A weekend in Prague
I have been travelling a lot in Europe lately, which is great, because, relatively speaking I have seen very little of Europe. I also just recently finished Dan Brown's latest book, The Secrets of Secrets, which featured Prague. I don't really recommend the book for the content, but if you want to visit Prague, it is not a bad book to read as a sort of a guide of the city. Last weekend I was there, just for 3 days and obviously it was not enough, but I got a good introduction to the city.
I rented a small apartment at Na Kampě, on the west bank of Vltava river, right next to the Charles Bridge (Karlův most). In terms of location, I don't think I could have asked for a better location for a first time visit to the city. The plan was great, but I happened to arrive at Frankfurt the very day Lufthansa pilots decided to go on 2-day strike and my connection from FRA to PRG got cancelled. Also due to the strike, every flight was overbooked (the ones that were flying, Swiss, Austrian etc). All I could manage was a flight to Vienna and then had to take a bus from Vienna to Prague. The bus was comfortable but added 6 hours to the journey and I arrived Prague after midnight!
That was the view of the apartment from Charles Bridge looking down into the plaza. Na Kampě is a quiet street while right next to perhaps the most busy tourist destination of Prague. In the daytime picture below the apartment was the light green pastel building sandwiched between the orange and yellow one in the middle distance on the far side of the plaza. There is a little restaurant at the bottom, where I had dark beer and meals multiple times. It was most excellent.
During the day, it feels like the living heart of Prague. Portrait painters line the bridge, their easels angled just right to catch the Old Town skyline. Small vendors sell handmade jewelry, caricatures, and souvenirs that glitter in the sun.
Tourists move in steady currents, stopping abruptly to photograph statues, admire the Vltava, or simply take in the view that seems to belong to another century. The bridge hums with voices in dozens of languages, footsteps echoing softly over worn cobblestones polished smooth by hundreds of years of passage.
Late at night carries a different magic. The lamps cast a warm, golden glow, and the city feels hushed, as if Prague itself has exhaled after a long day. Walking the bridge at that hour feels intimate and unhurried. Couples linger. Footsteps are soft again. The bridge belongs less to the city’s visitors and more to those willing to be still enough to listen.
A bit of history
A bit of the history of the bridge below:
The Charles Bridge (Karlův most) in Prague, constructed in 1357 under the reign of King Charles IV, stands as one of Europe's most remarkable medieval bridges. This Gothic masterpiece spans 516 meters across the Vltava River, connecting Prague's Old Town with the Lesser Quarter. Commissioned by Emperor Charles IV in 1357, its 516-meter span features 16 arches adorned with 30 Baroque-style statues of saints, creating an iconic, romantic, and often crowded open-air gallery of European history.
The view above is a look straight into the Bridge from my apartment window. You can also see the restaurant below overlooking the river. The bridge is adorned with 30, mostly Baroque-style statues and statuaries (now replicas, with originals in museums) erected around 1700, creating a "gallery" effect. It provides unmatched panoramic views of Prague Castle and the city's, often described as one of the most 'atmospheric' bridges of Europe.
What makes Charles Bridge special is not just its Gothic arches or historic statues, but its ability to hold contradictions. It is vibrant and crowded, yet serene and contemplative. It can feel like a marketplace at noon and a monastery walkway at dawn. Few places manage to remain iconic without becoming static; Charles Bridge does so by changing constantly with the hour, the weather, and the people crossing it.
If you visit Prague, you should absolutely walk Charles Bridge in the daytime—but don’t stop there. Go again early in the morning. Return late at night. Walk it in the rain if you get the chance. Only then do you begin to understand why this bridge has endured, not just as a structure of stone, but as a living rhythm within the city.