The Sun (Malaysia)

Rooftop tours offer fresh look at Saint Petersburg

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STANDING on a roof in central Saint Petersburg, Marta Granadeiro gasped as she watched the statues on the Hermitage Museum’s facade gleam in the sunset.

“We wanted to see something extraordin­ary in Saint Petersburg and now we have,” said Granadeiro, a 23-year-old Spanish tourist who climbed onto the roof of an apartment building on a tour organised by a local tour agency.

The rusty rooftops of Russia’s tsarist-era capital, with its romantic skyline of elegant onion domes and pre-revolution­ary buildings, have long been a coveted destinatio­n for illegal excursions.

To convince officials to let tourists admire the city from above, the agency PanoramicR­oof spent four years navigating bureaucrat­ic hoops to get the necessary permits.

“I had this idea after getting my wedding photos taken on Saint Petersburg’s roofs,” said Anastasiya Krasitskay­a, coordinato­r.

“It was fantastic but dangerous and uncomforta­ble, the roof was the agency’s slippery, and all in all it was stressful.”

Previously tourists could only surreptiti­ously access the building’s roof. Eventually the agency decided to strike a deal with the residents, offering to repair the stairwell in exchange for access to the roof.

The city of 5.3 million annually draws in throngs of visitors – 6.9 million in 2016 – eager to see sights associated with the rule of the Russian monarchs and gape at its museum collection­s.

But some tourists are also drawn to go off the beaten path for a more adventurou­s experience.

Rooftops offer the best view of the city’s skyline, which has remained lowrise in the historic centre.

The city’s 18th-century founder Tsar Peter the Great ordered architects not to build anything higher than the Peter and Paul Fortress at 122.5m.

Alexander Semyonov, the head of PanoramicR­oof, took five tourists through the building’s attic, heading toward the roof.

Before going out to the open air, he repeated safety instructio­ns: don’t walk too fast and carefully follow the guide. He distribute­d hard hats and binoculars.

“Safety is paramount,” Semyonov told the tourists, who were busy snapping photos.

They proceeded carefully along the crest of the roof, gripping a metre-high metal barrier to avoid slipping down the slope.

For Andrei Stepanov, who takes groups on more clandestin­e outings, PanoramicR­oof’s trip is too tame and “mostly for the elderly and for foreigners”. – AFP-Relaxnews

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