine to make it the perfect fit for the many-sided saxophone. And the Saxophonia Festival this February will make it clear to audiences that the city can be both classically serious and fashionably hip—in other words, Riga, like the saxophone, can unleash some seriously cool sounds. For more information about the Saxophonia Festival, please visit www.saxophonia.lv. BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 41 OUTLOOK TRAVEL / FINLAND / OULU Oulu: Unearthing an Arctic treasure With one foot on Lapland’s doorstep and the other on the Gulf of Bothnia, Oulu has taken the best of both worlds to inscribe its own, trademark signature. The region shines as a bright northern star, be it the sky of tourism or business innovations. 42 / AIRBALTIC.COM Text by Ieva Nora Firere | Publicity photos My first impression of Oulu was given by the friendly customs and border patrol detector dog, who wagged his tail excitedly. As it turned out, warmheartedness was the defining feature of entire trip to Oulu – its high northern latitude and cold winter weather notwithstanding. While waiting for my baggage, I flipped through the pages of OuluOn magazine, where a sentence caught my eye. “Oulu has learned to take excellent care of its visitors.” I wondered if that was just a standard phrase that any city’s marketing publication would print. However, I would soon discover, on more occasions than one, that the magazine’s claim was right on the mark. With a location at the same northern latitude as Iceland’s capital of Reykjavik, and where the average winter temperature hovers at about minus 10 degrees Centigrade, Oulu is home to an incredibly hardy, sincere, hospitable and straightforward people. Perhaps that is why this relatively small city of 140 000 inhabitants has been so successful with all kinds of innovations, and why it has managed to set a solid name for itself on the world stage. Oulu claims to be a gateway to the Arctic, which is quite understandable, since the term “gateway” implies being open. With one foot on Lapland’s doorstep and the other on the Gulf of Bothnia, Oulu and its surroundings excel in the specialties of both geographic regions. Tourists will be able to enjoy the classic selection of activities offered by Lapland – including Northern Lights holidays, husky and snowmobile safaris – as well as traditional Ostrobothnian offerings like seaside cottages, fishing and events on the beach. Big things out of nothing Oulu really stands out when you look at its economic and business indicators: it is one of the world’s leading centres for wireless technologies, including Nokia, Nokia Siemens Networks and Polar Electro R&D and manufacturing, and is ranked among top 28 IT cities worldwide. It also has the best wireless competence in Finland. Oulu also boasts the second busiest airport in the country, which will double its capacity by the end of this year. Oulu seems to have succeeded in unearthing its treasures, quite literally, as with the archaeological excavations at the Kierikki Stone Age Centre. Furthermore, the people of Oulu have also managed to make big things out of nothing, as with the annual Air OUTLOOK TRAVEL / FINLAND / OULU Guitar World Championships. What started off as a joke 15 years ago has now become a major international festival that draws considerable media coverage and attracts more than 10 000 curious visitors every year. Oulu’s touristic development experienced a tremendous boost at the end of the 1980s, when many locals place winter tires not only on their cars, but also on their bicycles. It is hard to say what came first to Oulu – its innovation-based businesses or its university-based research programmes. One thing is clear: the support of the city council to these initiatives proved very beneficial, for now Oulu is home to both a recognized university with 16 000 students, and a network of creative, internationally renowned enterprises. City of festivals Pikisaari Island Nallikari Winter village the Tietomaa science centre opened its doors to the public, and the renown Eden spa centre began offering its wellness services. In addition, most of the region’s cycle paths, which have a total length of more than 400 kilometres, were also constructed. The paths are maintained throughout the entire year and are deemed to be among the best in all of Finland. For this reason, bicycle travel is a common means of transport here, even in the wintertime. That means that every autumn, 44 / AIRBALTIC.COM Oulu’s spirit of initiative and entrepreneurship goes back at least as far as the 18th century, when tar was the black gold of the region and when the Oulu River was the lifeblood of the region’s economy. Tar was exported down the river through Oulu to various international destinations. At one point, the region was the largest tar supplier in the world. The historic riverside manors by the river’s shores represent these years of prosperity very well. Some of them, such as Maikkulan kartano and Merilän kartano, are still a local pride. Activities for individuals and groups can be booked through GoArctic there. The manor owners travelled frequently and incorporated the furniture, souvenirs and other items that they purchased abroad into their homes, as attested to by the Russian, Swedish and Central European influences in the buildings’ interiors. Their cooking, however, maintained a distinctly local touch – so much so, that common labourers asked to be fed salmon (an abundant local food now considered to be a delicacy) no more than three times a week. In short, Oulu has been a hub of trade and transportation for quite a long time, which has helped it to consolidate its position as a thriving northern city by the sea. Today, people from the neighbouring (and sparsely populated) region of Lapland admit that they sometimes travel to Oulu to get the feel of a real city. Now, as before, Oulu’s native inhabitants are continuing to develop the potential of their city. It all lies in the simple notion of cooperation. Last year, the organizers of several small arts and culture festivals got together under a single umbrella and this year, by pooling their resources, they hope to turn the entire month of August into one long festival “marathon”. From classical music to the darkest rock, from circus to cinema, from theatre to dance, and from literature to the visual arts – all will be represented in a wide array of activities. The notion that one must move continually forward is also practiced by the locals in other spheres of life, too. They will advise you before crossing a frozen lake on a snowmobile – if you hear a cracking sound, then press down on the gas and surge full speed ahead! BO OUTLOOK TRAVEL / FINLAND / OULU MUST–SEE IN THE OULU REGION FOR FAMILIES Science centre Tietomaa It takes only a couple of minutes to understand why Tietomaa – Oulu’s “hands on” science centre – is the city’s most popular tourist destination. The average length of a visit is four hours, as time seems to stand still there. Rule No. 1 implies that everything has to be touched. The exhibitions (Illusions, Gravitation, Great Inventions and Astronomy, to name a few) are located on several floors, but none has managed to exceed the popularity of the 4th floor and its Sporttimus exhibition, which includes a 3D ski jump simulator and the opportunity to change a race car tire. Make sure to take the glass elevator to the top of the tower, as the splendid view is worth even a queue. Although the admission is free for children aged five and under, parents will probably find it too hard to resist the temptation to spend at least a few euros in the wonderful souvenir and gift shop, where one can purchase all kinds of exotic items, such as a rubber cactus that “grows” overnight after having been watered like a plant. www.tietomaa.fi Iso–Syöte cita In Oulu and its surroundings, the landscape is as flat as a pancake. A bit further north towards Lapland, however, the terrain is already more rugged. The closest fells or tunturi (i.e. mountainous landscapes) are a two-hour drive away, in Syöte. While the 30-year-old Iso–Syöte winter resort is smaller than more northern places such as Levi, it offers a more intimate atmosphere and practically the same types of winter activities, which usually last until mid-April. These include snowmobile rides, husky safaris, snowshoe hiking and ice fishing. The main activities, of course, are downhill skiing and cross-country. Skiers have 16 slopes to choose from, with special consideration given to children and snowboarders. Accommodation options range from fell–top hotels to traditional kelo cottages (made of mature, full round pine trees) and a suite in ice igloo. The owner of the resort is a creative man with new exciting development plans to serve tourists even better in the future. During the winter season, a regular ski bus runs between Oulu and Iso–Syöte. www. experience-isosyote.fi OUTLOOK TRAVEL / FINLAND / OULU FOR SPORTS LOVERS Rokua Not only are Rokua’s Health & Spa centre and national park located close together, they both work hand in glove. For that reason, Rokua can actually be placed under several labels, including nature, sports, health and history. Rokua Geopark Rokua National Park is one of the most recent members of the Unesco Geopark Network. Eskers (gravel-like formations similar to moraines) form the basis of its terrain, a remnant of the Ice Age. A number of depressions from that geological period have become crystal-clear lakes, with age- old forests of stunning beauty to hike through, some of which lead to the hidden Poikajoki River canyon. Last year, this unique combination of natural features induced Unesco to accord Rokua the status of a Geopark, making it the world’s northernmost Geopark. The Geopark designation implies an additional obligation to showcase the local cultural heritage, which is why cultural exhibitions can be seen at the Suppa information centre. The centre’s friendly staff will also help you to book outdoor activities and rent equipment for snowshoe hiking, crosscountry skiing, ice fishing and Nordic walking. Health & Spa The massage and treatment therapies of Rokua’s Health & Spa go back several decades, when it began to treat Finnish veterans of the Second World War. Now, however, visitors of all ages and from all countries are welcome. Following the completion of a 10-million-EUR renovation project just two months ago, everything in the Health & Spa centre is once again sparkling and new. With pine forests all around, the air is particularly crisp, fresh and clean, providing added value to the beneficial effects of the centre’s treatment options, which include pools, massages, beauty therapy, health coaching and outdoor activities. The centre also has a great catering service that offers delicious food, and can accommodate 360 people at a time. www.rokua.com www.rokua.fi Ice hockey at the Oulun Energia Areena As this is the home arena of the Oulun Kärpät team, which has won several championships in the Finnish Hockey League (SM–liiga), try to catch at least one hockey match during your visit. Local tourism companies have recently started adding ice hockey to their tourist packages, and for good reason. The Finns are almost as crazy about hockey as the Latvians, so head to the arena for some great emotions. www.oulunkarpat.fi 46 / AIRBALTIC.COM OUTLOOK TRAVEL / FINLAND / OULU FOR CULTURE AND HISTORY AFFICIONADOS Oulu Museum of Art Kierikki Stone Age Centre The Oulu Museum of Art is a buzzing centre of activity for artists from Northern Finland. The light, spacious