
View Of Old Town © Zurich Tourismus, www.zuerich.com
While browsing in the elegant boutiques along Zurich's
Bahnhofstrasse, one of the most beautiful shopping areas in Europe,
you'll notice that the streets may not be paved with gold, but you
can be certain that a couple of metres below, unimaginable
treasures are lying in underground vaults.
Zurich is the world's banking capital, but as well as being a
city of fat cats parading in pin-stripes, glued to their mobile
phones and swinging patent leather briefcases, you'll also discover
that this is the city that gave birth to the avant-garde Dadaist
movement, and where James Joyce wrote Ulysses. The city's Museum of
Fine Arts houses one of Europe's most extensive collections from
15th century religious iconography to the modern art works of Dali,
Arp, Hockney, Cezanne, Monet, Gaugin, Munch and Picasso.
Visitors can spend days exploring Zurich's cobbled streets,
wandering through its museums, exploring its flea markets or
walking away with free gifts from its chocolate factories. The
quays, with their promenades, are made for walking, especially
along the shores of the lake. With an active café culture,
it's ideal for people-watching, and Zurich has a lively,
multi-ethnic population to rival any other major European city. The
exacting order of the Swiss, with their passion for neatness and
precision may create an impression of rather a prim and staid
society, but visitors will discover quite the opposite when
exploring Zurich's nightlife. With more bars, clubs and restaurants
than you can shake a stick at, as well as a calendar packed full of
street parades and festivals, Zurich can exhaust even the most
energetic party animal.