Showing posts with label Ljubljana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ljubljana. Show all posts

Friday, 24 August 2012

Metelkova Madness


In May 2010, I slept in a unique prison cell in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Here's how that came about...

Hostel Celica is an unconventional backpacker’s crash space. It was once a jail, a forbidding stone structure surrounded by barracks in the Metelkova district of the Slovenian capital Ljubljana.

It was built as a military facility by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, then decades later was inherited by the army of communist Yugoslavia and used as a political prison.

Then, after the tiny Adriatic state declared independence in 1991, the Yugoslav army moved out and Metelkova became a slum, full of decaying buildings that were marked for demolition.

Then something unexpected happened - the abandoned military buildings were occupied by artists, freed from the confines of communism and keen to spark creativity by banding together. The squatters stood (literally) in the way of the bulldozers.

It’s a dramatic story of artistic David triumphing over establishment Goliath. And although its residents have since developed a better relationship with the city authorities, its future remains uncertain - and that’s what gives it such edge as an artistic and nightlife centre.

Despite its grim past, the Hostel Celica (the word means cell) is actually the brightest and most official part of Metelkova.

It’s hard to believe it was ever a prison - even from the outside, brightly painted, it looks welcoming. Inside are atmospheric corridors and dorms, along with a good cafe and art gallery.

Most fascinating, however, are its “cells”: private rooms which are in fact renovated cells, with their barred doors still intact.

Each cell has been individually decorated by artists, producing a variety of weird and wonderful designs. 

Cell 116, which we're staying in, features a circular wooden bed suspended two metres above the ground, with a solar design beneath its frame. 

There’s a circular table beneath with curved, segmented stools on a blue-green floor. The walls are covered with mystical characters and cryptic text, and there’s a lampshade above the bed that resembles the sun.

Although cell 116 is one of their most popular, cell 111 is also memorable. It has a window fashioned around a ragged demolition ball's hole, a reminder of what might easily have become of this historic building. 

Metelkova is full of party-goers around midnight on a chilly Friday evening, the night of the week which locals say is the liveliest. What’s notable is the chatty, easy sociability of the scene – there’s even a bunch of people sipping beer high up on a multi-platform structure in the middle of one square. 


Jalla Jalla is a bar that’s typical of the vibe, at a focal point of one square where it funnels into the next. It’s a tiny space with the weathered, bohemian, much-painted alternative look that’s the standard in Metelkova. Friday night is the bar’s reggae night, and a DJ behind a red-yellow-green flag is spinning tracks as the squeezed-in occupants drink, smoke and sway.


In the second square, long wooden benches snake at angles in front of the daytime-only art galleries, the most striking facade of which is Galerija Alkatraz, a cutting-edge gallery during daytime hours. 

Above its door, the wall has been decorated in a riotous mosaic of broken crockery, with a classical statue at its centre. On the opposite side of the square, an African man has hung an array of sarongs, T-shirts, flags and drums for sale.

Nearby is Pri Marichi, a red-lit bar that’s an intriguing mix of styles - a DJ plays music from the 1930s while the clientele sits beneath posters of Metallica, Tom Waites, and Johnny Rotten giving the finger. 

Scattered through the complex are the entrances to several nightclubs - the most memorable being Klub Gromka, an eclectic venue presenting a range of music genres along with theatre, film and talks.


Nearby there's Klub Tiffany for LGBTI revellers, and lesbian venue Klub Monokel. Another venue is Gala Hala, where you could hear ska, punk, rock, metal, reggae or funk.

Metelkova might well be the coolest part of Ljubljana. It's certainly the most offbeat.


This post was sponsored by Student Flights NZ. Check out its site for student holidays.

Saturday, 8 May 2010

Ten Fragments of Ljubljana

I’m in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, once the northernmost part of Yugoslavia but nowadays a delightful little nation in the European Union.

It’s the first stop on a journey through Slovenia and Hungary to Poland, where I’ll be updating Lonely Planet’s Eastern Europe guidebook. My other half Narrelle Harris is accompanying me on the journey, and we’ve both been quite smitten by this pint-sized capital of a postage-stamp country.

Here are ten random fragments of Ljubljana that have taken our fancy...

1. Sleeper Cell. The below painting is part of the decoration in our cell... er, room... well, cell in the Hostel Celica. The hostel was once a military prison, built by the Austro-Hungarian Empire and used by the Yugoslav army until Slovenia’s independence in 1991. The building was saved from demolition by protesters occupying the site, then turned into a hostel with each former cell decorated by different artists.




2. Heavy Metal. The hostel is located in Metelkova, a former military garrison. After independence it became a hub of alternative culture, with nightclubs, bars and galleries dotted through the crumbling old army quarters. It’s a fascinating place to visit, and enjoys a measure of semi-official tolerance by the city authorities.




3. Quake Remake. After a devastating earthquake in 1895 levelled a fair amount of downtown Ljubljana, the city gained a number of good looking art nouveau buildings. This is the lively former bank building at Miklošičeva cesta 8.




4. Just Musing. This bust of Julija Primic gazes across a square to the statue of Slovenia’s celebrated poet France Prešeren, whose writing was inspired by Primic’s beauty.




5. Sausage Sizzle. Yes, this is a wooden model of a sausage. Don’t ask. Any resemblance to South Park’s Mr Hankey is entirely coincidental.




6. Lounging Lizards. One of four dragon statues on the aptly-named Dragon Bridge across the Ljubljanica River. The dragon is an emblem of the city, which seems a bit of a copyright infringement as Kraków, Poland, also claims it. Presumably there are enough dragons to go around.




7. Skull! Skull! A skeleton in a gibbet hanging outside the delightful Caffè del Moro, which has a charming skeletal motif. 



8. Imperial Edict. A bust of the French Emperor Napoleon, fondly remembered in Slovenia as he set Ljubljana up as the capital of his Illyrian Provinces in 1809, thus allowing a short period of Slovene independence from Austrian rule and the freedom to teach and publish in their own language.



9. Irish Passage. This piece of street art encountered unexpectedly at the train station is a monument to Irish writer James Joyce, who passed through Ljubljana in 1904.



10. Alternative Universe. Finally, here’s Metelkova again around midnight on a Friday night, when the courtyards, bars and clubs were packed with locals. It was a chilly night but a distinctly warm social scene, with people milling around drinking beer, chatting, and trying to live up to the outrageous public art above them.



Next stop: Hungary!