How Athens Became a Modern Metropolis

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 เม.ย. 2024
  • Is Athens the ugliest city in Europe? It seems many locals and tourists alike think so. But I beg to differ. Let's find out why Athens might be misunderstood.
    'The Athens Urbanist' Episode 3 of 6. Watch the next episode: • How Athens Survived Ne...
    Also, subtitles are also available in Greek! Υπάρχουν διαθέσιμοι υπότιτλοι στα ελληνικά 🇬🇷
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ความคิดเห็น • 1K

  • @UrbanistExploringCities
    @UrbanistExploringCities  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    🚌 Experience a Real-Life Urbanist Adventure on multi-day Greece trip: tours.urbanist.live

    • @Rousseau4469
      @Rousseau4469 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Athens can be transformed to a more livable and nicer city if it starts a plan to construct small parks and making them by tearing down squares with very old polykatoikies complexes. Also in some suburbs you can notice there are much lower complexes of polykatoikies with only 3 or 4 floors that have very large balconies which host huge amounts of plants or even small trees or fauna or even boumgamvillias which literally make the outside be hidden by them. Also somewhere in the city center there is an architect that owns the top 2 apartment and has transformed the terrace to a greenhouse. In my hometown of Pireas there is a building of polykatoikia that has managed to grow plants that run down it's walls and gives the feeling of a huge jungle obstacle. It's on Kountouriotou 178 street a bit before Mpoumpoulinas (the road that crosses vertical Kountouriotou).
      maps.app.goo.gl/AgFBHF2JkMAdBsyQ7?g_st=ic

  • @marshallc.t.2554
    @marshallc.t.2554 หลายเดือนก่อน +265

    The fact that commercial and residential areas are mixed and not seperate makes greek cities very lively and it’s a great concept!

    • @joenuts5167
      @joenuts5167 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Concept? That was the normal way of doing things until the druggies Americans decided that it should not be so

    • @samdaniels2
      @samdaniels2 หลายเดือนก่อน +96

      That’s the norm for most of the world. Strict zoning laws seem to be something that is unique to the US.

    • @ucouldnevah
      @ucouldnevah หลายเดือนก่อน +60

      that’s literally what the WHOLE of Europe looks like😅

    • @marshallc.t.2554
      @marshallc.t.2554 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ucouldnevah I know

    • @Patches_0001
      @Patches_0001 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      That’s just all European cities

  • @SofronPolitis
    @SofronPolitis หลายเดือนก่อน +513

    I once told an English friend that I hate Athens because it is ugly, he replied that he loves Athens because it is "honest"...which struck me as a very interesting description.

    • @goatsinoflust7116
      @goatsinoflust7116 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

      wow you just struck an athenian as well bro , it is true ,we don't try to hide our pathogenesis nor our happiness. Athens is a mirror of our politcs and daylife

    • @Fiaw1
      @Fiaw1 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

      Athens is an ugly city, no matter how you dress it up.

    • @lorrainevlambert
      @lorrainevlambert หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Athens has many pockets of beauty, all over the city.... look and you will find them.

    • @demetriosnikolianos1912
      @demetriosnikolianos1912 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Fiaw1 Indeed

    • @LProfessorSuBassStudio
      @LProfessorSuBassStudio หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@Fiaw1 so ugly that is has Acropolis in the city center.

  • @yanni2737
    @yanni2737 หลายเดือนก่อน +96

    The problem of Athens isn't the polykatikies but the general state of the urban environment. By that I mean, the quality of communal spaces (pavements, road infrastructure, bike infrastructure) the lack of maintenance of both the buildings and spaces and of course the lack of basic hygiene.

    • @ane-louisestampe7939
      @ane-louisestampe7939 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Agree.
      The mix of the people living close together is very good for a society's dynamics... says a Nordic 😉
      We talk about a socity's "connection power" (sammenhængskraft). We need to connect with people different from our selves. Sharing a staircase is an excellent way of attaining that.
      You can't hate all rich people, all immigrants, all doctors, all workers, if you know some of them 🥰

    • @itzelouise8714
      @itzelouise8714 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@ane-louisestampe7939 excellent point 👏

    • @Fegga1955
      @Fegga1955 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Perfect comment

    • @Masa-we2fu
      @Masa-we2fu 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I just came back from visiting Athens for first time in my life and I was shocked. You photoshoped buildings in this video to look a little cleaner but in fact buildings and whole city is just plain dirty! Garbage everywhere, building all have dirty walls, black from soot, ruins, it looks like thay had a war. I am sorry but dirty cannot be beautiful or "lively". They all have those old analog anthenas on the roofs or balconies ( I didn't know they are even in use anywhere in the world). They have tents on balconies ( instead of beeing glassed) so these tents get dirty from upper side and they cant clean it so it i dirty as it can be. They just have museums full of amphoras or statues of antic "Gods", which are if fact statues of naked men and women 🙄. And it is actually a sad remainder how every civilisation has its rise and fall. Walking through Athens, I saw a totally ruined country. I just cant believe they are so poor that they cant clean those buildings. And graffits are everywhere. In this video you showed few ones that look decent ( like that wolf graffit ) but in fact it is tertible. I t is a ruined city, and todays Greece has nothing to show except artefacts from famous past but surronded with dirty building is just sad .

    • @virginiatomazou6894
      @virginiatomazou6894 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @Masa-we2fu...in which country do you live? It must an extremely beautiful place with no trash, old run down building and only glass balconies, somewhat of a modern prison i would say.
      No museums with naked statues of men,
      can't take too much culture in at once, can we!

  • @pwp8737
    @pwp8737 หลายเดือนก่อน +259

    I lived in Athens for four years back in the '90's, and have very fond memories. I fell in love with the city. Hidden alleyways, with cafes, bars and nightclubs. Charming neighborhoods, very livable, and always a bakery, a periptero ( a newsstand, but much more), a bakaliko and kafeneio always close by. My biggest complaint was its people who often didn't show much pride in the city and dumped garbage everywhere. Greeks I found very anarchic, never obeying rules.

    • @skagon_
      @skagon_ หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      You hit the nail on the head with your last comment. Greeks are by nature anarchists. This is the best explanation, also why we got rid of royalty, and a lot of prominent politicians. Even in ancient Greece, and up until today, us Greeks are against any form of authority. A blessing and a curse, really. But that's how it is.

