Hipster Prague

Hipster Prague

Are you a fan of independent culture? Here are tips especially and exclusively for you!

Hipster Prague
Retro shops and trendy second-hand clothes shops, coffee with almond milk, sweetshops with vegan cakes, compounds full of artists, where you can meet an independent painter as well as a well-known musician. All that is part of the hipster scene and now Prague offers it all too. We will show you where to go if you have a liking for independent lifestyles.

Krymská - a street full of cafés

Krymská street in Prague’s Vršovice district near Vinohrady is a cross between Montmartre in Paris and Kreuzberg in Berlin. It is vibrant from morning to evening. In recent years, it has been teeming with cafés with a culture programme, yoga practise rooms, an art-house cinema, interest associations and a children’s book publishing house. This is the right spot whether you’re looking for a café, a vegan restaurant or a vintage shop.

Places alive with (alternative) music

There are several scenes in Prague that specialize in alternative and independent bands and singers. In the centre of Old Town there is the NOD/Roxy space, for example. It features not only indie bands, but also dance and other conventional performances. On the other hand, a visit to Palác Akropolis in the former working-class district of Žižkov, in the shade of the TV Tower is never a disappointment. Concerts by independent Czech and global bands take turns with theatre performances and traveller slideshows. And if you’re partial to mergers of music and other forms of contemporary art, you must visit the MeetFactory in the Smíchov district. It is literally a lair of every kind of artist. There are concerts or theatre shows almost every day, and the compound simultaneously works as a space for painters and sculptors.

Beer tastes best in the open air

Náplavka. This place has become an institution for Praguers in recent years. It is a riverfront thoroughfare below Rašínovo embankment in the city centre between the Dancing House and Vyšehrad. Náplavka is best enjoyed in summer, when dozens of garden pubs open there and you can savour a beer or soft drink from local producers at sunset, with a plastic cup in your hand and your feet in the Vltava. Several bands all along the Náplavka will be playing live music for listening and dancing. The riverfront isn’t completely dead in winter either. An old boat moors near the Vyšehrad end and opens a Finnish sauna every winter. But don’t expect a refreshing pool after the sauna. The whole river is at your service! At your own risk, of course...

Tips for café loungers

Few things represent the alternative culture more than the liking for quality coffee and various ways of making it. A lot of good cafés have recently sprung up around Prague, where you can order not only an espresso or a cappuccino, but also a coffee made in a French press, aeropress or vacuum pot. In search of good coffee, do not miss Vnitroblock, Kavárna co hledá jméno, Café Letka, EMA Espresso bar, as well as Místo and Potrvá. There are dozens of good tips, so don’t hesitate to ask locals where they enjoy their coffee.

The best markets are farmers’ markets

Prague too offers the opportunity to buy groceries from local farmers and producers. Following a great boom several years ago, three markets have become stable that are well proven and that local patriots swear by. The Náplavka Farmers’ Market takes place every Saturday morning. It’s easy to find. Descend to the riverfront by the Dancing House and follow the river upstream towards Vyšehrad. Another popular Saturday market – Kulaťák market – takes place by the Dejvická metro stop. And thirdly, the Jiřího z Poděbrad farmers’ market can be visited not only on Saturdays but also Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. It’s easy to find: it is located in Jiřího z Poděbrad square, overshadowed by the Church of the Sacred Heart.