Still Europe, but Cheaper

Once overlooked, Eastern European locales are drawing more travelers.

ByABC News
February 21, 2008, 12:54 PM

Feb. 22, 2008— -- "Madama Butterfly" at the Vienna State Opera too pricey? Avid operaphiles might want to head to Ukraine for a just-as-magical yet much cheaper experience at the Odessa Opera and Ballet Theater. But act fast, as you soon might not be able to reserve a seat at this Eastern European hot spot.

That's because travel to the region is brisk. The recent strength of the euro and a number of countries easing visa requirements have more tourists trekking east in search of architecturally, historically and culturally significant sights that for years had been practically overlooked.

The region's popular spots also include Nebet Tepe in Bulgaria, Prague's Old Town Square in the Czech Republic, and Lake Bled in Slovenia.

Click here to learn more about Eastern European hot spots at our partner site, Forbes.com.

"People go where their currency is strong," says Julia Glozman, manager at New York-based Complete Travel and Visa Center, a visa-passport agency specializing in luxury travel to countries of the former U.S.S.R. Ticket and visa sales to Eastern Europe, she says, have soared in the last five years.

"Since the euro was introduced," Glozman says, "individuals began seeking new historic places to travel to, and thus the gates were opened to Eastern Europe, with budget-minded tourists flocking to see Baroque influences in countries like the Ukraine and the Czech Republic, and the grandeur of Italy's Renaissance in Bulgaria. And then, word-of-mouth spread like wildfire."

Russia--specifically St. Petersburg--recently became her clients' most desirable destination because of its expanding number of relatively inexpensive luxury accommodations and its architectural similarities to France.

The Peterhof Reserve, for example, just 29 kilometers (18 miles) outside of St. Petersburg, is often compared to the Versailles Palace for its extravagant palaces, gold fountains and striking, 18th-century landscaped gardens.

Nebet Tepe, known as one of the best places in Bulgaria for sightseeing, is another landmark gaining tourist attention. Part of a three-hill range, Nebet towers 203 meters (666 feet) above sea level and offers its visitors a stunning panorama of the Balkan Mountains, the Bulgarian Renaissance-style architecture of Old Town Plovdiv, and multiple ancient ruins dating back to the third century B.C.