and modern museum actively cooperates with other museums in Finland, such as the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki, as well as international art institutions. At the end of this year, the museum will host ARS 11, one of the most important contemporary arts events in Finland. This year’s focus will be on new Finnish jewellery art and clothing design, as well as on young Finnish artists. Until April 21, visitors can see an exhibition entitled Chaos of the Senses, which explores the many ways in which people use their senses. The museum’s café is worth a visit of its own, as Irma Mannonen, the “lady of the house,” is a master baker. Her delectable tiramisu, for example, is sure to teleport you straight to Italy. While Rokua’s natural scenery has been formed by the Ice Age, Kierikki focuses on life in the Stone Age. Its reconstructed Stone Age village shows how people once lived in prehistoric Finland, how they made fire and how they processed their food. Visitors can even participate in ongoing archaeological excavations. The more adventurous can take part in Kierikki’s Primitive Surviving Project, which is held regularly. The next project session will take place from February 7–25. Here, one can directly experience the harsh living conditions faced by our ancestors and see how they adapted. The project is quite popular and has seen a rising demand by both local and foreign visitors. www.ouka.fi/taidemuseo_eng www.kierikki.fi OUTLOOK TRAVEL / FINLAND / OULU SOUVENIRS Shaman Spirits (Šamaani) The company sells a new commercial object ind industrial or warehouse uses 16b Acones Street, Ulbroka, Stopiņu village, 12 km from the Riga city centre, 5 km to the Via Baltic, paved driveways). Total area of commercial land - 9070 square m. The area is fenced, paved and there is possibility for perspective building. Production-warehouse building area - 1440m2 (size 24x60x11), the Administrative building area 120m2. Administration building full decoration, manufacturingwarehouse building is equipped with two 5 ton lifting equipment. All communications. Price - EUR 1.5 million. Tel. (+ 371) 2555-8076 (English) Tel. (+371) 2923-6361, (+371) 2929-9574 (Latvian, Russian) e-mail: [email protected] Shaman Spirits produces genuinely local alcoholic drinks. The name refers to shamans from Lapland and other places where this form of religious activity is practiced. Shaman Spirits claims to be the northernmost spirit distillery in the world, obtaining its alcohol by refining locally grown potatoes and adding flavours from forest berries that grow in the vicinity (cloudberries, lingonberries, cranberries and blueberries). It is one of Finland’s two distilleries and its exports reach various other countries. For example, its potato-based gin is sold as far south as Spain. The distillery’s products can be tasted during the factory tour (groups are welcome to contact the company through its website), as well as in restaurants and bought at Alko stores all over Finland. Those who feel especially brave can try a rare specialty – Shaman Spirits’s black-coloured pine extract liqueur. www.shamanspirits.com LOVI Lovi is an Oulu-born brand that fits well into the concept of Finnish design – clear lines, simple and smart, as close to nature as possible. Lovi offers smart-looking decoration pieces and three-dimensional objects from Finnish birch plywood that you assemble yourself (no extra tools needed), giving you the joy of feeling as if you have created the article yourself. The smallest items are envelope-sized and easy to send. Lovi products are available in various stores in the city, as well as the Oulu airport shop. www.lovi.fi Leipäjuusto Translated into English, leipäjuusto means “bread cheese.” Other nations might recognize it under the name of Lapland cheese or Finnish “squeaky” cheese (after the sound that it makes when eaten). Leipäjuusto has a universal character. Finns prefer to eat it as a dessert, either by crumbling it into coffee or by heating it up in the oven and serving it with cream, vanilla and cinnamon. The cheese can be bought in Oulu grocery shops and kauppahalli (indoor market place), as well as at dairies outside of the city, including Niemitalon Juustola (www.niemitalonjuustola.fi) on the way to Syöte or Vaalan Juustola (www.vaalanjuustola.fi) in the direction of Rokua. Special thanks to Airport Hotel Oulu, Maikkulan kartano, Hotel Iso-Syöte, Rokua Helath & Spa, Rokua Geopark and Sokos Hotel Arina, as well as the GoArctic adventure team, the representatives of the city of Oulu and last but not least the managing director of Travel Marketing Oulu Ltd, Kaisu Laurila-Seluska; for all their kind assistance and warm hospitality over the three day period. For further travel information on the Oulu region, please visit www.ouluon.fi Fly to Oulu with Direct flights from Turku and Riga starting from EUR 39 From more than 70 cities via Riga starting from EUR 104 Earn 5 BalticMiles Points for each Euro spent BalticMiles partners in Oulu: airBaltic, Avis, Sixt, Radisson Blu, Cumulus, airBalticTravel, Language Direct OUTLOOK / PROMO Publicity photo A traffic- and stress- free trip to the airport Moscow is known, among other things, for its legendary traffic jams. However, since Aeroexpress began running an electric train shuttle service between the Russian capital and its three largest airports in 2008, passengers no longer have to spend anxiety-filled moments stuck in traffic. Aeroexpress is the fastest, safest and most convenient way to travel both to and from Moscow’s airports – without any stops, transfers or traffic jams on the way. The trip from central Moscow to Vnukovo and Sheremetyevo airports takes only 35 minutes, while the ride to Domodedovo lasts 45 minutes. Aeroexpress’ services are also available to airBaltic passengers, as the airline offers two daily flights from Riga to Sheremetyevo Airport and three flights a week from Riga to Domodedovo. Aeroexpress offers two levels of service – Standard and Business Class. Business Class passengers receive such added perks as the option to reserve individual seats in advance. They can read free copies of leading business newspapers and magazines. Furthermore, the Business Class train cars are furnished with upgraded interiors and additional space between seat rows. Starting from late June or early July, all Aeroexpress passengers will have WiFi wireless internet access during their train ride. Aeroexpress train terminals are strategically located close to the Kiyevskaya, Belorusskaya and Paveletskaya metro stations, which is very convenient for the 30 000 passengers who use the Aeroexpress train every day. The company is also expanding its range of ticket sales services. Clients can already purchase their train tickets in advance through Aeroexpress’ website at www.aeroexpress.ru. This year, an additional mobile ticket service system is planned. BO For further information about Aeroexpress train schedules and ticket prices, please consult the company’s website at www.aeroexpress.ru BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 49 OUTLOOK / PROMO Welcome to the Northern Finland! Sokos Hotel Levi The northernmost hotel of the Sokos Hotels chain is located in the very heart of Levi, the highly popular destination set amid the wild and unspoiled fjells of Lapland. The hotel offers a chance to sample the exotic flavors of the region, whether traveling for leisure or business. The distance to the nearest bus stop is 300 m, the airport 15 km and the railway station 80 km. The 202 rooms (including 20 superior rooms and 9 suites) of the hotel are individually furnished to reflect the variety of the seasons in Lapland. The hotel features indoor and outdoor jacuzzi, ski storage and a 170–car heated indoor car park. Coffee House & Bar (www.coffeehouse.fi) on the first floor offers a wide selection of foods from early morning coffee to leisurely lunch and is also a convivial place for an evening of relaxation. Two meeting rooms at the hotel adapt to a wide range of needs and events for 10–60 participants. A private sauna can also be booked in conjunction with meetings. The hotel’s airy Restaurant Kiisa offers further banquet facilities for 140 people and can also be used for private parties of all kinds. Ask for details! 50 / AIRBALTIC.COM OUTLOOK / PROMO Sokos Hotel Arina in Oulu Famous for its merchant and handicraft traditions, Oulu is a major know–how centre of advanced technology and the business centre of northern Finland. Sokos Hotel Arina is a classy and comfortable hotel right in the centre of Oulu, on the pedestrian street Rotuaari. The dignified facades of the time–honored merchant’s block conceal a top modern hotel and restaurant complex. The ground floor is one of Oulu’s hotspots, as it hosts a café Coffee House and four restaurants. Fransmanni offers Rustic French cuisine, renowned for its use of simple, fresh ingredients. Amarillo is a stylish bar and restaurant serving delicious Mexican–style food and is known as one of the top party venues in the city. Rosso’s uncomplicated Italian style menu is perfect for the entire family, baby and granny included. However, the open kitchen of Torero offers tasty Spanish tapas and juicy steaks from the lava grill open kitchen. Arina is well suited for the needs of both business and leisure travelers. The hotel capacity exceeds 500 guests at a time. Out of the 260 rooms, 17 are superior rooms and 6 are suites. There are three public saunas available as well as rooms and suites with private en–suite saunas. Being based in the very center of the Arctic business hub, the hotel offers thorough conference services. 15 conference rooms are suitable for various–sized business meetings for a total of 350 people. You can also arrange a meeting with a follow– up sauna. Sokos Hotel Vaakuna Rovaniemi Rovaniemi is the modern capital of Finnish Lapland, located on the Northern Arctic Circle, a place where reality and fairytales meet on the border of the Arctic. Every season in Rovaniemi is an unforgettable experience: the never–ending summertime sunshine, the twilight period leading up to Christmas, and the springtime snowscapes glistering like fields of diamonds. Located in the heart of Rovaniemi and close to nature, Sokos Hotel Vaakuna’s 157 rooms and two suites offer a relaxing and homely atmosphere. Close by, you’ll find a wide range of opportunities to go shopping, a variety of sports and culture services and local sights – the Arktikum, Arctic Circle, Santa Claus, Rovaniemi Theatre, Rovaniemi Art Museum and Santasport Spa. The pleasant Tokka meeting facilities in the hotel can hold up to 60 people, and we can also arrange meetings in the hotel’s other facilities. The hotel features two restaurants that serve rustic French cuisine seasoned with garlic and herbs and Wild West Tex Mex. Round off your evening in the newly refurbished Doris Night Club, the party–goers’ paradise, without even having to step outside. The two hotel restaurants and the bar combined provide space for as many as 700 people, depending on table formation. More information on facilities and services: www.sokoshotels.fi BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 51 OUTLOOK / PROMO TAV Airports TAV Airports, which had signed a Memorandum of Understanding with airBaltic in relation to the construction and operation of a possible new terminal building in Riga, started operating the Duty-Free, Food & Beverage and other commercial areas within the existing terminal on January 1st, 2011. Launched Operations at Riga Airport TAV Airports