    • @andreasbalaskas7292
      @andreasbalaskas7292 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      From Ireland.
      Your video has its [+ / -], when it comes (2) evaluate and appreciate after a point all the "good looking resident buildings" vs neo classical or Victorian era, from all point of views.
      If you ask some1, 2day who is on their mid (45 - 50 +) years old, born late - early (60's - 70's), they reply you that, I caught Athens (2) see built with all that massive concrete last century. And after half century, I have use the whole idea "2 see the beauty of ugliness on these buildings".
      The good thing is that, the graffiti we see all around, cover some (50% - 60%) all the ugliness of Athens, as capital. You walked in neighbourhoods with shops totally closed and full with graffiti, how did you felt???
      Personally, I don't know any capital city around the globe without graffiti.
      1st) The wrong thing with buildings in Athens, is that, are built with such unique way [that time, last century]. And don't allow you (2) questioning, that, Athens had, has and will continue have such serious problems on the topic of buildings, because no1 really cares.
      During your video, you should ask locals, from all walks of life and all social background, how really feel on this topic??

    • @Gk-ug6gu
      @Gk-ug6gu หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@skagon_Exactly! Very few can understand this.

    • @sars6224
      @sars6224 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

      @@skagon_ There is for sure anarchy into us but not for the reasons you write. During antiquity and Roman empire ages we were completely pro authority and loyal to the state. We became anarchic during the occupation of the Ottomans as disregard of authority and disloyalty to it was the only way to survive.

    • @kostantismp3704
      @kostantismp3704 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      about your last comment, its in our nature, free spirits hahahaxaxa

  • @vndevries
    @vndevries หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    Ok, I think this is my first comment ever on youtube. I just moved to Athens after years all over the world, including NYC, Shanghai and Dubai. It's an overwhelmingly ugly city that is full of beauty. You captured it so well. There's a story about dog and cat cities - a dog city being a place like Amsterdam - it comes to you. A cat city being a place like Athens (or Beirut or Tehran)....you need to explore and see the beauty. Athens is full of life, love, culture, & energy. There's ugliness everywhere. There's beauty everywhere. You just have to look. Love Athens.

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Hey I appreciate you commenting and watching the video! And I totally understand what you mean by dog and cat cities. Yea Athens beauty isn’t obvious and takes more digging and flowing with the chaos

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      There are cities that look beautiful both from above and from low and inside and out. There are other cities that at first sight seem below average but in wandering through them you find a lot of beauty. Athens belongs to the second category. It is a very special one that looks like no other, it has its uniqueness and while it looks ugly, if you live it you will love it. It has a huge history, high level culture, concentrated market and entertainment, good food, helpful people, good climate, good prices. Of course, there are negative points too. Certainly is not the ugliest in Europe. That is for sure!

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      And very friendly for the tourist and the foreigner. Because I have been in manny European cities where you have to pay a fortune to drink a glass of water, you will die from starvation if you don't speak their language. In Athens you will find the Hellenic (Greek) red cross to deliver free water to the walkers, in summer. Most of the Greeks are hospitable and you can communicate with them in basic or advanced English. They do not oblige you to speak in Greek. There are many good sides of Athens that you will not find in many ""beautiful European cities""". And I am the one who has been traveling to more than 20 European cities out of Greece. Have a nice time.

  • @Hectorsanchez12331
    @Hectorsanchez12331 หลายเดือนก่อน +231

    I'm watching while tears coming from my eyes. God.... I missed Athens so much. Athens: Ugly at first sight and so lovely and beautiful after you getting know it. Ariel my friend, your approach is also so unique. So simple and so pure at the same time. Talking with the locals with such a friendly conversation. And they are opening their hearts... I don't have another word to discribe it. done again my friend!!!

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      this right here is the comment of the week! this means so much. I'm glad this episode has moved you so much. I developed a similar emotional connection with Athens. And that means so much about this comment, about my approach being simple and pure. I definitely found it powerful to let people feel calm and safe to express themselves freely.

    • @GothPaoki
      @GothPaoki หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      No it's still ugly after the first sight.

    • @Hectorsanchez12331
      @Hectorsanchez12331 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      @@GothPaoki Call doctor Kevorkian

    • @Dav23614
      @Dav23614 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Hectorsanchez12331 😅😅😅👍

    • @Konsiliop
      @Konsiliop หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@GothPaoki That's the problem with Greeks, we can't appreciate anything we have until we lose it. Is it smart? i don't think so, but it is what it is.......Unfortunately.

  • @altrogeruvah
    @altrogeruvah หลายเดือนก่อน +172

    I'm Greek and my wife's Japanese. I used to dread visiting Athens as a child, but seeing my wife's unfiltered love for Athens (and Greece in general) and asking me to visit whenever we can, I learned to appreciate the small things in this city. The small cafes and mom-and-pop stores in Plaka, Anafiotika, Thiseio, Koukaki etc, young and old people making the most of what they have with a smile on their face, always open for banter etc. I've lived in so many countries in my life so far, but every time I come back to Athens, I feel at home. Even though I know it's a piece of crap of a city, it's *_my_* piece of crap and I wouldn't trade it for the world.

    • @DaGo314
      @DaGo314 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Well, I think Greece should have modernize their fundamentals from their magnificent structures like the Parthenon or the Olimpia Zeus Temple. The founder fathers of the US had an open love for Roman and Greek architecture.

    • @Phosphoreus
      @Phosphoreus หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I’ve been to hundreds of cities and take offense at you calling it that.

    • @KujieSama
      @KujieSama หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Phosphoreusoh? And how do you call a city filled with trash and graffiti EVERYWHERE? With broken sidewalks and streets? With zero consideration for bikers and people with disabilities? With next to zero green? With no respect from drivers to pedestrians and vice versa? With so many uncontrollable motorcycles which defy the laws about sounds? I could go on and on about "precious" Athens. Βρωμιά και σαπίλα, αυτό είναι.

    • @carlitoxb110
      @carlitoxb110 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I understand you bro, I feel the same for my city, Bogotá Colombia is a massive and diverse mess that somehow makes sense and has a unique vibe I haven't found anywhere else, we have big issues but im proud of what we've build, my city is usually called the Athens of South America because we have lots of museums and libraries

    • @alejandromartinezcorredor6493
      @alejandromartinezcorredor6493 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It most b

