Why Bucharest needs a local guide
Bucharest is chaotic, contradictory, and weirdly charming. The Palace of the Parliament is the heaviest building on earth. Three blocks away, stray dogs sleep on art nouveau ruins. The Old Town (Lipscani) was a half-abandoned warren until the 2000s and is now packed with bars and restaurants.
Bucharest is one of the most underrated capitals in Europe, drawing around 2.5 million visitors a year, a fraction of what Prague or Budapest pulls. Most who come stick to Lipscani's old town bars and the Palace of the Parliament tour, then head to Transylvania. They miss the belle epoque buildings on Calea Victoriei that earned Bucharest the nickname 'Little Paris' in the 1930s, many of them crumbling but still gorgeous in the early morning light. They never walk through Cotroceni's quiet residential streets where the Botanical Garden hides behind a wall and an entire neighborhood feels like it belongs in a different city. To become a tour guide in Bucharest is to embrace contradiction. You stand in front of the Palace of the Parliament, the heaviest building on earth, and explain that Ceausescu demolished a fifth of the city to build it, including churches, synagogues, and 40,000 homes. Then you walk three blocks to Stavropoleos Church, a tiny 18th-century gem that survived because one architect fought to save it. If you want to become a tour guide in Bucharest, you need to find beauty in chaos. Becoming a tour guide in Bucharest means telling the story of a city that has been an Ottoman trading post, a Francophile capital, a Communist experiment, and a wild capitalist boomtown, all in the same century.