started operating the Duty-Free, Food & Beverage and other commercial areas within the existing terminal on January 1st, 2011. The operation at the Riga Airport will eventually cover sections spread over a 4650-square-metre area, such as Duty-Free, Food & Beverage Points, foreign exchange offices, car rental offices, banks, pharmacies and CIP Lounges during an operation period of 10 years, in accordance with the tender specifications arranged by SJSC Riga International Airport Management. Considering Latvia as a noteworthy market and centring it in its expansion strategies regarding Northern Europe, TAV Airports has already been providing ground handling services through North Hub Services, of which its subsidiary Havas is a 50% shareholder, in Latvia and Finland. TAV Airports Holding President and CEO Dr. M. Sani Sener said: “The Riga International Airport has experienced 31% annual growth in terms of passenger numbers for the last seven years. TAV Airports will be a key player in this process, with its excellent service mentality and superior operational performance. We will not be a stranger in Riga, where we are already present with North Hub Services, our ground handling company, of which our subsidiary Havas is a shareholder. We intend to start working with airBaltic in the construction and operation of a possible new terminal at the Riga International Airport. This project is the acknowledgement of TAV’s commercial-wise success on the international level, together with TAV’s wholly integrated airport operation projects.” Through its subsidiary ATU, TAV Airports has been in a partnership with Gebr. Heinemann, a German retail company known worldwide, since the launch of duty free operations at the Istanbul Atatürk Airport, and 52 / AIRBALTIC.COM delivered high quality service to passengers along with Heinemann’s experience of operations at 48 international airports in 19 countries. As of now, TAV is transferring its global know-how in management and operations of F&B and commercial areas to Riga. Closely following the developments in the Riga Airport during the last four years, TAV Airports is planning to become an important player in the launch of the new terminal. TAV Airports is the leading airport operator in Turkey and is among the major players in the worldwide airport business. TAV Airports operates Istanbul Atatürk Airport (one of the busiest airports in Europe), Ankara Esenboga Airport, Izmir Adnan Menderes Airport and Antalya Gazipasa Airport in Turkey, the Tbilisi and Batumi Airports in Georgia, Monastir and Enfidha Airports in Tunisia, as well as the Skopje and the Ohrid Airports in Macedonia. TAV Airports also has diversified businesses in other branches of airport operations, such as duty-free sales, food and beverage services, ground handling services, information technologies, security and other commercial area operations. TAV Airports serves 410 000 flights for approximately 300 airline companies and 48 million passengers on average per year. TAV Airports provides an unparalleled passenger experience through its subsidiaries, which strive to meet every need that can be expected from an airport. There is no room for error, confusion or indecision in airport operations, where the pace is frantic 24 hours a day. Armed with this awareness, TAV Airports serves its customers with experienced and cheerful staff at every point; from the parking lot to security control, from checkin to cafés, from duty-free shops to the boarding gates.BO OUTLOOK / TRAVEL / COPENHAGEN Text by Simon Cooper | Publicity photos and coRBIS and emilysalomon.dk A Love Story If Paris is Europe’s heartland of romanticism, then Copenhagen is its adventure playground. From the people to the buildings and mood of the cityscape, love really is all around – and it’s imbued with the customary Danish qualities. You can hardly imagine the tourist board of any European capital failing to include the adjective ‘romantic’ in its literature. From London to Madrid – and, of course, Paris – each can stake their just claim as being romantic cities, offering pockets of intimate charm and waterside strolls, where aphrodisiacal air whisks loving couples away to a place light years away from the brick and mortar cityscape. Few cities, though, can actually be heralded as purveyors of true romance. Copenhagen is fortunate to have a romantic feel of its own right, offering much more than a mere Danish interpretation of l’amour à la Parisienne. Even on a busy shopping street or in a City Hall Square crowd, any place can feel privately veiled, like a protected personal space for love-struck couples. Limitations do not count for much in Denmark’s capital city. Single-sex relationships and marriages are aplenty, whilst the light-hearted term ‘love refugee’ refers to those foreign nationals who have been enraptured by a Dane travelling abroad and now go about their lives here. There is no envy in watching chic, handsome couples stroll past. Instead, you get the feeling that if you aren’t already head-over-heals in love, then you soon will be. Whether it is the costume drama quaintness of Frederiksberg Park and labyrinth, or the canals and autumnalshaded houses of Christianhavn, there are numerous backdrops to whatever romantic play you chose. Modernized scenarios inspired by Hans Christian Andersen, if you will. The same author of children’s stories, inspired by a love for Swedish opera singer Jenny Lind, wrote his tale the Nightingale in Tivoli, a park surely designed with more than a simple nod to the infatuated escapist. Like OUTLOOK / TRAVEL / COPENHAGEN throwing open the cupboard doors to Narnia, an oasis of plants, lights and colour greets you, a landscape fit for stolen looks or secluded shows of embrace. Naturally, for one of the most open-minded cities on Earth, public displays of affection are common and passionate, but not extravagant. There are even ‘designated’ places for you to canoodle with your lover. Falkoner Biografen and Empire cinemas have back-row ‘love seats’ wide enough for couples to get comfy with each other, minus the inconvenience of an armrest. Romantic atmosphere Taking the concept further last April, the bus company Arriva ran a two-week ‘kissing seats’ scheme on 100 city buses to induce an even more romantic atmosphere on board. The seats were matted in a passionate shade of red. Kissing can also be practiced outdoors, au plein air. Outside the Planetarium, at the foot of the lakes, is a serene ‘kissing spot’ that overlooks the water and hovers under the night sky. Do so in a small square and you may even be played to by a band. Copenhagen has a laissez-faire attitude to love and sex. As genuine amorous feeling goes, walking down Istedgade – the famous sex industry hub – is hardly what you want. It is, however, a platform for the sort of open sentiment radiating through the streets and hanging in the air behind each pretty cyclist who breezes past. Close to Istedgade is Vesterbro – a former workers’ district. Now chic and full of life, a huddle of bars and clubs sees young people. Copenhagen Opera House (Operaen): Located on the small island of Dokløen opposite the Amalienborg castle and designed by architect Henning Larsen, the Opera House is accessible by waterbus from the Royal Theatre. The waterbus is a spectacular way to tour the city, regardless of whether you plan on going to the opera or not. Restaurant Alsace Ny Østergade 9 In the very centre of Copenhagen, a few metres off Strøget, lies a reclusive courtyard that hoses a liquorice criss-cross of Alsatian buildings and crystal conservatory. The latter has now been annexed to a family-run restaurant that serves authentic food in an otherworldly setting. Værnedamsvej Quite simply the most romantic street in the city. Known as Copenhagen’s Little Paris, its sides are lined with cafés, shops and delicatessens. The Granola coffee and ice cream bar is a must. Relaxing SPA procedures, Turkish steam bath hammam and sauna on the 5th floor with a view of the church steeples of Old Riga! Dome SPA 4 Miesnieku street, Riga www.domespa.lv Gammel Holtegaard Attemosevej 170, Holte In the suburb of Holte lies an awe-inspiring art gallery and Baroque park. A perfect and uplifting way to spend a Sunday morning with your loved one. Assistens Cemetery Falkonner Biografen Sylows Allé 15, Frederiksberg The resting place of Danish authors Hans Christian Andersen and Søren Kirkergaard, Assistens is to cemeteries what Tivoli is to theme parks. Stroll at your leisure in this tranquil spot, which acquires a different feel with the changing of the seasons. Couples even picnic here during the summer. This cinema’s halls are decorated with red seats, with orange armchairs and old movie photos from films such as Breakfast at Tiffany’s. It has a modern feel, although certain older parts of the building have been preserved. Take the stairs to the leisurely latte lounge and then watch a film from the comfort of a ‘kissing seat’. During the day, take a carefree walk and see the well-kept splendour of Østerport. Continue from Kongens Nytorv to Nyhavn and up the water’s edge past the Royal Danish Playhouse, Little Mermaid and boat tour station. You will end up at Churchill Park, where the notion of Copenhagen as an endless, flat plain is dispelled with small hills, twisting trees and a wooden windmill built in 1847. Opposite is the old fortification of Kastellet with a surrounding park – elevated, starshaped and picturesque in the extreme. Back down on Øster Voldgade, you can duck into the Botanical Gardens – another fairy-tale spread of plants, steeped rock mounds and ponds. Running from Kongens Nytorv to Kastallet is Bredgade – a large yet tranquil street housing various embassy buildings, as well as the Amalienborg castle and gardens, not to mention the stunning Marmorkirken church with its basilica-like dome. The street has a wide selection of intimate cafés and bars to choose from, and one of the restaurants, Von Plessen is ideal for a candlelit meal. As Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard once said, ‘Love is all, it gives all, and it takes all.’ A mere weekend in Copenhagen will prove this. There is nothing tokenistic or commercial (Valentines’ Day isn’t really emphasized here) in Copenhagen’s romance, which is vibrant and exhilarating, as much a part of the city as the very ground on which it was built. BO Nørrebrogade, Nørrebro Fly to Copenhagen with Direct flights from Riga and Vilnius starting from EUR 39 From more than 70 cities via Riga starting from EUR 73 Earn 5 BalticMiles Points for each Euro spent BalticMiles partners in Copenhagen: airBaltic, Avis, Sixt, Radisson Blu, airBalticTravel, Language Direct OUTLOOK / PROMO Latvian singer LINDA LEEN The timeless Beauty of fur MELE, “Basteja Pasāža” Zigfrīda Annas Meierovica bulvāris 16, Rīga, Latvija Phone: +371 26645451; +371 26476633 www.mele1880.lv 58 / AIRBALTIC.COM Fur is one of the softest, warmest, and most luxurious materials known to man. As you run your fingers through the silky hairs of a mink stole, you immediately want to brush your cheeks against the soft material and bask in its lavish, natural magnificence. OUTLOOK / PROMO A fur coat is the ultimate fulfilment of this natural desire. Human beings have been wearing the pelts of animals for thousands of years, but coats made from the highest quality furs – mink, chinchilla, and sable – have become exclusive garments only in recent centuries. It is easy to see why, as the preparation of a well-made fur coat demands the highest quality materials, precise stitching and expert tailoring. Mastering the art of fur-making requires time and dedication. One of the world’s oldest furriers is MELE, founded in Italy in 1880 by a leather entrepreneur named Enrico Mele. By the early 20th century, the Naples-based company was one of the most respected furriers in Europe. In 1907, MELE won a gold medal at the Exposition Universelle in Paris, and in 1917, Enrico Mele himself was crowned a Knight of the Crown of Italy by King Victor Emmanuel III. Over the last 130 years, the traditions, secrets and techniques of the MELE fur company have been passed down through five generations of the Mele family. Today, the business is run by three brothers – Enrico, colours vary widely, from classic browns and blacks to creamy whites and subtly dyed blues. Sensuous softness Of course, the main element in any fur garment is the material itself. For 130 years, MELE has prided itself in the highest quality furs, which it acquires from high-end purveyors throughout the world. MELE purchases all of its furs at exclusive auctions in various cities worldwide, where international furriers gather to assess, select, and buy their materials. The company prefers the sensuous softness of blackglama and saga mink, chinchilla, and the most coveted and exclusive fur available today—sable fur from Russia. Each of the materials is carefully treated, processed and stitched into completed garments at the MELE factory in Naples. Along with a local partner, the Mele brothers have recently opened their first boutique shop in the Baltic countries, in the fashionable Basteja Pasāža shopping complex, directly across from Bastejkalns Hill in Riga’s Old Town. The boutique is the only store in the Baltics to exclusively sell MELE furs, and the first MELE Davide, and Diego – who continue the traditions, monobrand boutique in the world after the reputation of excellence associated with the secrets and Naples showroom. MELE name since the late 1800s. techniques Customers can browse the racks of garments in an atmosphere of hushed elegance that Although the company’s fur coats are of the MELE befits the grandeur of fur. They can also order particularly popular in Italy, MELE is known fur company made-to-measure garments directly from the throughout the world for its luxurious and have been Naples factory – just like the leading Italian reasonably priced garments. Legendary actresses such as Monica Bellucci and Sofia passed down actresses and fashion models – with individual Loren, as well as high-ranking politicians, have through FIVE measurements and sizing made right there at been known to order custom-made garments generations the shop in Riga. A high quality fur coat is much more than from the MELE showroom in Naples. of the Mele a purchase; it is an investment in the future. The fact that MELE has been making fur family If properly cared for, a fur coat can last garments since 1880 doesn’t mean that the practically forever, passed down from generation to furrier hasn’t kept up with the latest styles in fur design. Every year, the furrier releases a new line of clothing that generation, just like the MELE name itself. Fur is such a showcases the latest fashion trends. These include classic luxurious material, that a fur garment will never go out of style. It will be inherited by future generations and worn knee-length coats for colder weather; shorter coats for the spring and autumn; as well as variety of other stylish as a testament to our enduring desire for natural warmth, garments, including vests, wraps, mantles and stoles. The classic luxury and timeless beauty. BO BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 59 Fly to Baku with airBaltic starting from April 17 from €59 One cannot serve Text by Elvita Ruka | Photos by Aija Bley two masters “Look, over there! Owls! Flying about by the cross of the church. They usually appear at about midnight, make a couple of loops around the building and settle down to perch upon its dome. Let’s be still for a minute. You can hear their wings flapping. I do not know why so many of them gather here. I suppose that they sense the sanctity of this holy place. And they are fond of me, too!” Even as he speaks, Father Gregor seems to be making music. Twenty years ago, he was a carefree musician named Armen, savouring the pleasures of life. He wanted to flee the Soviet Union and settle down in America with his wife and prized violin. His jazz band was scheduled to tour the United States, and he had already planned his family’s escape. His friends had even 60 / AIRBALTIC.COM found a restaurant in America where he could perform and make his living, and an invitation had been written up for his daughter to visit the USA. Shortly before his scheduled departure, however, Armen was asked to replace the Gandzasar church deacon in Karabakh for two short weeks. Two decades later, he is still there, with a new name – Father Gregor. OUTLOOK / SPECIAL “No, I do not play the violin any more. One cannot serve two masters. However, my wife is still an opera singer. She’s the one who does the singing and travelling. ‘Gregor, I am in Paris now. Gregor, I am in Venice. Gregor, I am roaming the streets of Athens.’ My duty is to ‘tune up’ human souls here in Karabakh. I was dragged into the war with Azerbaijan and can no longer leave. My wife signed a paper consenting to “I was ordained as a priest in Karabakh. The war broke out in 1988 and someone had to baptize the lads, listen to their confessions and provide them with support. I was a chaplain during the war. I had a cross in one hand and a rifle in the other. Do you know what the Karabakh Syndrome is? Those who have actually fought in the conflict never speak about its tragic side, only about its comic aspects. There are still things that you can laugh about during wartime. Eventually, you get used to all kinds of situations. Death may be all around you, but you try to see the funny side of it. What kind of person are you if you have no sense of humour?” Baptism before battle my service to the Church.” Gandzasar was built on the place where pilgrims supposedly brought the severed skull of St. John the Baptist – a sacred relic. That was back in the 13th century. The monastery rises on a hilltop, mysterious and imposing. Now it has been restored, thanks to the funding of an Armenian millionaire who fanatically supports the revival of Nagorno-Karabakh. The philanthropist builds, invests, maintains, cares for and educates. First, he restored the monastery. The electric bill alone reaches 1500 USD per month, which he dutifully pays. “Once, we had to go into battle, but I had to bless the soldiers for victory first. Suddenly, a forceful lady turned up and asked me to baptize her right there on the spot. Her husband had been killed, she had nothing to lose and wanted to fight to the end. I told her: ‘Let’s do it later. Wait until after the battle.’ But she went on the offensive and started shouting at me: ‘Who will baptise me if you get killed?’ Yes, I hadn’t thought about that. I asked the soldiers to wait and told her to kneel down. She already had a cross around her neck. I asked her to unbutton her blouse. She yanked it open. The buttons flew off and her breasts popped out right in front of the whole platoon. So I baptized this half-naked woman just before the battle. So many guys were killed at that time, too many.” We are sitting in the ancient vaults of the monastery and enjoying an evening trapeza.* From time to time, a little beady-eyed mouse runs up to the table. She is not afraid of people, only of owls, so she is looking for security in a most insecure place – the company of humans. This time, the humans turn out to be benevolent, and the mouse is saved. Father Gregor has not yet killed the violinist named Armen inside himself. Both sides of his personality still love music. A captivating and wistful concert rings out in the building. It is his mobile phone, ringing during a dinner of lavash bread, chicken and tomatoes. The phone has all kinds of melodies: classical music and jazz, new Armenian pop songs and old hits. The phone’s reflection can be seen against the bottle of wine and Father Gregor’s eyes are sparkling. Meanwhile, Armen’s fingers play a non-existent violin. “Listen to this song, and this one! And now, my favourite tune!” The morning prayer at the Gandzasar Monastery is sung by only two souls – Father Gregor and his assistant. The lonesome chant echoes beautifully through the vaults of the church. Strangely, the prayers seem to be accompanied by the sound of a violin. BO * Trapeza – a common meal after a prayer. CARS In association with Whatcar.LV The Bentley Continental GT: an all-new version of Bentley’s super-coupé says... One of the finest coupés that money can buy Just like HP Sauce and fish and chips, things don’t come much more British than a Bentley, even if the latest Continental GT is built almost entirely from Volkswagen Group parts. 62 / AIRBALTIC.COM CARS Well, dry your eyes Anglophiles, because the Continental GT happens to be one of the finest coupés that money can buy. A 575-horsepower, 6.0-litre twin-turbo W12 engine provides the driving force. All of that power is pumped through a six-speed automatic gearbox and down to the road via four-wheel drive and wide tyres on 20-inch alloy wheels. Hardly surprising then, that despite its prodigious 2.3-tonne weight, the Continental is one seriously quick car. Sink the huge accelerator pedal into the thick pile carpet and that famous grille rises in unison with the smooth, instantaneous and vast force that you’ve just unleashed. The Continental GT takes just 4.8 seconds to go from rest to 100 km/h and carries on to a top speed just shy of 320 km/h. It’s just as well that the active suspension and wide axles ensure unwavering straight-line stability. Engine 6-litre twin-turbocharged W12 Power 575 Hp 0-100 km/h 4,6 sec Top speed 318 km/h Economy 16,5 l/100km CO g/km 384 Price from(without VAT) 160 000 € 2 So, what’s it like to drive? Don’t go thinking that the Continental was conceived just to devour motorway miles. Quite the reverse. Show it a series of bends and the combination of grip, sweetly weighted steering and minimal body roll enable the GT to change direction smoothly and accurately. Given that it’s a Bentley, you’d be appalled if it wasn’t library quiet: you won’t be disappointed. The new car is 16% quieter than the model that it replaces. Inevitably, those big tyres do generate some road noise over grainier surfaces, but that’s the only small fly in the ointment. The engine is running at just above tickover at motorway speeds, so there’s almost no mechanical row from under the bonnet, while the triple laminated acoustic glass blots out wind noise effectively. Your passengers will have no problem catching forty winks as you enjoy the vast reserves of performance. What’s it like inside? The interior of the Continental GT is much more up-to-date than that of its predecessor, having a more bespoke look and feel. BO BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 63 CARS A small dose of optimism from Detroit Our experts from the car buyers’ guide whatcar.lv share the latest news from the North American International Auto Show (NAIAS) in Detroit 64 / AIRBALTIC.COM Audi A6 The unveiling of the new A6 in Detroit was its first public showing, and there’s already a sense of eager anticipation that this Audi model may once again hit the mark. The start of the year was cold and wintry in the Motor City, but this time the air was tinged with an optimism that had not been