  • @JohnYannoulas
    @JohnYannoulas หลายเดือนก่อน +122

    "Why do Athenians hate Athens?" I really don't want to come off as condescending, but I see the same attitude in many passerbys that have this removed, academic interest in this topic, and this romanticized idea of a city, divorced from its lived reality as an inhabitant.
    You can interview a lot of bon viveurs, urbanites, or professors, basically high-middle to high class citizens that will say the situation is not really this bad.
    Well, to understand their point of view, you need to see the polykatoikia as the scale model of social inequality that it is. When it pours, the top floor tenants can enjoy a hot chocolate inside, an almost impressionistic view of the city in the haze, through a window adorned by shiny raindrops.
    Meanwhile the basement dwellers fear an imminent flood, due to the terrible infastructure, that will turn their possessions into moldy trash and their spaces into even more putrid catacombs.
    You can take thee bus to the sea, yes. You will also suffer through endless traffic in the hot sun, to reach a riviera infested with private beaches that cut off a lot of working class people with their entrance fees, and of course terribly polluted water.
    And enjoying the view of dilapidated buildings is not quite the same as living in them, where absent soundproofing and faulty construction make the entire place a noisy (and quite cold in the winter), space. Soaring rents don't make it any more romantic either.
    Having immigrants live in the darkest recesses of these structures or in lower income areas is not an element of cultural pluralism, its just another layer of cement that keeps them out of sight and out of mind so the more xenophobic parts of our society can feel at ease.
    You can't really feel this guttural disgust for the mess that is Athens if you haven't sufficiently tripped on its wrecked pavements, slipped on its time-eaten marbles, woken up to the smell of fresh sewage in your hot, street level apartment, seen the corpses of hundreds of neoclassicals that await to become banks and Zara outlets instead of housing the poor and homeless, and I could go on.

    • @henrico6973
      @henrico6973 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Great take on some aspects of this video, those aspects you mention often go unnoticed when watching a video like this.

    • @Gafigglethorp
      @Gafigglethorp หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Very good comment. The flight of the middle and upper classes to the suburbs, leaving their downtown properties behind to become rented and increasingly dilapidated and unrepaired also wasn't really addressed.
      But i think the urban fabric of central Athens can be salvaged because of the traits talked about in the video. Transit is imperative because there is literally No parking on the streets of central Athens for even one car per apartment, let alone several, and no mayoral candidate is going to (openly) advocate bulldozing everything to make car parks, unlike in lots of the suburbs (mine included).
      The real battle is definitely against all these urbanites and/or tourists rediscovering how this is a great place to live if we fix it, then skyrocketing rents in response; essentially just gentrification, and sending the poor into increasingly segregated ghettos or far flung suburbs. Even the examples he gives in the video (Kolonaki, Koukaki, Kerameikos) are informed by a touristy, trendy perspective of the city.
      EDIT: apparently the next episode in the series is much more about what I'm talking about haha

    • @alanpotter8680
      @alanpotter8680 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      From my 25 years of experience in Athens since the day I was born, I have YET to see an Athenian who hates Athens. Astorian Athenians cry when they land on the airport. American tourist swear by the beauty of the city, Europeans flock every single year, Italians move to Greece.. (and that one is saying something!) ... Nobody hates Athens, especially not the Athenians, L.O.L.! If anything, we are proud of it. It's our baby, we raise it as well as we can. No other major capital of such magnitude or higher is better looking .. we all have our shit going on.

    • @Gafigglethorp
      @Gafigglethorp หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@alanpotter8680 with all due respect, the Greek American experience is not the same as that of people "back home". Obviously returning back to where you grew up has a certain element of nostalgia and rose tinted glasses.
      Personally I love Athens, but i moved here at 15. I know plenty of young and old Athenians who genuinely hate it and would do (and many actually do) anything to leave. Whether for reasons specific to Athens or because they hate big city living, its not for everyone.

    • @JohnYannoulas
      @JohnYannoulas หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@alanpotter8680 Lol spotted the kolonaki elitist

  • @myt-mat-mil-mit-met-com-trol
    @myt-mat-mil-mit-met-com-trol หลายเดือนก่อน +77

    As a former resident of Athens center, that is when I was in my 20s and it was the 1990s, and the center was not so renovated as now, I did not care much of the architecture. I liked the way people meet in the same block and neighborhood: students, intellectuals and uneducated, young and old, rich and poor, even drivers and pedestrians. I could see my society in a glance, not just my community. This video brought me the insight I never thought for myself, and that's brilliant (and congratulations for). That time, Athens center was even more vibrant in this sense and I was a young man and I wanted to know people and things. Now as I grow older, I realize Athens is mostly impractical. You have to go to places, and that's not quick, there are still a lot to be done for public transport. You have to work and you commute, and that's expensive in time and money. You have to raise children and you have to feel they are safe; you cannot just keep them at home playing video games, neither you should expose them to dangers on the streets. There is the pedestrian warfare, people and vehicles cramped. It is not impossible to grow up in Athens, the contrary, but it is as difficult, and I notice "city people" becoming more individualistic. Athens made it because water, electricity, sewage, internet and the urban facilities made it in quality. That was a miracle. But fuel, energy and maintenance of infrastructure are costly considerations. So, Athens may not be ugly and appear mesmerizing to the visitor. But residents have a point of being not satisfied in comparison to a planned architecture.

    • @viciouslady1340
      @viciouslady1340 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The metros are expanding so thats good

  • @MrSebfrench76
    @MrSebfrench76 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

    I have beautiful memories of Athens in 1992 .Spent 15 days in the city, riding a 200 CC Vespa . Trafic was anarchic, the air was suffocating, streets were dirty, and many buildings were decaying. But, gosh, how i felt alive....I was where everything is born.

    • @TalkingPoint773
      @TalkingPoint773 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      What drugs were you taking then?

  • @CrushedFemur
    @CrushedFemur หลายเดือนก่อน +373

    I can understand why Athenians may dislike the polykatokias. But as an outsider it does have so much more character than the apartments I see built in my city in the US. It's less cold and distant, it has an inviting feeling. I also think it actually does look incredibly nice. Of course this is just an outsiders perspective

    • @gaarakabuto1
      @gaarakabuto1 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

      Wait until you live inside of one. To be fair the apartment buildings (polykatikoies), are not the worst thing ever, BUT it is another bad thing added into a pile. Also not all of these apartment buildings are terrible to live in, but they are associated with compromise.

    • @gdb524
      @gdb524 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      I'm really surprised to hear there's so much contempt for Athen's architecture. I consider Athens much more pleasant than Stockholm for example, which is a pretty but very sterile wax figure of a city.

    • @keksimusultimus4257
      @keksimusultimus4257 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      wait until you go to sleep and you have to listen to EVERYTHING. the problem is there's 0 soundproofing whatsoever you can hear your neighboor breath almost. This is what makes them terrible.

