Sillamäe
Sourced from Wikivoyage. Text is available under the CC-by-SA 3.0 license.
Sillamäe is a city of 17,000 inhabitants in East Estonia situated on a river near the shore of the Gulf of Finland.
Understand
Under the Soviet era Sillamäe was a closed, secret military city that was even not marked on maps. Activities conducted there were mostly military industrial and included mining and refining uranium. Sillamäe was opened up in 1991 when Estonia became independent.
Get in
Bus and train schedules are easily available online – read more under Estonia#Get around.
By bus
There are direct bus lines from/to Tallinn (~€10), and Narva. Some buses on the Tallinn-Saint Petersburg route also stop here.By train
The train does not run through Sillamäe. However, there is a stop along the Tallinn-Narva route, called Vaivara, which is just 2 km from Sillamäe centre.Get around
is located at Tallinna mnt 9. The ticket office is open from 09:00-17:30 (with a lunch break between 12-12:30).
See
- Take a sombre moment in remembrance of the Cold War and the unfortunate nuclear arms race, and see what used to be a puddle of uranium refining waste product now a small hill or large heap.
Eat
-
phone: +372 3924199address: Viru 35Pizzeria.
Sleep
-
phone: +372 3929030address: Kesk 23The room price includes a good breakfast.
-
phone: +372 564 2173address: Perjatsi küla villageSituated in the village of Perjatsi, 1.5 km towards Narva from Sillamäe is the cheaper Perjatsi lodgings.
Go next
- Narva – Estonia's eastern-most and third largest city, on the Narva River, which is the border with Russia. Famous for the Hermann castle, right opposite of the Ivangorod's castle, and the Kreenholm factories. Even though it might seem grey and dull.
- Narva-Jõesuu – The beach side town of Narva on the Narva River.
- Toila – A small coastal and historic resort town further west.
- Jõhvi – The capital of the county, but rather uninteresting from a travellers point of view.