felt about the car industry – especially the American car industry – for some years. This year’s NAIAS motor show kicked off in the wake of recently released US car sales figures for the year 2010, which make for great reading. The number of sold cars had risen by 11% compared to the previous year, halting a four-year run of declining sales. Predictions for the year ahead are cautious but positive, with more growth expected. Leading that growth will be a variety of car launches, ranging from the all-new Audi A6 and face-lifted Mercedes C-Class through to near-production-ready concepts such as the Mini Paceman and cutting-edge vehicles such as the electric Ford Focus. Here are some of the cars that got us excited. CARS BMW The BMW 1 Series M Coupé isn’t a fast-sounding car name, but don’t let that fool you. This is the fastest and most extreme production 1 Series yet, the “baby M3,” as some may call it. Hyundai Hyundai will re-enter the affordable coupé market with the Veloster, which is especially notable for the unusual layout of a single door on the driver’s side and two conventional doors on the passenger side. Mercedes-Benz Ford Mercedes’ all-electric supercar, the SLS AMG E-cell, made its first appearance at a motor show in Detroit with the claim by CEO Dieter Zetsche that it will satisfy the two most popular New Year’s resolutions: “quit smoking and lose weight.” Ford revealed a design concept for a global compact crossover. Named Vertrek, it could replace the Kuga in Europe and the Escape in North America by combining the best elements of both. Mini Honda A new Honda Civic will be launched later this year, and this concept car gives the first clue as to how the vehicle will look. A lot of Mini fans will take a look at this striking Paceman concept car and think: ‘Wow’! Many others might look at the three-door coupé version of the Countryman and think: ‘Why?’ If positive reviews prevail, then you can expect to see it in showrooms – minus the concept car eccentricities – midway through 2012. GADGETS Text by Girts Rozners | Publicity photos JUST 5 Spacephone I just want to call! The Latvian-based company Just5 caters to those who require nothing more in their cellular phones than the capacity to make telephone calls and send sms text messages. Its latest model is the limited edition cellular Spacephone, which features these two basic functions and which is available in five incredibly bright colours. The phone has a very large keypad and is very easy to use, as well as an SOS button and built-in LED diode flashlight. Just5’s previous models can be bought through Amazon and eBay for an average of 80 USD. The limited edition Spacephone is currently available for a list price of about 100 USD. New toys www.just5.lv for the New Year Acer Aspire One AO522 Stylish netbook The first thing that one notices about this new netbook is its design. The body of the AO522 has been released with new lines, and its two-tone colour scheme immediately attracts attention. In the future, it may also be available in other colours besides black and green. The Acer Aspire 10-inch netbook (1280 x 720 pixels) is run by the latest generation of AMD Fusion processors, making it faster and more powerful than ever before. Along with the standard wired and wireless features of current-day netbooks, the AO522 can also be connected to your home’s widescreen television with an HDMI cable. LG E-90 Super thin monitor The E-90 is currently the slimmest monitor on offer by LG, with a thickness of only 7.2 mm. The image reaction time does not surpass 2 ms and the model’s sufficiently large 21-inch screen permits it to be used not only for work purposes with your computer, but also for viewing films and sportscasts. In addition, the screen’s 1920 x 1080 resolution can accommodate Blu-ray-quality content. However, the main feature of this monitor is its unusual appearance: the E-90’s thin screen and silvery support base give it an added element of style that will suit practically any office or home interior. Creative Zen Touch 2 An extremely intelligent PMP The newest generation of Zen multimedia portable media players (PMP) is the first to incorporate the Android 2.1 operating system. As a result, you can now download a wide range of apps, films, music and games from the internet; stream music wirelessly to compatible Bluetooth® headphones or speakers; use the Touch 2’s Wi-Fi function to surf the web and check your e-mail; and take photographs with its 2-megapixel built-in camera. All that’s missing in this device is a cellular phone. The Creative Zen Touch 2 is available in a choice of either 8GB or 16GB storage capacities, which sell for 279 USD and 319 USD, respectively. OUTLOOK / PROMO Feeding emotions at Kaļķu Vārti Kaļķu 11a, Rīga, Latvia Phone 67 224 576 www.kalkuvarti.lv 68 / AIRBALTIC.COM “Emotions” is a word that you will hear a lot when speaking with the new executive chef at Riga’s Kaļķu Vārti restaurant, Raimonds Zommers. “I want to conjure up positive emotions in our customers and give them a rush of positive energy,” he’ll say when describing a new dish. It’s almost as if the emotions, not hungry bellies, are what this chef is out to feed. And as it turns out, that isn’t far from the truth. OUTLOOK / PROMO Kaļķu Vārti is among the elder statesmen of the Latvian gourmet dining scene. The restaurant has been around since 2002 and spent many years under the direction of Ēriks Dreibants, one of the country’s most wellknown chefs. However, Dreibants recently decamped to the Latvian countryside with his family, leaving the stewardship of the place that he helped to create to his long-time assistant, chef Raimonds Zommers. Zommers, who was raised on an organic dairy farm in Latvia’s western region of Kurzeme, has worked as a cook at Kaļķu Vārti for ten years, so he knows his way around a kitchen as well as a local farm – the source of all of the restaurant’s fresh ingredients. Now he is faced with the daunting task of maintaining the restaurant’s high standards and satisfying the customers who have been coming here for almost a decade. Yet he doesn’t seem too fazed by the prospects. In fact, he welcomes the challenge, as it gives him a chance to explore the culinary universe. “What attracts me about working as an executive chef is the freedom of exploration,” Zommers explains. “I can explore not only new ways of preparation and new technologies, but also new products and ingredients.” One of the cornerstones of his new menu is Jerusalem artichoke soup, which has fast become a favourite dish at Kaļķu Vārti. Zommers has long been attracted by this curious root vegetable, which he claims tastes like hazel nuts, but only recently had the chance to discover its distinctive flavour and employ it in a dish. prepares the pork using the sous-vide method, preserving the meat’s juices, and then shreds the chops into pieces, unleashing their flavour on the taste buds of diners. Exuberance and vitality In order to assist its patrons in this process of discovery, Kaļķu Vārti employs some of the best waiters and waitresses in the city, who gladly interpret the chef’s explorations for diners who might not be versed in the intricacies of the culinary arts. The waitstaff is also prepared to offer its recommendations for dishes and wine pairings, and is always glad to call out the chef to present his masterpieces in person. This February, diners have a few particular masterworks to look forward to. Chef Zommers has designed a special Valentine’s Day tasting menu, available after the 14th. As for the future, Zommers has a few ideas up his sleeve. He currently has his eye on snails from his native New insights Zommers is also excited by the possibility of using the cutting-edge cooking technologies available in the Kaļķu Vārti kitchen. One is the sous-vide method of cooking, where products like meat are sealed in an airtight plastic bag and placed for several hours in a bath of warm water, which is maintained at a constant, low temperature. After being prepared under the sous-vide method, food is intensely flavourful, as it has retained its juices and cooked in its own sauces. At Kaļķu Vārti, Zommers has divided his menu into two parts: classic gourmet cuisine, and modern interpretations of traditional Latvian products and recipes. For his gourmet cuisine, he elegantly prepares classic dishes, such as soufflés and carpaccios, using some of his favourite ingredients, like rosemary, coriander, cumin, Brussels sprouts, steamed vegetables and pan-fried fish. Zommers perfects his understanding of these classic dishes by regularly visiting Michelinstarred restaurants throughout Europe, many of which are staffed by old friends from Latvia. However, the second part of the menu is where Zommers has a chance to really get down to the business of exploration. Zommers has taken traditional Latvian products, such as cabbage, pork, peas and beets, and given them a new spin. He aims to surprise his customers with variants of their ancestors’ dishes, and to give them new insight into the deep flavours of the region. For example, for his version of Latvian pork chops, Zommers Kurzeme, which are raised at special farms and fed a diet of mashed cabbage and carrots. Although many diners may be adverse to eating these strange-looking creatures, Zommers say that when the snails are fried in farm-fresh butter and sprinkled with fresh herbs and spices, they taste simply divine. Zommers is also excited about the upcoming spring, when some of his favourite garden herbs – like chives, radishes, beets, and sorrel – will gradually become available for use in his classic dishes and new inventions. The farm where Zommers was raised also had a large garden, so he certainly knows how to handle fresh vegetables. Now, as the new executive chef at Kaļķu Vārti, he finally has a chance to put his great wealth of experience to work by freely experimenting with everything that he fancies. He keeps on inventing new dishes and perfecting classic favourites in order to continue surprising his diners and take them along on his ongoing journey of discovery. BO BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 69 OUTLOOK / PROMO Land of Meistaru 21, Līvu laukums, Riga Phone: +371 67223307 www.zila-govs.lv 70 / AIRBALTIC.COM the Blue Cow The Blue Cow is housed on Meistaru iela 21, in an Although steak is the focal point of the menu, it architectural landmark that was completed in 1823. certainly isn’t the only dish. As the sign above the Some of the building’s original structural elements door announces, the restaurant also specializes in fish. have been preserved, including its wooden ceilings and Therefore, the menu offers such regional delicacies as stone walls, parts of which date back to the smoked eel tartar with walnut cream cheese, 13th century. The interior itself was designed pine nuts and Baltic salmon caviar. An entire The by a local artist, who added custom-made section is devoted exclusively to dishes that ingredients use locally grown and organic products, such wooden tables and iron chandeliers to the interior. The stone walls have been covered as the slow-cooked veal fillet and rack of are with a layer of white plaster and decorated purchased lamb. The ingredients are purchased directly with painted designs. These embellishments from Latvian farmers and producers, including directly combine to brighten the space and conjure from Latvian a family farm in the parish of Aizpute, which is an aura of old-fashioned charm. close to the native home of the blue cows on farmers and the Kurzeme