    • @nickklavdianos5136
      @nickklavdianos5136 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Couple of notes here:
      The big problem with Athens is that it's a very modern city. Now, I understand it can sound crazy to call Athens, a city that has been around since the Bronze Age, new, but the fact of the matter is that during the years of the Eastern Roman and Ottoman Empires, Athens massively regressed as a settlement, to the point that when it became capital of the newly independent Greece, in the 1830s, it was just a village around the Acropolis. There are some really funny photos from back then, were you can see the Acropolis, a few houses and the King's palace (now the Greek parliament), which looks enormous compared to the houses around. Athens became a large city during the late 19th and throughout the 20th century, when people from the rest of Greece kept moving in the increasingly bustling capital. But the fact that Athens is so new, makes the city lack the beautiful and picturesque medieval center, associated with most large cities in Europe, as well as the more modern but still old buildings of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. So, all the buildings that make cities like Amsterdam, Zurich, Prague, Vienna and Budapest beautiful, are nowhere to be found in Athens.
      Another point is that all these beautiful buildings, tend to be generally expensive to build. And Greece is really not that rich of a country.
      Now, the emergence of the polykatikoia happened for one big reason. Money. You see, during the 60s and the 70s, when a good amount of these buildings were erected, Greeks were, you guessed it, not doing very well economically. So, the moment people got the chance to sell their single or two floor houses to build five or six, or even seven story polykatikies, they did it immediately. (The way this worked was that the contractor that built the polykatikoia paid the money to build it and could sell most of the apartments. The owner of the land got a few apartments themselves, for their own use and to rent out for passive income.) The problem was, that these contractors didn't really care to make the building look beautiful, leave space for greenery etc. They cared to maximize space and height so that they could get as many apartments out of it as possible. So you end up with buildings that are ugly, that are jam packed together, most of the time don't offer adequate parking space, and are tall enough that when you walk in narrow streets, you feel suffocated. Plus, there's very few trees and other green areas like parks etc. Another big thing is that these buildings usually aren't kept very well on their outside, so a lot of the time they can look ugly and a bit decrepit. And because most buildings are greyish, it creates a depressing feeling around them.
      I like to joke that we built communist architecture in a capitalist country, so the buildings are equally ugly and depressing, and they also lack all the good features of the communist buildings, like the fact that they are built at some distance from the road so that people don't suffocate, that they leave space for greenery, and that they have incorporated parks inside and around them, something that Greek cities lack.

    • @GothPaoki
      @GothPaoki หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Unfortunately that's the least of Athens problem. City is too big and too chaotic. Too many people in it and complete lack of city planning

  • @CM73878
    @CM73878 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

    It’s charming in its chaos. I love wandering around Athens and trying to live like a local. The best places are off the tourist track, like any big city. It is ugly and beautiful at the same time. But the weather and warmth of the people are undeniable.

    • @gmeachim3270
      @gmeachim3270 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Greeks can be very warm but at the same time the rudeness and aggressiveness on the roads is appalling.

  • @lrosemaije1995
    @lrosemaije1995 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    In 2019 I had the privilege to live in Athens and I loved every bit of it. Even tho I had a very small salary, I had the best time of my life. The buildings, the atmosphere, everything. I lived in Voula and Agia Varvara and the most beautiful part is that I met the love of my life which I’m still together with. So I’m forever grateful to Athens and it has a special place in my heart.

  • @AALavdas
    @AALavdas หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    My family has been living in Athens since the late 19th century. The ugliest European capital - well, maybe, although it has many nice parts. But the ugliest city??? Who says that? Even Greece itself has many uglier cities... As for the apartment buildings ("polykatoikies"), it depends on which ones. Those built before 1960, and even more so before 1940, are really nice. The only problem with those is when they replaced a neoclassical or other older building. But, post 1960, these are ranging from boring to ugly. Also, before 1960, the apartment building was THE building of choice for higher incomes. (The refugees of the Asia Minor disaster were not housed in central Athens, but in peripheral settlements). But, after 1960, more and more apartment buildings for lower income niches were built. A problem with this otherwise interesting video is that it does not make this distinction at all, and it also rarely shows any beautiful buildings, it is as if it is focused on ugliness.. A lot of delapidation, graffiti and exposed side walls in most images. Speaking with Nikos was brilliant, very few people know the city and care about it like Nikos does. His remarks are spot-on.

    • @MariawithCats75
      @MariawithCats75 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      THANK YOU! You are totally right. Kolonos' buildings are not the average in Athens and the intro of the video only shows kolonos... What about the cute buildings at Lykabettus, Faliro, Glyfada, Kolonaki etc etc...??

    • @AALavdas
      @AALavdas หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@MariawithCats75 To be fair, it does have some nice views - glimpses of Panepistimiou, St Dionysius in Skoufa in Kolonaki, St George square in Kypseli...but they are few and far between

    • @Dominic-tq6dw
      @Dominic-tq6dw หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thats Exaclty what happened in Italy too

  • @Flamethrower2579
    @Flamethrower2579 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    I really do feel like polykatokias are an optimal form of building at least for southern European cities.
    In Palermo, the areas with polykatokia-like buildings are usually considered to be good neighborhoods, whilst areas with apartment buildings that look like more those of central and northern Europe with big green open spaces between them are usually very degraded.

    • @Fiaw1
      @Fiaw1 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It's depressing to compare the aesthetics of other European cities to Athens. Athens is hideous. The buildings are ugly, and the graffiti is EVERYWHERE. No matter which way you or this youtuber tries to dress it up, it's ugly to any visitor that is touring around Europe.

    • @giogisimos
      @giogisimos หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Fiaw1 No it is only ugly for you. Stop trying to push your opinion as if it is some objective reality. Athens is amongst the most lively, aesthetic and interesting cities in Europe.

    • @Fiaw1
      @Fiaw1 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @giogisimos I mean, I've lived in Greece for 13 years, and i love the country and people. Athens, however, is a shthole no matter how you spin it. The people are less Greek (kind), and the city is an unorganized mess and looks horribly ugly. These aren't opinions. These are facts, and the vast majority of Greeks agree with me. You sound like a Greek American who goes to Greece on holidays because Greeks generally dont act like you. Defending the indefensible. Greeks are self critical, and call a spade a spade when they see one. They dont make everything an emotional argument but are instead pragmatic. If you meet a woman, and she is 400lb, and nothing on her face is symmetrical nor matches, but when you look very closely, she has nicely shaped ears, she is still ugly. it's not an opinion, It is a fact. Are there noce places in Athens? Sure, I've lived it. I've been to all of them. Is Athens still a disorganized ugly city? Sure is.

    • @pelagaki97
      @pelagaki97 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I am not sure if densely build neighborhoods are less degraded. It depends on many factors
      However, when i walk in these areas in greece they tend to seem more crowded with pedestrians and make me feel safe.

    • @Fiaw1
      @Fiaw1 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @giogisimos Yeah, okay, i guess beauty is subjective? Do you find beauty also in a pile of cow dung?

  • @user-mf4pr8td3b
    @user-mf4pr8td3b หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    Athens feels extremely similar to Beirut. A concrete jungle with very little greenery left. The vibes feel a lot alike where you feel it is chaotic and ugly, yet interesting and charming oftentimes when moving from a place to another.

