Tartu Old Town
In Tartu, Estonia .
More places to visit in Tartu
Discover more attractions and things to do in Tartu.
AHHAA Science Centre
Since opening its glass-roofed atrium in 2011 , AHHAA has become the Baltic region’s largest playground for the scientifically curious. A resident planetarium projects 8K journeys through black holes, while the three-story “Hands-on Hall” lets children pedal a bicycle across a tightrope and generate thunder in a Tesla cage . The Water World gallery invites barefoot exploration of whirlpools and Archimedes screws; next door, living ant colonies demonstrate complex social algorithms . Daily chemistry theatre erupts with flaming magnesium and colour-changing cocktails, and weekend surgery demos livestream from the university hospital to teach anatomy via augmented reality. Visitors can ride a gyroscope to feel astronaut training or spend the night during monthly “Science Sleepovers.” An outdoor rooftop garden tests aeroponic lettuce under Nordic LEDs, underscoring the centre’s climate focus. The gift shop stocks Estonian-invented robotics kits, and the café serves nitrogen-frozen ice cream. Blending education with adrenaline, AHHAA transforms complex research into memorable, family-friendly adventure.
Estonian National Museum
Stretching 350 meters across a former Soviet runway, the Estonian National Museum (ERM) embodies cultural take-off in both form and content. Opened in 2016 by architects Dorell Ghotmeh Tane, its cantilevered glass prow points toward Lake Peipus like a departing paper plane. Inside, the flagship exhibition “Echo of the Urals” immerses guests in Finno-Ugric myth via sound domes and tactile artefacts, while the “Encounters” gallery traces everyday life from Stone-Age seal hunters to Singing Revolution protesters with 1,400 objects and holographic storytellers. Interactive language labs let visitors record greetings in Võro or Seto dialects, and smart tickets save personalised content to download later. The vast atrium hosts folk-dance flash mobs and drone shows, and outdoor grounds feature an experimental Smoke Sauna recognised by UNESCO. A research library, conservation labs, and ethnography centre buzz behind the scenes, underscoring ERM’s scholarly mission. Recharge at the restaurant serving modern twists on rye bread and forest herbs before browsing the design store’s woollen handicrafts. ERM offers a panoramic, tech-savvy journey through Estonia’s resilient identity.
Toome Hill
Rising 25 meters above the Emajõgi plain, Toome Hill (Toomemägi) offers Tartu’s most poetic blend of nature and ruins. Shaded by linden and maple groves planted during the University reopening in 1802 , its winding paths lead to the skeletal arches of the 13th-century Tartu Cathedral , bombarded in the Livonian War and now housing the University History Museum. Nearby, the romantic Angel’s Bridge bears a Latin inscription urging scholars to “resign yourself to diligence,” while the darker Devil’s Bridge commemorates Emperor Alexander I. Geological outcrops reveal Devonian sandstone riddled with legends of hidden passages. Families picnic beside the observatory designed by Friedrich Struve, whose meridian arc became a UNESCO World Heritage science site. In winter, students sled down the hill by torchlight; spring brings carpets of wood anemones around monuments to poet Kristjan Jaak Peterson. Augmented-reality panels allow visitors to overlay vanished towers onto today’s skyline, merging past and present on their phones. Whether for panoramic sunrise views, quiet reading benches, or night-time star parties, Toome Hill remains Tartu’s green acropolis.
University of Tartu
Founded in 1632 by Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus, the University of Tartu embodies Estonia’s centuries-long quest for knowledge and national self-expression. The white-columned main building, completed in 1809 , crowns Ülikooli Street with Ionic grandeur and still hosts solemn matriculation ceremonies beneath a restored Lock-Up cell once reserved for over-zealous students. Step inside the Art Museum —a Pompeii-style rotunda lined with plaster casts of classical statues—or descend to the Cabinet of Curiosities where narwhal tusks and Siberian shaman drums share glass cases. Across town the Old Observatory , listed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register, showcases a meridian circle that helped map the first accurate star catalog for czarist Russia. Campus life spills into cafés that offer discount “brain pies” and host lively philosophy nights , while the annual Spring Days festival fills streets with raft races and choral flash mobs. Whether you attend a public lecture, browse rare folios in the library’s manuscript vault , or simply admire neo-classical façades glowing at dusk, the University of Tartu remains the intellectual heartbeat of Estonia’s second city.