coast. producers The Blue Cow is also a perfect spot for Prime steak in all of its glory However, the main focus at the Blue Cow is banquets and private parties, as the on the food, which the chef calls “modern restaurant can seat up to 80 people in its interpretations of traditional Latvian cuisine.” Not large back room, with a view of the castle-like Small surprisingly for a restaurant with a cow as its mascot, Guild next door. The front room, for its part, has a the main dish is steak, consisting of the finest prime pair of cozy banquettes beside the windows looking beef that has been dry aged for 25-40 days in the out onto the bustling Līvu laukums. Sitting up front, restaurant’s onsite meat locker. Thankfully, the menu you will be within earshot of the restaurant’s mascot, keeps the selection process as simple as possible, who occasionally gives voice to a loud but contented by presenting each cut of steak with its weight and moo. After feasting on an array of inventive culinary thickness alongside the price, as well as a handy ruler masterworks made with organic local ingredients, you underneath to give diners a sense of proportion. will be sure to do the same. BO FOOD & DRINK Photos by Janis Salins, f64, and courtesy of Kamadena Restaurants, bars, cafés Fly to 6 cities in Baltic States with airBaltic from €20 Kamadena vegetarian restaurant, Riga Ottella vinotheque and restaurant, Riga Ottella is the latest newcomer to Riga’s Embassy Row. Its owners are experienced restaurateurs, who also own Ottella’s sister establishment one block away, on Pumpura iela – the Rossini restaurant/ pizzeria, where it is hard to get a table without an advance reservation. The idea to open Ottella came when the owners of Rossini decided that they were ready to expand their Italian menu and wine list still further. A small vinotheque by the restaurant entrance offers a variety of Italian wines that have been personally selected by the owners themselves. In fact, they decided to name their new restaurant after Ottella Lugana, the first wine that they brought back to Latvia from Italy. Like the other wines on offer, it can be purchased in bottles to bring home after your meal, or tasted on the spot with the restaurant’s main specialty, a Bistecca Fiorentina T–bone steak, grilled over an open fire of ash tree wood. Besides its excellent food, Ottella has a tastefully decorated interior and a very pleasant atmosphere. J. Alunāna iela 2 Open: daily from 12:00-23:00 www.ottella.lv Riga had long deserved a distinguished vegetarian restaurant that is open to both die-hard vegetarians and those who only occasionally flirt with the concept. Kamadena, (named after Kamadhenu, the divine bovine-goddess of Hindu mythology) is a veritable oasis of peace and tranquillity, with real, natural flames in the fireplace, soft lighting, an interior dominated by wood furnishings and delicious, ayurvedic meals. Up until now, there hadn’t been too many places in Riga where one could enjoy an expertly made masala chai, mango lassi or other Indian dish. Kamadena is located on Lāčplēša iela between Brīvības and Baznīcas streets, slightly uptown from Riga’s traditional tourist hot spots. A variety of neighbouring restaurants have also opened their doors on this city block during the past six months, and Kamadena is the latest addition. Although the restaurant owners openly propound a vegetarian lifestyle, as evidenced by various quotes at the bottom of the menu (including one by American BMX racer Taj Mihelich: “I don’t think I’m so important that an animal has to die every time I get hungry”), this conviction is expressed sufficiently moderately not to make regular meateaters feel too ill at ease. The atmosphere is peaceful and the prices for a dinner meal are reasonable. For lunch, however, it is advisable to order the daily special, which should cost no more than about 5-EUR. Lāčplēša iela 12 Open: Mon.-Sat. 11:00-22:00, closed Sun. www.kamadena.lv FOOD & DRINK airBaltic Hot Spots in Vilnius Vilnius has a fairly diverse restaurant and bar scene. From traditional Lithuanian cuisine to Korean kimchi, Spanish tapas or Belgian mussels, the city offers pretty much something for everyone. If I were to go out for a night in the town, then I would probably choose the following itinerary. Tadas Vizgirda, Executive Vice President and General Manager in Lithuania Balzac restaurant Nestled on a side street in the heart of Vilnius, Balzac makes you feel as though you were in a small romantic café somewhere in the Monmartre district of Paris. The atmosphere is cosy, the service is quick and the French cuisine is truly authentic. My favourite dishes are the homemade foie gras, followed In Vino After a wonderful culinary experience at Balzac, there’s hardly a better place to continue a romantic evening than at the Fly to Vilnius with airBaltic from €39 by the mouth-watering boeuf bourguignon. Balzac also has a great selection of French wines and was voted the best restaurant in the Baltic countries by the readers of the Baltic Times. Hours: Mon.-Thu. 11.30-23:00, Fri. 11.30-24:00, Sat. 12:00-24:00, Sun. 12:00-21:00 Savičiaus g. 7 www.balzac.lt restaurant/wine bar In Vino. The place opens in the afternoon and tends to be somewhat crowded during weekends, but it’s definitely worth the visit. The wine selection is impressive and the finger foods are delectable. Besides tapas and other wine companions, In Vino also offers tasty full-course dinners. Hours: Sun.-Thu. 16:00-02:00, Fri.-Sat. 16:00-04:00 Aušros Vartų g. 7 www.invino.lt Radisson Blu Hotel Lietuva, the bar provides a magnificent, panoramic view of the Old Town. With over 70 classical cocktails on offer, Skybar is the perfect location for a night cap, as you take in the sights from a lofty vantage point. Skybar Skybar is one of the best places to complete an evening in Vilnius. Being on the top floor of the Hours: Sun.-Thu. 17:00-01:00, Fri.-Sat. 17:00-02:30 22nd floor of the Radisson Blu Hotel Lietuva, Konstitucijos pr. 20 www.sky-bar.lt Food blog A place where August never ends TEXT By Sergei Timofeyev Ulitsa Bolshaya Dmitrovka 32, Building No. 4, Moscow 74 / AIRBALTIC.COM Some ideas are born spontaneously, and the notion Alexander Gavrilov happens to be a great home to found the Avgust (August) café and restaurant in chef, and has brought many of his favourite home central Moscow was one of them. Alexander Gavrilov, recipes to Avgust, as well as the Sestri Grimm (Sisters a literary critic and restaurateur, was inspired by the Grimm) restaurant, which he also runs. From time to greenery of the month of August to set up his latest time, Gavrilov invites various well-known and highly eating establishment. Regardless of the season outside, regarded personalities – including poets, journalists the interior in Avgust, which occupies two entire floors, and economists – to share their favourite recipes with is always a summery green, with every spare metre Avgust’s clients. The best of these are then placed on the of space covered in a myriad of live potted honour role of the restaurant’s already diverse plants. You will feel as if you are in a verdant menu. Everything garden where the seasons never change. Among the highlights are turnip salad with in the Everything in the menu of the Avgust restaurant spicy blue cheese sauce, as well as a number menu of seems to have a bit of spice in it. For example, of other common items served in an exotic the Avgust manner, including special rolls made from if the aromatic lingonberry tea seems to taste somewhat exotic, then that is because a small restaurant thin pumpkin slices, and chicken breasts in dose of raspberries, ginger, black peppers, cloves dogwood berry sauce. For dessert, it is worth seems to and a few round slices of chilli pepper have have a bit of trying Avgust’s legendary “tea” ice cream, been added for good measure. The meat and which exudes the fragrances of lavender, spice in it seafood dishes, for their part, are accompanied thyme and other aromatic herbs. by healthy servings of fried spinach. You will see no Russian works of art on the “Cut the garlic into thin slices and the red peppers into walls of Avgust (as in the Art-akademiya restaurant), rings. Heat up a skillet with a bit of vegetable oil, add nor are there any live music performances (as in the the garlic and then the red peppers. Once the garlic Masterskaya). However, you will feel very much at ease begins to turn brown, add a pinch of salt and a bunch amidst Avgust’s easygoing clientele and verdant oasis of of fresh spinach. Stir immediately for a few minutes and garden plants. The “summer home” concept (pioneered allow the spinach to collapse. Serve hot.” While that by the Apshu club and restaurant) is quite popular in recipe sounds simple enough, the author of this article Moscow, and Avgust provides a splendid example of this was not quite able to replicate it at home. growing restaurant trend. BO OUTLOOK / PROMO Roberts Smilga At Restaurant 1221, A long winter’s night Restaurant “1221” Open 12.00-23.00 Riga, Jauniela 16 +371 6722 0171 www.1221.lv 76 / AIRBALTIC.COM chef Roberts Smilga is using the quiet time in January to come up with some new recipes for his kitchen. After fifteen years working in one of the largest and fanciest hotel restaurants in Riga, he enjoys having the opportunity to be creative instead of being a part of some large machine whose menu changed little in the entire time he worked there. One of his favorites is Latvian wild game meat, adding little bits here and there to make a traditional favorite a little bit more interesting. A spoonful of pret cranberry jelly on the salmon steak, perhaps, or a dab of jam on your herring fillet. And he has discovered that venison or roe buck steak go great with a little local jam as a glaze topping. The secret, he says, is in keeping it simple, and use the highest quality ingredients, the more local the better. Back in late January, sensing the interests and desires of the restaurant’s customers, Chef Roberts decided to expand his menu starting in February with new game dishes—not just with beaver meat, but also with venison, since deer are a popular game animal in Latvia in the wintertime. Venison Month at the restaurant 1221 will be something new and tasty for tourists and other visitors to the Old City. The long January nights here in Riga have gotten a little easier to wait out, with wild game steaks, a little bit of pumpkin ice cream, and some nice wine at a cozy table in one of the oldest houses in Riga. Yes, I think we will survive this snowiest of winters, after all. BO airBaltic Kittila / Levi* Tromso* Rovaniemi Lulea* Umea Kuusamo* Vaasa Visby* Arkhangelsk* Pskov* Moscow Sheremetyevo Moscow Domodedovo Hanover* BUDAPEST new from May 16 Nice* Belgrade* Odessa* Almaty* Simferopol* Madrid* Yerevan* Athens* Dushanbe* Baku* Beirut Amman Sharm el-Sheikh** Hurghada** * Seasonal flights. ** Operated in cooperation with tour operator Tez Tour. Sharm el-Sheikh** Hurghada** Welcome aboard airBaltic! 