    • @AlihanGurpinar
      @AlihanGurpinar หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes, it both looks like a concrete jungle. But Athens road layout is much more neat compared to Beirut.

    • @SathyaswamyS
      @SathyaswamyS หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Better than Indian cities

    • @hamlet557
      @hamlet557 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      If Beirut was safe for a solo female, I'd have already visited it.
      And I'm pretty sure I'd love it.

    • @erosgritti5171
      @erosgritti5171 หลายเดือนก่อน

      it is an objectively ugly city, but this does not mean that it does not have its charm.

    • @dimitrioschoulis1190
      @dimitrioschoulis1190 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@erosgritti5171 The most ugly cities in Europe are in Sicily. Catania and Palermo, especially Catania.

  • @user-xv9vn9si4g
    @user-xv9vn9si4g หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    What a great take an a busy metropolis that is so chaotic, yet so orderly, so lively across all neighborhoods, so warm and communal. The mix of all people regardless of financial status!
    Great approach Ariel.

    • @gmeachim3270
      @gmeachim3270 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      In what way is it orderly? I'm curious, not being sarcastic.

    • @user-xv9vn9si4g
      @user-xv9vn9si4g หลายเดือนก่อน

      It becomes orderly by the people who despite what seems chaotic they adapt and find their way through to meet their needs.
      It seems chaotic to an outsider but locals find their ways and adjust accordingly.

    • @gmeachim3270
      @gmeachim3270 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@user-xv9vn9si4g I lived there for 2 and a half years. I didn't find it orderly.

  • @Amundsakis
    @Amundsakis หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I love Athens. Its like an overgrown Greek village. The people brought their own villages into growing metropolis and made it a organic, beautiful mess! Nothing like it. A Unique modern and ancient city.

  • @nicolebaab
    @nicolebaab หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    This is another great episode! I learned a lot. You’re doing such a great job with your first documentary series ❤️

  • @innorruck1
    @innorruck1 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Last year i traveled for the first time outside of Greece to Budapest Hungary and i was so excited to see some refreshing good architecture. When we arrived there from day one i felt depressed and started to question myself. How could i feel like this, when i had great architecture around me in comparison to Athens's concrete buildings? I later realized that it was because almost everything was the same. Square buildings with windows and decorative features and while stunning, they felt mundane and cold. In Athens every single polykatoikia is different, they have balconies which add depth and greenery (unfortunately most people leave them empty), you can hear and see people sitting or looking out from them.
    I believe that if polykatoikies start to have a more architectural exterior and add color, Athens could become a more likable city by Greeks.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I have traveled a lot out of Greece, and I have walked step by step many European cities. Most of them are like bacterial clones. Exactly designed squares with the same motive and colour of buildings, in the same motive of roads and usually a river in the middle of the city. For tourism is OK, but after some days you fell depressed. Athens has colour, weather, food, entertainment, diversity, HISTORY, high culture and many more. It is not the ugly city they show in that video. But if it is for them, it is not for us. At the very end, we Greeks live here, not they.

    • @user-uf2df6zf5w
      @user-uf2df6zf5w หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@user-oi4cn7rt8t The reason for that is the good weather and familiarity. Imagine these types of structures somewhere north of the Alps, where it is rainy and dark more often (that is basically former USSR level of depression,).

  • @Atenejin
    @Atenejin หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    Very interesting and informative video.
    Put it simply: Greeks who have traveled or lived overseas get to appreciate the aesthetics and practicality of the polykatoikia.
    Now, could Athens be built differently? Could we have huge high-rise buildings like in Miami, Tokyo or London? Definitely not. Could we preserve the Neo-classical architecture of the early 20th century? Perhaps, but only if we didn't have to accommodate this influx of population after the Minor Asia Campaign, the Civil War and the urbanism of late '50s to early 70s.
    Greeks should learn to accept and love their polykatoikias and finds ways to decorate them. Paint the exterior, decorate them with plants, keep them clean and well maintained... Yes, there are ways to make them beautiful.

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I’m glad you enjoyed the video! And I agree there’s many ways that Athens current structures can be improved

  • @cindygreif3077
    @cindygreif3077 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    This was so interesting and educational. Well done! I love how you erase the opening credits with yourself!

  • @batnayanineveh6082
    @batnayanineveh6082 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    This was super informative and well put together. Thank you Ariel and team !

  • @lisapa297
    @lisapa297 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great vid!! Been watching your Athens series, can't wait for the next one!! Keep up the good work!!

  • @fawnmarie2679
    @fawnmarie2679 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    What I love about this episode, and all your content, are all the different view points you dish out to us. You are absolutely spot on with the ideas you showed us about architecture. "People dont admire what they have. They admire what they miss." Was that how it went? At any rate, fabulous and again so happy for where you are going. Followed you for years. Some of my favorite youtube videos are when your Dad would drive you from place to place in your old hood!!! Loved that!! Congrats ✌

    • @maritkjn505
      @maritkjn505 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I love that qoute ♥

  • @kerrieb07
    @kerrieb07 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I was in Athens in December for the first time. I love that city. I love the community of people. I enjoyed being able to walk and explore the city. I can't wait to go back. Thanks for doing this video. Made me feel I was back in Athens.❤

    • @demetriosarcolakis4821
      @demetriosarcolakis4821 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If you are a tourist it's nice, if you are a citizen everyday life is a hell

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@demetriosarcolakis4821not really! I am a Greek living in Athens and I find it very charming. Depends on the person...

  • @KCH55
    @KCH55 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I think that they're still missing something like yeah those plans are wonderful but they're in essence recreating what's already there.
    This is fine for restoration purposes however I think what's missing is parks, garden squares/ garden centers. This is the same problem in New York City is the lack of garden squares.
    Another thing is it has a lot of exposed wiring which gives it the feeling of not being very safe.
    Another thing is it's a limit of size since the stories have a limit.
    What I do like about it is I love balconies, not everybody thinks of balconies necessary but they do give spaces for people outdoors.
    Yes, there's greenery from the balconies but those are private. They're not public and that's what it lacks. Parks are public spaces of gathering, but allow people to be immersed in nature or garden spaces.

  • @matiasechehun9518
    @matiasechehun9518 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Finally the youtube recommendations work, I'm so glad I found your channel, beautiful video

  • @steliosthemelakis9899
    @steliosthemelakis9899 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    you have done a wonderful job in these series, it definitely deserves a lot of views.

