![]() |
City Guide - St Petersburg - Shopping | ||
![]() |
||
Shopping Shopping in St Petersburg is an architectural delight with the shops ranging from elegant eighteenth-century arcades to ornate Art Nouveau and Art Deco. This compensates for the fact that, although more goods are available than in Soviet days, there are still unpredictable scarcities. Value Added Tax of 20% is included in prices and is not recoverable for visitors. Opening hours vary but Nevsky prospekt, St Petersburg's main shopping street, jostles with crowds well into the evening, as most shops stay open until 2000 or later. Street markets operate 0900-1700. Vodka, caviar (although it is illegal to take it out of the country), lacquered wares, woollen shawls and semi-precious stones are the specialities, as well as the ubiquitous matrioshka dolls and Soviet memorabilia. On Nevsky prospekt, the columned arcades and pillared façade of the eighteenth-century Gostinyy dvor accommodates hundreds of traders in a labyrinth of units selling everything from clothes to alcohol. Immediately opposite is the nineteenth-century glass-roofed Passazh Arcade with more of the same. Just down the street, the striking Style Moderne frontage of Yeliseev's, the famous delicatessen, is more stunning than the range of food, but this is the place to look for caviar or vodka. There are souvenir markets and kiosks everywhere, including Konyushennaya ploschad, opposite the Church of the Saviour on the Spilled Blood and Dumskaya ulitsa, across Nevsky prospekt from the Grand Hotel Europe. The art market at Nevsky prospekt 32/34, in front of St Catherine Catholic Church sells oil paintings, prints and portraits drawn on the spot. Food markets thrive throughout the city, including Kuznechnyy, off Nevsky prospekt, which sells flowers, fresh fruit and vegetables, homemade cheeses and pickles, usually with unexpected bric-a-brac vendors in the midst of them. |