LIFE & CULTURE

XpatAthens
Monday, 20 March 2017 08:02
The National Library Of Greece To Relocate
The National Library of Greece, under the direction of Dr. Filippos Tsimpoglou, General Director, is methodically preparing for a historic relocation that will enable its transition into a new digital era of innovation and extroversion. From the Vallianeio historic neoclassical building in the center of Athens, which together with the University of Athens and the Academy form the Athens Trilogy, the National Library is moving its headquarters to a state-of-the-art building erected by architect Renzo Piano for the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center (SNFCC).
The entrance to the Library leads into a large open lobby that provides an immediate visual orientation to all the organization’s functions. The natural light creates an open hospitable environment for individual and collaborative learning. Within its new premises, the National Library of Greece will thus be able to strengthen its role in the field of Research, while expanding its focus from an exclusive research facility to an inclusive public resource, an active hub for knowledge, enterprise and innovation.
Starting from March 2017, the National Library of Greece has six months to complete the relocation process and two months to conduct pilot operation at the new building. Based on this framework, the library opening is being scheduled for Autumn 2017.
To read this article in full, please visit: Greek News Agenda
Photo Credit: Giorgis Gerolympos, Greek News Agenda
Photo Credit: Giorgis Gerolympos, Greek News Agenda
Published in
Local News
Tagged under
Thursday, 16 March 2017 07:00
The 14 Best Greek Islands For Families
Here are the best Greek islands for families. They’re known for their sandy beaches, water sports, untouched island life, and lots of history and culture.
Rhodes, Dodecanese
Best for: fly and flop
If you’re after a bit of R&R, Rhodes’s east coast has a 30-mile stretch of well-maintained golden-sand beaches with warm, shallow water down its eastern coast.
Corfu, Ionian islands
Best for: budget
Make like the Durrells and head to Corfu for a spot of swimming and sunbathing on one of its varied beaches: sandy Glyfada, on the wild west coast; nearby Paleokastritsa, with its sheltered pebble coves; or Sidari on the north coast, with its peculiar rock formations and warm shallow sea.
Zakynthos, Ioninan islands
Best for: sociable teens
If you want to avoid the crowds of an all-inclusive, but have teens who need to mingle, head to the Peligoni Beach Club on Zakynthos. The island’s dramatic coastline will thrill your family by day – Navagio (Shipwreck beach), a blissful cove backed by plummeting limestone cliffs, is unmissable – and Peligoni Club offers families with teenagers round-the- clock activities – and options for socialising in the evenings.
Mykonos, Cyclades
Best for: honeymoon with the kids
Mykonos is famous for its flamboyant nightlife, but the island also makes for a wonderful family destination if you stay in one of the quieter resorts, such as Agios Ioannis, with its lovely sandy beach beach, immortalised in the film Shirley Valentine (1989). Days spent by the sea will ensure that young children are ready for bed come sunset, after which you can head into Mykonos Town for dinner, then round off with either drinks overlooking the harbour in Little Venice.
To read this article in full, please visit: The Telegraph
Published in
Kids Life
Tagged under
Thursday, 16 March 2017 07:00
Refugee Cookout Steals The Show At 19th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival
Eight refugees from Syria and Iraq held a cookout with traditional dishes for visitors and other refugees attending the 19th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival.
During the event, called “Food Uniting People #WithRefugees,” the four men from the refugee camps of Volvi and Alexandria cooked and served quzi, falafel and kibbeh.
Speaking to the Athens-Macedonian News Agency (ANA), 18-year-old Ahmet Obeyid from Syria said he participated because he wanted to show the culinary wealth and culture of his country, but also to thank the Greeks for their friendly attitude towards them.
To read this article in full, please visit: Greek Reporter
Published in
Greece In The News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 14 March 2017 08:29
Carrot & Goat Cheese Sandwiches With Green Olive Tapenade
For Carrots
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
- 2 teaspoons sweet paprika
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/4 teaspoon cayenne
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 cup olive oil
- 1 1/2 lb medium carrots (8)
For Tapenade
- 1 1/4 cups green olives (6 to 7 oz) such as Cerignola or picholine, pitted
-
3 tablespoons drained bottled capers, rinsed
-
1/4 cup chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
- 1 flat anchovy fillet, chopped
- 1 teaspoon finely grated fresh lemon zest
- 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/4 cup olive oil
For Sandwiches
- 12 slices good-quality pumpernickel sandwich bread
- 6 oz soft mild goat cheese (3/4 cup) at room temperature
Published in
Greek Food & Diet
Tagged under
Tuesday, 14 March 2017 08:09
41 Museums To Visit In Your Lifetime
Housed all over the world are some of the greatest art and history collections. The experts at The Telegraph reveal where the best collections exist and the 41 museums never to miss in a lifetime. Lucky for us, two of those museums call Athens home - The Benaki Museum and the New Acropolis Museum.
Listed as number 24, the New Acropolis Museum is described as, ‘this light, airy glass-and-concrete building that was designed by Swiss architect Bernard Tschumi. Archaic and classical finds from the Acropolis site are displayed here – proud statues of the ancients and life-like stone carvings of animals. The top floor is devoted to the marble frieze that once ran around the top of the Parthenon. About half of the pieces are originals, while the remainder are white plaster copies.’
And at 25, the Benaki Museum is oused in a neo-classical building with a lovely roof-terrace cafe, this museum traces Greek art right up the 20th century.