  • @wendym5137
    @wendym5137 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Yay, wow, so interesting on the history/architecture. I never knew! thanks for the wonderful insight ✨️

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      yay!! thank you so much for watching this look into architecture history :D

  • @daveexploring4512
    @daveexploring4512 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Well done Ariel and the team on putting together another informative and entertaining perspective of Athens and it's urbanisation.

  • @neboul
    @neboul หลายเดือนก่อน

    Nice guests. Very informative. Good to have all those point of views. Really enjoyed it

  • @Pan472
    @Pan472 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Thing is, if the polykatoikies were properly maintained, they wouldn't be ugly. Many that have been maintained are indeed nice. But they're still few in numbers in comparison to the total.
    Plus, we call them ugly as they replaced objectively beautiful neoclassical buildings, with which Athens was entirely made of them until the 60s. We miss that beauty and we call their replacements ugly (which, they are for the most part, excepting these who've been maintained, as mentioned).
    For the comparison with Paris: Athens is also designed in perfect blocks, if you'll see from the satellite. But the buildings built in these blocks are chaotic.

  • @williammckelvey2677
    @williammckelvey2677 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I absolutely loved Athens. It didn't find it ugly at all. It isn't beautiful, but it's not ugly.
    I think tourists are disappointed because they are expecting Rome, but Greek.
    But Athens is just a very large, very dense, deeply lived-in city. It is charismatic, almost electric.

  • @skoy21
    @skoy21 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have really enjoyed this series so far! Already waiting for the next!

  • @viivii346
    @viivii346 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love the interviews, insightful, learning from your documentaries. 🙏

  • @MaximusAugustusOrthodox
    @MaximusAugustusOrthodox หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Love Greece from Germany ☦️🇩🇪❤️🇬🇷☦️

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน

      We are poor lazy and inferior to you!!
      How you dare love us?!!?!?!
      That is a shame!

    • @emilbruns9238
      @emilbruns9238 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@user-oi4cn7rt8t How can you say such a thing? We Germans always adored Greek culture. Take king Ludwig I. of Bavaria as an example. He was so obsessed with Greece that he caused a neoclassical building boom in his capital Munich and he even changed the German spelling of his country from “Baiern” to the “Bayern” with the Greek “Y”. There’s nobody inferior to anyone here

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน

      @emilbruns9238 Ludwig 1 may appreciated Greece and Greek culture and Greeks, but modern Germans hate Greece. Do you know how much abuse the Greeks received from the ""europeans"" and especially the Germans during the years of the economic crisis??? Have you ever read comments by the Germans against the Greeks?? We Greeks had our big problems and troubles, we had also the Germans calling us lazy, thieves, pigs and that we were fed by them because we were hungry. Do you know how many times Greeks read abusive and insulting comments??
      Do you know how many times we see Germans to support turkey in violations and threats??
      There were times that we didn't want to enter sites and videos concerning Greece, because we were afraid of the comments coming from Germans and the rest of their partnership in Europe.
      We Greeks had to face the daily suicides, the austerity, the threats of the turks and we also had to face the German comments. Come on now. I wish your country never live something like that.
      Admiration, respect and love is in real actions my friend and not in words of a comment. We didn't want your admiration we wanted your respect, because we worth it.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @emilbruns9238 Ludwig 1 may appreciated Greece and Greek culture and Greeks, but modern Germans hate Greece. Do you know how much abuse the Greeks received from the ""europeans"" and especially the Germans during the years of the economic crisis??? Have you ever read comments by the Germans against the Greeks?? We Greeks had our big problems and troubles, we had also the Germans calling us lazy, thieves, pigs and that we were fed by them because we were hungry. Do you know how many times Greeks read abusive and insulting comments??
      Do you know how many times we see Germans to support turkey in violations and threats??
      There were times that we didn't want to enter sites and videos concerning Greece, because we were afraid of the comments coming from Germans and the rest of their partnership of Europe.
      We Greeks had to face the daily suicides, the austerity, the threats of the turks and we also had to face the German comments. Come on now. I wish your country NEVER live something like that.
      Admiration, respect and love is in real actions my friend and not in words of a comment many years later. We didn't want your admiration we wanted your respect, because we worth it.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @emilbruns9238 I tried to answer you many times but my messages, although polite, were not shown..... anyway.
      The bullying that Greeks have accepted from the Germans and their friends, the past years, is untold. Most of the Greeks were afraid of entering in a video concerning Greece, because of the German comments. Come on now please.

  • @suemcleavy2571
    @suemcleavy2571 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Ariel, this episode I thought I’d like the least, but so far I have loved the most. You brought the humanism of the city and, dare I say, beauty of a city I was hard pressed to see the beauty in. Well done! I appreciate Athens in a different way now. Love the series!

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน

      That means so much! Thank you for watching 🙏 I knew this episode wouldn’t be the most obvious one that people would like, but I knew deep down inside that people would be interested in learning about Athens architecture history. So it means a lot to hear this! Glad I can help you see the beauty of a place like Athens 🙏

    • @suemcleavy2571
      @suemcleavy2571 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      🩷🩷 Cannot wait for the next three episodes!

  • @michelelands4103
    @michelelands4103 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love this docuseries. I learned so much about Greece. History, religion, food, architecture, traditions, culture, and urbanism. The cinematography, music and content are presented a way so I feel as if I was there, experiencing this journey with Ariel. I enjoyed this series and look forward to future productions by Ariel.

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน

      wow that means so much man! Our intention was immersion first and foremost, so I'm so happy to hear you were immersed!

  • @hhydar883
    @hhydar883 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Achievement is not to build new fancy tall buildings and luxury neighborhoods... the true achievement is to preserve and uplift the buildings and neighborhoods with historical heritage. Thats what tourists want to see when they visit a city.

  • @checkadog
    @checkadog หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I grew up, and still live in Athens.
    If I had to describe Athens and cities in Greece, the words I would choose are "beautiful caos".
    I miss that when I travel abroad, when I see for example several identical multi storie residential buildings together, I really dislike that. There is no personality in that.
    I like the caos us Greeks have.
    The biggest drawback of living in Athens is the traffic. If you don't live near a metro station, you are very unlucky. Over the years, as the population grew, the state did nothing to improve the infrastructure. And the result is really bad.
    If Athens and the greater Attica region, could go from 5million, to 3.5m people, I think it would be ideal.

  • @strathernian
    @strathernian หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    As an urban researcher i found this absolutely fascinating. I can't wait to explore Athens now.

  • @skalextmv5483
    @skalextmv5483 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Tbh I’ve lived in Gdańsk I’ve lived in Copenhagen I’ve lived in delft but nothing beats Athens so beautiful in every way

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yea I’ve been to Copenhagen too and many other beautiful cities of Europe, but I still find that Athens has its charm 🥰

    • @chrise36coupe
      @chrise36coupe หลายเดือนก่อน

      Oh really Copenhagen is like coming from a farytale...