78 airBaltic news / 80 Behind the scenes / 82 Aviation training 83 airBaltic Travel / 84 BalticMiles / 86 Meals / 87 Inflight entertainment / 88 Fleet / 89 Flight map / 92 Contacts airBaltic / NEWS Turku In brief 1/ Double daily flights to Turku and Oulu 2/ Riga super spa at special prices 3/ Simpler ways to earn and spend your BalticMiles points 4/ airBaltic launches new iPhone service 5/ airBaltic’s customer service commitment 78 / AIRBALTICTRAVEL.COM 1/ Double daily flights to Turku and Oulu From February airBaltic is “doubling up” its popular daily flights to and from the Finnish cities of Turku and Oulu. These second flights will operate in the evening and offer better connections for passengers travelling from Oulu and Turku via Riga to the Middle East and Russia/CIS destinations. For example there will now be excellent connections to Amman, Beirut, Tel Aviv and Dubai. Turku is one of two European Capitals of Culture in 2011 (the other is Tallinn, another major airBaltic destination) and has received a lot of global attention as a result. More flights will give a new opportunity for travellers to connect to this great city. One-way ticket prices between Turku and Riga and Oulu and Riga as well as between Turku and Oulu start from EUR 39. Altogether in Finland, airBaltic offers flights to and from 10 airports: Helsinki, Oulu, Lappeenranta, Turku, Tampere, Vaasa, Kuusamo, Kuopio, Rovaniemi and Kittila/Levi. airBaltic / NEWS 2/ Riga super spa at special prices ESPA airBaltic in cooperation with the Radisson Blu Hotel Latvija is offering a travel package to guests who want to combine a trip to the beautiful nordic capital of Riga with a first-class spa experience at the biggest and most popular spa in the Baltics – ESPA. The package includes round-trip flights and transfers to and from the airport using the Airport Express Shuttle, a one night stay in a Superior room at the Radisson Blu Hotel Latvia with breakfast, and a two-and-a-half hour visit to the ESPA Active leisure area featuring an 18-metre indoor swimming pool, vitality pool with air jets, rock sauna, steam room, sanarium and more. The package price per person if sharing a double room starts from EUR 151. Alternatively, choose a package with all the items above included plus one ESPA Riga 55-min spa treatment such as the renowned Aromatherapy Body massage, ESPA Intensive Facial or Ultimate Body Wrap. This package per person in a double room starts from EUR 215. Airport taxes are not included as they may vary according to your chosen departure airport. Find these and other packages at www.airbaltic.com in the “Tickets” section. To book a package send a request by e-mail to: [email protected] 3/ Simpler ways to earn and spend your BalticMiles points airBaltic is updating its BalticMiles scheme to provide a simpler and fairer way of earning and spending points on flights. Starting from February the number of points awarded depends on how many Euros are spent to cover the flight ticket (including fare, taxes and surcharges). For each Euro spent, members earn the standard rate of 5 points (10 points if flying in Business Class). New ways of spending points are also being introduced to give the opportunity to fly free to more than 70 destinations. Members can exchange a fixed number of points to get a free Economy class ticket as soon as they have earned 5000 points or flown on average 2 times in Business class or 12 times in Economy class. To find out more about the new earning and spending scheme, please visit www.airbaltic.com 4/ airBaltic launches new iPhone service airBaltic has unveiled a new iPhone application to make it more convenient for iPhone users to learn about airBaltic flights and services. iPhone and iPad users can keep track of the latest timetables for all airBaltic flights. Whether planning a holiday or business trip, choosing a destination, or checking flight frequencies, the handy app will save users both time and money. The new iPhone tool also enables users to check flight status in real-time whilst travelling, including departure and arrival information, and flight updates about any flight disruptions. In addition, the app enables users to conveniently connect to airBaltic’s Wingtips blog and its Facebook and Twitter content. airBaltic for iPhones is available in nine languages: English, Latvian, Russian, Lithuanian, Estonian, Norwegian, Finnish, Swedish and German. It can be downloaded for free at Apple’s iTunes site. 5/ airBaltic’s customer service commitment The opinions of passengers are very important to airBaltic. If you have any suggestions how the airline could improve its service, or if something during your flight didn’t go as smoothly as you have come to expect, airBaltic welcomes your feedback. Write to the customer relations department at: [email protected]. All passenger claims at airBaltic are answered within 10 working days, but if the claim concerns baggage (delayed, lost baggage etc) it will be answered within 5 working days. Only by understanding your experiences and thoughts can airBaltic continue to bring you more of what you demand – the chance to travel the world at speed and in comfort at the best possible prices. BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 79 airBaltic / BEHIND THE SCENES Karlis Smiltens, airBaltic’s Web marketing manager Customer service through the social media Kārlis Smiltens is airBaltic’s online marketing and social media guru. He currently manages the airline’s web marketing team, which was established in 2009. With Smiltens at the helm, airBaltic has been at the vanguard of worldwide trends in online marketing and communications. Smiltens recently spoke on behalf of airBaltic at the IATA Commercial Strategy Symposium in Istanbul, but also found the time to sit down with Baltic Outlook and discuss how airBaltic is using the internet and social media to interact with customers. How did you arrive at airBaltic? I started working in the advertising industry in Riga 11 years ago. I began as an assistant and worked my way up to project manager. Along the way, I got to know the entire advertising industry. About four years ago, I obtained a position at airBaltic in the marketing 80 / AIRBALTICTRAVEL.COM department. I was attracted by the charms of aviation. I can see the runway from my office, and to this day I still like to watch the planes take off and land. I haven’t gotten tired of seeing that, perhaps because no two takeoffs or landings are exactly alike. When I started to work at airBaltic, web marketing was just one part of my many duties. Over time, however, I began to specialize in web marketing. At first I was the only employee to work in this field, but in April of 2009 – as the volume of work increased and social media gained in importance – airBaltic began to realize the growing significance of that new phenomenon in the industry. A brand is discussed whether or not its parent company has a presence in the social media, and that is particularly true in the aviation industry. People will talk about you regardless of whether you have an online presence. airBaltic / BEHIND THE SCENES What are your main tasks in the web marketing team? There are three main things that we work on. The first is e-marketing and communications. These include our newsletter and other informative communications. The next is developing content for the websites of airBaltic and the companies connected to airBaltic. In this regard, I have had the opportunity to see how the company has grown, because when I began working here in the fall of 2006, there was just airBaltic to be concerned about. Now there are several new niches and businesses, including airBalticTravel, BalticMiles, BalticBike, airBalticTraining, airBalticCafe, airBalticPeople and our blog, Wingtips. The third aspect concerns the management of social media. We started slowly and carefully. At first only one person handled everything. However, the Icelandic volcano in April of 2010 opened our eyes – both at airBaltic and within the industry as a whole – about the power of social media and the resources that they demand. Another advantage of social media is that you can successfully hear feedback about products or services or new offers. People aren’t shy in the social media environment and they react quickly. This isn’t possible in classical marketing: a person who hears an ad on the radio probably won’t call the airline and tell them his opinion. But social media are like a test laboratory, because you can hear these opinions and take them into account. The third important aspect is sales and revenue. This is not yet the driving force in social media, but it is growing. We can sell more tickets and earn more revenue through the internet. Today you can even order a pizza or movie tickets through Facebook. People are accepting this as the norm. I doubt that aviation leaders will say, “No, we won’t sell tickets on Facebook.” It’s the future. What future online products can customers expect? Our colleagues in the e-business department just launched an iPhone application. The first phase of this application provides information about flights, timetables and current arrivals and departures. Later, in the next phase, we’ll offer users such functions as mobile check-in, so you can head straight to the gate and simply scan the screen of your phone before boarding. You probably spend most of your workday online. When do you go offline? I’m a traditional person – I still appreciate offline things. My work in international marketing at airBaltic helps me to balance my responsibilities. One minute I will be busy working on online campaigns, and then the next I’ll be carrying boxes of booklets that I need to send to one of our Eastern markets. The online environment is important, but it hasn’t taken things over. I still have offline friends and occasionally still need to shovel the snow. Sometimes, you have to take a break from the online world and turn off the internet connection on your fancy smartphone. BO airBaltic / Aviation training airBaltic Brings IATA Training Courses to the Baltic Region The mission of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) is to represent, lead, and serve the airline industry, and its members comprise some 230 airlines in more than 150 countries worldwide. For the last sixty years, IATA has developed the standards that have made aviation one of the most dynamic and vital industries in the world today. In order to uphold and continuously improve these standards, IATA has established a network of Regional Training Centers to help train the thousands of aviation employees who sustain the global industry. This month, the association has approved the airBaltic Training Center, located at Riga International Airport, as the first IATA Training and Development Institute (ITDI) Regional Training Center in the European Union. This new partnership will contribute to ITDI’s objective of being a leading provider of global aviation training solutions. The IATA Regional Training Center will be operated in collaboration with airBaltic Training, whose world-class facilities, training organization, and business plan for future development underwent a lengthy audit process to make sure they met IATA’s high standards. airBaltic Training will be the IATA sales agent not only in the Baltic states, but also in Finland, Sweden, Poland, and Slovakia, guaranteeing classrooms and training facilities, transportation, hotel accommodations, and visa services for both instructors and students. Thanks to its central location, the city of Riga is easily accessible for companies throughout the region. Situated just 13 km from Riga International Airport, the Latvian capital also provides a wealth of options for accommodation, dining, and entertainment, as well as stunning architecture, beautiful beaches, and a rich history. The airBaltic Training Center is a modern, stateof-the-art building with marvelous views of the surrounding landscape. The onsite cafeteria even offers a glimpse of airBaltic’s planes taking off from the runway at Riga airport, departing for the airline’s 80 