To read this article in full, please visit: The Telegraph
Published in
Greece In The News
Tagged under
Monday, 13 March 2017 08:02
Air France Launches New Routes From Athens
Air France has recently announced new routes from Athens to Nice, Toulouse, and Marseille to keep up with high traveller’s demand. The new routes with start from July 24th through September 3rd.
Nice is a city where life is sweet and living is easy. The capital of the riviera stands out with its colourful architecture and its intense cultural life. Tourists come from all over the world to contemplate it and discover its impressive architectural heritage.
Toulouse is considered the pink city of a thousand flavours. This gourmet destination is brimming with natural and historical attractions. The Saint-Sernin Basilica, the Jacobins Convent, the Saint-Etienne Cathedral, the Roman amphitheater at Purpan, the Roman baths at Ancely: monuments and historic sites abound in Toulouse, the capital of the Visigoth kingdom in the 5th century.
Marseille gives us the sweet fragrance of the Mediterranean. It is the second largest city in France and it possesses a rich and exciting past.
To read this article in full, please visit: Greek Travel Pages
Published in
International Travel
Tagged under
Monday, 13 March 2017 07:52
New Residence Permits To Be Issued For Foreigners Living In Greece
Adhesive labels in passports and all other kinds of paperwork relating to foreign nationals living in Greece are to be scrapped and replaced by a new, electronic residence permit that will also double up as an identity card.
There are currently 557,476 third-country nationals living in Greece legally and they will soon be able to apply for a meeting with authorities to go through the necessary process for obtaining their permits.
Within 30 days of receiving the application, Greek authorities will have to set a date for the meeting, during which their biometric data (user’s photo and fingerprints) will be recorded so it can be entered on the card’s electronic chip. The chip can also store electronic proof of identity and a qualified electronic signature.
To read this article in full, please visit: Ekathimerini
Published in
Local News
Tagged under
Thursday, 09 March 2017 07:00
Athens' Newest Cool Neighborhoods - Koukaki & Makriyianni
If Vogue is writing about it, then it must be cool, right?
From roaming the streets of Plaka to admiring the exhibitions at the Benaki Museum, Athens doesn’t dissapoint with brilliant things to do. Sometimes however, especially during the summer months, Athens becomes crowded with tourists. It may be hard to find a quiet space to enjoy the city if you don’t know what you’re looking for. In this article, Vogue explores Koukaki and Makriyianni and establishes these two neighborhoods as ‘inviting and lingering, remaining remarkably hushed.’
Click HERE to read Vogue’s suggestions for what to do, where to eat, where to shop, and even where to stay, all within Koukaki and Makriyianni!
Published in
City Discovery
Tagged under
Thursday, 09 March 2017 07:00
Zaro's Named Best Bottled Water In The World
ZARO’S natural mineral bottled water won the Golden Prize Award in the ‘Bottled Water’ category in the framework of the 27th Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting, a competition which brought together more than 600 bottled waters from around the world.
ZARO’S water, which is bottled from water sources located at the foot of the mountain Psiloritis in Crete, was evaluated by 12 judges — among them internationally famous water conoisseurs — who examined criteria such as smell, view, taste and texture.
It is the second successive distinction for ZARO’S water, after it won the ‘iTQi’ Superior Taste Award in 2016.
To read this article in full, please visit: Greek Reporter
Published in
Greece In The News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 07 March 2017 08:21
The Best Places To Visit In Greece In 2017
Athens – Cool Culture, Great Sights
While Athens has been bearing the brunt of the Greek crisis, it has also undergone an evident revival as a tourism destination. Downtown Syntagma has become a hub of exciting restaurants, sophisticated wine bars and award-winning mixologists, alternative art spaces and design studios, but also a few brand-new hotels, with the most talked-about arrival in 2016 being that of the Metropolis Electra. The inauguration of the National Museum of Contemporary Art, the honor of hosting the international art forum Documenta 14 and the anticipated unveiling of the new opera house at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center also point to a renaissance in the arts and constitute excellent reasons to extend your stay beyond a visit to the Acropolis and its museum.
Tinos – The Cyclades’ New ‘It’ Place
Tinos spent decades in the shadow of the Cycladic island cluster’s most popular destination – Mykonos – and was known mainly as a pilgrimage site for the Church of the Panaghia, dedicated to the Virgin Mary. Its reputation has undergone a massive turnaround in the past few years, however, and today it’s becoming the place to be, thanks to its many beautiful traditional villages, its local winemakers producing fine organic like Volacus, and cultural events such as Tinos Food Paths and the Tinos World Music Festival.
Antiparos – Going Mainstream
Just a stone’s throw from the popular Cyclades holiday destination of Paros, this small island that was a punk-rocker haven in 1970s, has acquired a new sophistication after its discovery by Hollywood star Tom Hanks. Laidback campers now rub shoulders with jet-setters sailing into the island on luxury yachts, staying at rented villas and eating at fancy restaurants. The islet of Despotiko, an archaeological site, is a must-see. To reach Antiparos, fly or take a ferry to Paros and take a boat either from Parikia port or from Pounta.
Kythera – The Peloponnese’s Magical Island
All the beauty of the Peloponnese can be found encapsulated on this island off the peninsula’s southeastern tip. It has great beaches like Kaladi and Halkos, pretty cobbled alleys in the main town of Hora, traditional cafés and seafood restaurants where you can dine on fresh lobster, and, of course, located above the village of Milopotamos, the famous Neraida Waterfall, named after the fabled fairies some believe still frolic among the age-old plane trees.
Published in
Travel Greece
Tagged under