    • @skalextmv5483
      @skalextmv5483 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      it’s not only the buildings that make a city. It’s the people the vibe. The energy that gives you. Copenhagen was beautiful almost perfect but Athens is perfectly imperfect.

  • @gerassimos.fourlanos
    @gerassimos.fourlanos หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    A very beautiful, almost poetic video about Athens. Since I live in Stockholm for almost 50 years, I have now enough distance from the city of my youth to see it with a "fresh eye." I now see Athens as a place where ugly is really ugly and pretty is really pretty. A city where you find many sterile, uninspiring areas as well as extremely energising areas, yes, areas, not just spots, where you can walk around for hours surrounded by beauty and transcending to a different reality. And a city where you walk around and suddenly you turn right or left and everything changes, from chaotic to perfect and from dull to invigorating. Finally, a city where all buildings and all polykatoikias are individual rather than uniform...

  • @tsiaa6790
    @tsiaa6790 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The best video out there explaining why Athens is the way it🎉 thanks for all your hard work and effort! It really payed off!

  • @kaymarrow
    @kaymarrow หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Each episode just gets better and better, and I’m learning so much! Thank you Ariel.

  • @supanyc
    @supanyc หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    I very much enjoyed watching this latest episode. Learned a lot. The visuals are wonderful too.

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      yay! I'm glad the visuals were able to convey the look of Athens 🙏

    • @supanyc
      @supanyc หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Also, the PoroCity concept by Maria & Katarina is so interesting. I can imagine something like that here in Bushwick!

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@supanyc yes agreed, this style of building can really work in Bushwick! :D

    • @malamatinas1
      @malamatinas1 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@UrbanistExploringCities another great video! Have you ever been to Thessaloniki? It’s the second biggest city in Greece and my hometown! I highly recommend checking it out if you have the time.

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ⁠@@malamatinas1yea I have videos on Thessaloniki in this channel, they are from 2021. But I do hope to visit again soon!

  • @haristsiras5075
    @haristsiras5075 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    How says athens is ugly??? Athens is a unique city with unique vibe!!! ❤❤❤❤

  • @viciouslady1340
    @viciouslady1340 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

    Its the graffiti that pisses me off ,I remember the first time I saw the polytechnic in the 80s 😳 I grew up in Canada but my parents are Greek so visited regularly and the graffiti really taints the beauty.
    When mentioning graffiti I m not talking about artistic murals

    • @nyenyere
      @nyenyere หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Well you cannot really have artistic murals without the graffiti, it's part of the same culture.

    • @viciouslady1340
      @viciouslady1340 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @nyenyere fortunately than is not true I ve lived in 2 major cities in Canada that have beautiful murals and businesses, residents and the city will remove much of the nuicance graffiti. When my friend from Greece visited here they were shocked how clean it was , of course we have our skid rows that are pretty bad but those are not representstive of the city.

    • @Enigmashoot
      @Enigmashoot 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@nyenyere There is not art in graffiti, just ego.

    • @nyenyere
      @nyenyere 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@Enigmashoot Well the two things are not mutually exclusive, quite the contrary. Also, just because you don't like it, it does not cease to be art. It's just bad art. And to be clear: most art is bad IMO, not just graffiti, but that doesn't make all graffiti bad, especially will not invalidate it as an art form in general.

    • @nyenyere
      @nyenyere 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@viciouslady1340 Well, that's Canada. I' will be just assuming here for some of the stuff I write, so feel free to prove me wrong. Since Greece is an economically disadvantaged country, there is not much money in the art scene. I am pretty sure that most of the people who can pull off "artistic murals" have done their training on illegal graffiti. Also I see it as a spectrum, from random tags made with permanent markers on one end, to huge murals that need highly skilled artists to make on the other end. You cannot find a clear point where you say this is just 'graffiti' and this on the other side is 'artistic mural' that won't be arbitrary, only representing your personal taste and nothing else but that. Apart from that, by just looking at them you cannot really determine about some murals here in Athens if they were legally commissioned and not done illegally, so that is not a viable option to determine where it falls on the "graffiti bad - art good" scale. Not to say that some of the clearly illegal graffiti has way more artistic depth, more thought provoking message or just simply cooler aesthetic than some of the more boring /corporate looking murals here, and it's true in some other cities I've visited too (Marseille is a good example).

  • @bernardobonixe6873
    @bernardobonixe6873 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    What a great story, beautiful imagery and simply sublime soundtrack... Love this!

  • @retroball
    @retroball หลายเดือนก่อน

    this content is so top class. truly enjoying this!

  • @mirtokiriazanou766
    @mirtokiriazanou766 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    You left the fact that Athens has really bad infrastructure. In the 19th century, people didn't want to give a part of their land to the state in exchange for money, to create bigger roads and bigger pavements. The city centre ( the non touristic parts, so real Athens, not Plaka, or Akropolis or Koukaki or Kolonaki that is a rich neighborhood) is dirty and smells like piss sometimes. There are cars parked in pavements that are already non taken care off, with cracks, which makes daily walk really difficult. All this cause there was no planning for cars in the 50s-60s when these polykatikies were being build. In addition, the polykatikies, have no soundproufing and no insulation and are not taken care off. The traffic is insane, so no, you can't go to the beach. In summer days you need at least 2 hours to go to and be back from the beach, by car. It's an everyday nighmare, when i can be somewere in 40 minutes on foot (on 20 by car) and the public transport can be there in there in 40-60 minutes. Public transports are also never on time, except from our beutiful and usefull metro ❤And bear in mind these buses and trolleys are old vehicles and not being maintained the way the should be, so they look older, are super dirty and everyone is packed inside like sardines cause we need more vehicles. Foreigners will never understand the strugle, for you it's colourful lively neighbohouds, for us it's uglyness and obstacles everywhere. It's different to live in Athens for a few weeks/months in a good neighborhood at the centre, than having to live there for decades, in a regular far from the centre neighborhood. Also, Athens has one of the lowest percentage of green spaces in Europe and no, plants on polykatikies are not parks. I really hope Athens gets better by the next century though 🤞 I would love for the city to be friendlier to those who actually live there❤

  • @AmbientWalking
    @AmbientWalking หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Super! 😁 Enjoyed this a lot a lot. 😁

  • @raresremetan2001
    @raresremetan2001 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Amazing work! Thanks to you I only got to further appreciate the unique beauty Athens has, and now I’d really like to buy a plane ticket and book a hotel somewhere in the city centre to explore all these streets myself! Keep up with the great work and I would warmly encourage you to come and document as well the urbanist chaos that took place in the capital city of my country Romania, Bucharest. A lot changed during the communist period, but part of the chaos still persists today! I think you’ll find it quite intriguing! Best wishes!