destinations worldwide. For more information about the IATA Regional Training Center, please visit airBalticTraining.com. BO airBaltic / airBalticTravel.com airBalticTravel.com your all-in-one travel portal TOP destinations at airBalticTravel.com in 2010 1. Riga 2. Rome 3. Paris 4. Barcelona 5. Istanbul hoose any destination C from our wide offer and approve or change this TOP in year 2011! AirBalticTravel.com is the online travel portal where you can book everything for your holiday or business trip, from flights and hotels all over the world to other additional services such as car rental, excursions and events. Package your travel for smart savings Planning a flight and know you will need a hotel at your destination too? Why not book both in a single package at airBalticTravel.com – you could immediately save at least 20% off the price you pay when booking a flight and hotel separately! This way you’ll get return flights with airBaltic or a partner airline and all applicable airport taxes, surcharges, and hotel accommodation for the selected number of nights – all in one package! You can also add a car rental service to the package and benefit from our special agreement prices from AVIS. And in the event you’ve already purchased all your other travel arrangements – you can still make a separate reservation for AVIS cars worldwide. Plus, here’s another brand new option for airBalticTravel.com: Now you can even reserve a full range of other great services such as transfers from/to airports, excursions, entrance tickets and beyond! What’s more, with each and every booking you make as a package you get a fixed number of BalticMiles per purchase (250 for flight + Recharge voucher hotel and 500 for flight + hotel + car). And don’t forget to put your miles to work too: You can use your accrued miles for a full or partial payment for any product you purchase on airBalticTravel.com! Booking just a hotel? Pay on arrival! What if you’ve already bought your flight ticket or have alternative transport? At airBalticTravel.com, you can book a hotel alone when that’s all you need. Choose from 90 000 available hotels, from all around the world! And with plenty of good quality photos, recommendations from other travellers and the option to search Google maps for the perfect location, the search is made easy. Finally, here’s the best part: Anytime you book just hotel accommodations, pay only upon arrival at the hotel – and there’s no reservation fee! For questions and inquiries, the airBalticTravel.com call centre would be delighted to assist you on +371 67229696. New BalticMiles partners: 1/ Georg Ots SPA, Estonia Discover a spa with award-winning interior design inspired by a simple and pure island environment. Beautifully set beside the sea, Georg Ots SPA lies on Estonia’s Saaremaa Island near Kuressaare Castle and accommodates 182 guests. Its “active spa” offers Finnish saunas, steam rooms, various pools; both relaxation and beauty packages and even a “private” section for massages and treatments for the body, face, hands and feet. This family-friendly hotel has fun for all ages and even includes supervised playrooms for children. You’ll find facilities available for your events and can enjoy delicious organic meals in the restaurant. BalticMiles members earn 500 points per hotel stay and 100 points per treatment over 25 EUR. For more information: www.gospa.ee 2/ Unique Hotels, Estonia Unique Hotels is a small group of lifestyle hotels in the heart of Tallinn in genuine historical buildings painstakingly renovated for historical ambience, daring design and modern convenience. How about a “perfect holiday”? Spanning 500 years of rich history, the fully renovated Vihula Manor Country Club & Spa is the most recent edition to the Unique Hotels and lies in beautiful Lahemaa National Park, only 90 km from Tallinn on Estonia’s northern coast. It offers supreme comfort and luxury perfect for romantic weekends, activity breaks, family adventures and conferences for up to 450 delegates. “Because you are Unique” BalticMiles members earn 300-500 points per hotel stay and 7 points per 1 EUR spent in the restaurants. Booking info: www.uniquestay.com airBaltic / BalticMiles Do your romantic shopping at shop.balticmiles.com! Looking for that perfect Valentine’s present? Browse through the BalticMiles rewards shop, it’s overflowing with romantic experiences and charming gifts. Dinner & Theatre in Milan for 2 42900 Points or € 305 airBaltic Concierge Flowers or Sparkling Wine service 4158 Points or € 31 Chocolate Fondue for 2 in Lithuania Nina Ricci Gift Set “Nina” 1870 Points or € 13 13650 Points or € 104 Wine Tasting for 2 in Lithuania Baldessarini Round Cufflinks 4132 Points or € 29 25454 Points or € 223 Hot Air Balloon Flight for 2 in Baltics Philips GoGear MP3 Player 2GB 49186 Points or € 348 9681 Points or € 70 All prices displayed include shipping to Latvia. Price and availability are subject to change depending on the delivery country. BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 85 airBaltic / MEALS Business class / On all airBaltic flights, Business class passengers will enjoy a complimentary full meal including appetizer, hot main course, dessert (except flights shorter than one hour, where snacks are served instead), and a wide range of beverages and alcoholic drinks. On flights lasting longer than three hours, we offer a double service—first a full hot meal served with beverages, followed by a snack consisting of coffee or tea and a small dessert. On night flights with early morning arrival, we provide a “wake-up” service with tea or coffee and a light breakfast. Economy class / meals Economy class passengers can purchase a selection of snacks, hot meals (on flights longer than 1 h. 30 min.) and beverages from the onboard menu cards. To save money and time, preorder your meal before the flight, either at the airBaltic website or ticket offices. This will guarantee that your choice will be available, and that you’ll be served first. Enjoy freshly made Nespresso in Business class! airBaltic Boeing 757-200 and 737-300 aircrafts now have Jacobucci/ Nespresso Coffee Makers installed and offer their business class passengers the chance to enjoy freshly made espresso and cappuccino during their flight (except short flights shorter than 1 hour). There are 4 different Nespresso tastes available: Espresso Forte Round and balanced, made exclusively from South and Central American Arabicas. The complex aroma of this intensely roasted espresso is a balance of strong roasted and fruity notes. Intensity 7 – strong, intensive taste. Espresso Decaffeinato Dense and powerful, dark roasted South American Arabicas with a touch of Robusta bring out the subtle cocoa and roasted cereal notes of this full-bodied decaffeinated espresso. Intensity 7. 86 / AIRBALTICTRAVEL.COM Lungo Leggero (Americana, Regular) Flowery and refreshing coffee with mild notes of jasmine. A delicate blend of lightly roasted East African and South and Central American Arabicas. Intensity 2. Cappuchino Classic Espresso Forte + milk foam. airBaltic / ENTERTAINMENT INFLIGHT ENTERTAINMENT On flights longer than 2 hours 30 minutes, passengers can rent portable entertainment devices pre-loaded with movies, cartoons, serials, music and games. TV serials: House | Modern Family | The Office | Friends | Glee For kids: My gym partner's a monkey | Looney Tunes | The Batman | The Simpsons (new episodes) | Family Guy (new episodes) | Wallace and Gromit Despicable Me Salt Computer animation Voices: Julie Andrews, Steve Carell, Jack McBrayer, Jason Segel, Russell Brand, Will Arnett Thriller, Drama Cast: Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber, Chjwetel Ejiofor, Daniel Olbrychski, Andre Braugher In a happy suburban neighborhood surrounded by white picket fences with flowering rose bushes, sits a black house with a dead lawn. Surrounded by a small army of minions, we discover Gru, planning the biggest heist in the history of the world. He is going to steal the Moon (yes, the Moon!). But then he encounters three little orphaned girls who choose him to be their Dad and won’t leave. As a CIA officer, Evelyn Salt swore an oath to duty, honor and country. Her loyalty will be tested when a defector accuses her of being a Russian spy. Salt goes on the run, using all her skills and years of experience as a covert operative to elude capture. Salt’s efforts to prove her innocence only serve to cast doubt on her motives, as the hunt to uncover the truth behind her identity continues. Predators Eat Pray Love Sci-Fi Cast: Adrien Brody, Topher Grace, Alice Braga, Walton Goggins Romance, Drama Cast: Julia Roberts, James Franco, Richard Jenkins, Viola Davis, Billy Crudup, Javier Bardem Chosen for their ability to kill without conscience, a group of killers, some trained and some who are not, must endeavour the alien race of predators that have set out to target them as prey. Dropped into the vast jungle of a distant world, these human predators must learn just who, or what, they are up against, and that their ability, knowledge and wits are tested to the limits in the battle. Liz Gilbert is a modern woman on a quest to marvel at and travel the world while rediscovering and reconnecting with her true inner self. After a divorce, Gilbert takes a sabbatical from her job and steps uncharacteristically out of her comfort zone. In her exotic travels, she experiences the simple pleasure of nourishment by eating in Italy; the power of prayer in India, and, finally and unexpectedly, the inner peace and balance of love in Bali. Knight and Day Action, Comedy Cast: Tom Cruise, Cameron Diaz, Peter Sarsgaard, Viola Davis, Olivier Martinez, Paul Dano, Maggie Grace, Marc Blucas During their glamorous and sometimes deadly adventure, nothing and no one – even the now fugitive couple – are what they seem. Amid shifting alliances and unexpected betrayals, they race across the globe, with their survival ultimately hinging on the battle of truth vs. trust. Shot in Massachusetts, and other locations all around the world. Twilight Saga: Eclipse Romance, adventure Cast: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson,Taylor Lautner, Dakota Fanning, Anna Kendrick Bella once again finds herself surrounded by danger as Seattle is ravaged by a string of mysterious killings and a vampire continues her quest for revenge. In the midst of it all, she is forced to choose between her love for Edward and her friendship with Jacob – knowing that her decision has the potential to ignite the struggle between vampire and werewolf. Bella is confronted with the most important decision of her life. BALTIC OUTLOOK / FEBRUARY 2011 / 87 airBaltic / NEWS FLEET Boeing 757-200 Boeing 737-300 Number of aircraft 8 Number of seats 142/144/146 Max take-off weight 63 metric tons Max payload 14.2 metric tons Length 32.18 m Wing span 31.22 m Cruising speed 800 km/h Commercial range 3500 km Fuel consumption 3000 l/h Engine CFM56-3C-1 Boeing 737-500 Number of aircraft 6 Number of seats 120 Max take-off weight 58 metric tons Max payload 13.5 metric tons Length 29.79 m Wing span 28.9 m Cruising speed 800 km/h Q400 NextGen 8 76 29.6 metric tons 8.6 metric tons Fokker 50 Number of aircraft 10 Number of seats 46/50/52 Max take-off weight 20.8 metric tons Max payload 4.9 metric tons 32.83 m Length 25.3 m 28.42 m Wing span 29.0 m 667 km/h Cruising speed 520 km/h Commercial range 3500 km 2084 km Commercial range 1300 km Fuel consumption 3000 l/h 1074 l/h Fuel consumption 800 l/h Engine CFM56-3 88 / AIRBALTICTRAVEL.COM P&W 150A Engine P&W 125 B