…and pollution capital of the current World.
Ok ok, so it doesn’t even make the top 5 most polluted cities, but the blanket of smog over Athens was horrendous. I had coughing and sneezing problems the entire time and couldn’t wait to get home to the “clean” air of London. Why is it so polluted? Well, one of the reasons might be that 40% of all Greeks live in the capital. Another might be that the city is surrounded on 3 sides by very large hills. It looked like the entire city was covered in soot and nothing had been cleaned in 50 years. My guess would be that they used to fight the problem by scrubbing every so often, but eventually even the corporations gave up trying to keep their buildings shiny.
They try to rectify the problem by allowing only cars with odd-numbered plates on odd-numbered days and vice versa. They are of course examining other options but right now the situation doesn’t look good.
We arrived in the city center via the brand-spanking-new metro, and walked out into a slum. We looked around and everyone was dressed nicely, the cars were fairly new, and the atmosphere was upbeat. It was as if you took people in Buckhead (a nice upscale part of Atlanta) and dropped them in the worst area of New York. We were a little confused by it all, to say the least. Luckily, our hotel was on a street with a few trees which made it look slightly better (and probably bumped up the air quality a bit), but head any direction and you enter the mish-mash of upscale and slum.
Putting on our blinders, we tried to focus on the reason we came to Athens… the monuments, of course! And this was definitely the place for them. Our hotel was in a really cool area – in the shadow of the Acropolis where you could look up wherever you were and see the ancient buildings tower over you. To brush everyone up on their Athens trivia, the Acropolis is a rock outcrop in the middle of the city which has 3 main monuments still on top: The Parthenon (the most famous), the Erechtheon (with a temple to Athena and Poseidon), and the Propylaea (a huge archway). We didn’t do the Acropolis until Day 2, but chose to focus on monuments around its base. There are 2 forums (one from the Greeks and one from the Romans) and an absolutely huge library created by Hadrian. The largest temple in all of Greece is the Temple of Olympian Zeus, which would have been even more magnificent to see
if more than 15 of its 56-foot 104 columns still existed and were standing. On the contrary, the Temple of Hephaestus is pretty much all there — it even has a complete roof and is the only Ancient Greek temple anywhere with that honor. Moving up the Acropolis, we walked through a tiny village called Anafiotika which was composed of people from the island of Anafi and their small, bleach-white houses typical of their island homes. Most people miss this tiny town when they go to Athens, but we thought it was one of the coolest parts. When we got to the Acropolis, we walked through the Propylaea to enter the main area, and were completely taken aback by the size of the Parthenon. That is truly one incredible structure. Its only problem is that scaffolding has been erected around it since about 1980 so you can’t get a decent picture off.
We also went to the Greek Archaeological Museum which has famous statues from many generations of Greek civilizations, and also quite a story about hiding everything from the Germans during WWII. Another site we visited that I highly recommend is the original Olympic Stadium which was rebuilt in 1896 for the first modern Olympics (so it looks in mint condition compared to the other sites).
I’m sure you don’t remember much about the history of Athens because neither Stacey nor I could get it right, so let me jump through the basic timeline. The Greeks were there first, then they were conquered by the Romans (Hadrian had a particular affinity for the Greeks). Then the Herulians drove the Romans out, but then the Romans came back, and then the Romans left and the Turks showed up and r
uthlessly destroyed a lot of the monuments. Then the Venetians came in and fought a huge battle with the Turks. During this battle, the Venetians made a direct hit on a gunpowder store in the Parthenon (who the hell keeps gunpowder in a really important monument???) and blew its middle completely out. And to finish it all up, Greece was occupied by the Germans in WWII. Basically, this can be summed up like so: the monuments were erected, destroyed, rebuilt, destroyed, built over top of with more monuments, destroyed, built over top of with houses and roads, destroyed, excavated, and eroded. It was a historical nightmare!
We had a very interesting dinner whereby a restaurant put tables outside in as many places as possible, which included right on the street. Luckily ours was on the sidewalk, but we had the pleasure of watching cars come by every 10 minutes forcing people to stand up, move their chairs, and sometimes move their tables. We even saw one huge van pull up and the driver got in an argument with the restaurant server in Greek, then the driver got really pissed and ran over one of the tables. It was quite a scene!
All-in-all, we enjoyed Athens once we forced ourselves to look past the pollution. Would I recommend someone going there? Of course. We saw people from a lot of different countries, as the Ancient World attracts a lot of people interested in the beginnings of the modern-day advanced society. What I might recommend is to try and go as soon as possible. The monuments have already shown a lot of damage from pollution and it’s not going to get better anytime soon. One study even discovered that a particular monument had more damage in the past 50 years from pollution than the previous 3000 years of its life sitting outside in the elements.
Pictures have been up for a bit. You should definitely check them out.
Oh, and you’ve got to check this out: http://www.debevec.org/Parthenon/film.html (download video)