The New Zealand Herald

ISTANBUL ON THE CHEAP

Once the marketplac­e of the world, it can still be a bargain destinatio­n, writes Russell Maclennan-Jones

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The cheapest thing to do in Istanbul is simply to walk around, through quaint old streets following no obvious pattern, and run the risk of getting lost. The city is full of bargains for the curious traveller. Locals are only too willing to help guide you, especially if they have a carpet shop they would like you to visit — and many locals in the busy Sultanahme­t area seem to have a carpet shop, or be on the payroll.

Try the swankier area near Taksim Square across the Galata Bridge, using one of the cheap ways to get around, the $2.70 funicular (cable car) up from Katabas, the end of the main tramline through the city. Then you can walk down Istiklal Avenue with its posh shops and embassies and catch another treat, an elderly funicular known as the Tunnel, which gets you back to Galata Bridge.

But if instead you walk downhill through the narrow cobbled streets lined with shops that all seem to specialise in the local version of Freeview and satellite dishes, you can climb the Galata Tower (long queues at busy times and a fee of about $12), a fascinatin­g reminder that the Genoese were in residence for many years.

After all that walking, a ferry ride across to the Asian side ($2.70 each way unless you stay on the ferry for the return trip) is a great way to relax with views up the Bosphorous and across the Sea of Mamara, and mosques dotting the skyline. The Blue Mosque, a central part of Muslim life in the city, is worth more than one visit and is free. It costs about $16 to enter the museum at the nearby Hagia Sophia.

As you would expect the queues are shorter first thing (it opens for visitors at 9am on most days). In the area around the mosque you will run into Baradan or one of his mates offering to shine your shoes ($6, but haggle). Baradan has five children in Kurdish Iran and spends three months there, then two months in Istanbul, and has been shining shoes in the city for 20 years.

The nearby Basilica Cistern is another bargain (about $6). The water storage system in Byzantine times, it’s vast and cavernous but cool and peaceful on a hot day (until lots of tourists crowd in — as usual the morning is your best bet).

Back at Taksim Square you could investigat­e one of the Orthodox churches, the Hagia Triada (Holy Trinity), for instance, with its Rococo towers, and if you stay for a service you will be able to ponder the similariti­es between the chanting of the Orthodox and Muslim prayers.

Istanbul takes time to celebrate its past (the archaeolog­ical museum is a bargain at $6) and the Palatium cafe is a special treat, it’s around the corner from the Four Seasons hotel in Sultanahme­t, a few minutes’ walk from the Blue Mosque. The owners have excavated ruins from Roman and Byzantine times and after you have enjoyed a coffee or apple tea you can climb down the stairs and find yourself in a domed space that would have been familiar to people 1500 years ago. You can view the ruins even without buying a coffee, but they are more than worth the price. And the pizzas are worth trying as well.

 ?? Photo / Danny Hu, Getty Images ?? Istanbul. with the Haghia Sofia in the foreground.
Photo / Danny Hu, Getty Images Istanbul. with the Haghia Sofia in the foreground.

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