  • @officialkurwol
    @officialkurwol หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    10/10 video,excellent pacing to the story. I felt at peace throughout watching it, which is a rarity

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That means so much!! We put so much work in making this a well paced video, so thank you!!

  • @lostinthesupermarket
    @lostinthesupermarket หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I rarely say this but this is a really well made and interesting video. Ive been to athens a few times and loved it despite its "chaos"(to be honest its nothing compared to cities like Naples). It reminded me a bit of my hometown (buenos aires) but with a relaxed mediterranian flair.
    It doesnt have the majesties of rome or the big avenues of paris, but everything seems to fit naturally somehow.

  • @maakalli
    @maakalli หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I’m loving this video. I was born and raised in Athens, bang in the middle of the city, and I always went around on foot and with public transport. I have lived in London and the last fourteen years in Mumbai. London is truly very easy to navigate and with a lot of character, and Mumbai is… well the epitome of chaos. Athens is quiet and with hardly any people, no truly high rise buildings, a very humane city to live in. Athens is the golden, middle path for city life and with so much character.

    • @flawyerlawyertv7454
      @flawyerlawyertv7454 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What caused you to move to Mumbai?

    • @maakalli
      @maakalli หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@flawyerlawyertv7454 just… life. I moved so I can be with my partner.

  • @axelsandi
    @axelsandi หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As an Athenian, who has travelled Europe, excellent and highly esthetic documentary and very interesting interview-partners!

  • @Tobi-ln9xr
    @Tobi-ln9xr หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    9:06
    It was actually the opposite. Germany and Greece received the least amount of money from the Marshall plan among the major countries…

    • @King_Leonidas723
      @King_Leonidas723 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sadly even though it lost nearly 1/3 of its population and was the first axis setback

  • @Gk-ug6gu
    @Gk-ug6gu หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Get rid of graffiti,make an open call for all artists around the world to draw murals in the walls(open art museum) fix the sidewalks better and wider without obstacles and make new parking spaces. Also give to residents incentives to paint their facades n change the awnings. Lastly plant trees and flowers wherever you can and take advantage of every single free space.

    • @Nestoras_Zogopoulos
      @Nestoras_Zogopoulos หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      graffiti gets cleaned and remade all the time despite the best efforts of everyone. Murals such as the ones you suggest do exist in a limited way, but even those occassionally get painted-over by idiots or cleaned by cranky neighbors. I do agree about the sidewalks, they desperately need to be fixed and widened, but widening streets is very hard due to the density of apartments. The last point about trees and flowers is more or less done by individuals. If only it were that simple...

  • @CR-wz7hu
    @CR-wz7hu หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Im Portuguese and I have Visited for the first time Athens last year and I loved the vibe of the city!
    Looking forward to comeback this year ❤

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      🇬🇷💙🇵🇹

    • @hamlet557
      @hamlet557 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      When I went to Lisbon, and people asked me I said that it's like Athens in spirit but beautiful.

    • @CR-wz7hu
      @CR-wz7hu หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@hamlet557will be back in July! Counting the days ❤️

  • @veroniquevero22
    @veroniquevero22 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great documentary on Athens's buildings! The PoroCity design is a wonderful idea to update Athens!

  • @konstantinosmarkakis4661
    @konstantinosmarkakis4661 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great documentary mate!

  • @Kotsiras
    @Kotsiras หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I enjoyed and appreciated your research video of Athens! Excellent way to describe the problems and charming uniqueness of my beloved Capital.

  • @frida507
    @frida507 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Never been to Athens or even Greece but it looks charming and not ugly at all! Or did they pick only the more charming locations? From the birds eye view it looks a bit dense, but in the street view there seems to be quite a lot of greenery.
    Please don't let it be ruined by gentrification and Air b&b!
    I imagine summers can be tough... If it's too hot and air pollution maybe add some mini park here and there, in between, and some water features to cool off?

    • @Gk-ug6gu
      @Gk-ug6gu หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Athens hasn't many parks and especially big parks but does have many trees in sidewalks ,in streets and in alleys something that is not common in the most European cities at least.Also greek style buildings have big balconies and people usually have many plants their something that you can't see the often in other European cities which their apartment buildings doesn't have balconies.

    • @frida507
      @frida507 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Gk-ug6gu Exactly like it looked in this video. It makes a difference though. And if it's too hot adding some little park in stead of a building here and there could be nice.

  • @missdramatica2604
    @missdramatica2604 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Beautifully done intro👏

  • @CreeperTheOriginal
    @CreeperTheOriginal หลายเดือนก่อน

    This was excellent! Subscribed.

  • @DzzO
    @DzzO หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I think it's beatifull. Beauty from the above is useless. Cheers from Brazil.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Greeks 💙 Brazilians and their warm comments.
      Brazilians are good hearted people with a positive and deep word for Greece, always.
      🇬🇷 💙 🇧🇷 😊

  • @Chloe-hu9tf
    @Chloe-hu9tf หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    ✅✔The appearance of othomans turks in this region ( Asia Minor , Europe) few centuries ego had huge negative consequences for the local nations. Sad. but where turks appear there is regress

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      True

    • @lalamla1879
      @lalamla1879 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Turks did not live in Athens or Southern Greece, they mostly lived in Northern Greece (Western Thrace and Southern Macedonia). The funny part is that the most developed region of Greece was where Turks lived densely.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน

      @lalamla1879 it is logic since they got the rates from all Greeks. Greeks payed high taxes to ottomans during the ottoman period. It is logic to be wealthier than the Greeks.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน

      Greeks worked like slaves to pay the high taxes to the ottomans.

  • @michaelpilos
    @michaelpilos หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    What a Beautiful & Inspiring Documentary! I want to walk Athens now ❤

  • @proskater6899
    @proskater6899 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Loved the documentary! Very professional job and one thing that I admire is how you managed to bring a posotive vibe even when showing objectively the problematic parts of the city.

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Glad you enjoyed it! Yes, we aimed to show both the good and bad parts of Athens. But I still have a very high opinion of the city

  • @passionatesingle
    @passionatesingle หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Imagine living in a beautiful city with no soul,culture or aliveness. How utterly boring! Give me Athens any time!! Αθηνα μου λείπεις!!

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yea exactly! Liveliness is more important than aesthetics

  • @fatboi6917
    @fatboi6917 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    great episode!

  • @stratoskanas6503
    @stratoskanas6503 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Wonderful episode!!!🙂

  • @MeLexdy
    @MeLexdy หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Its a beautfiul city. Its not just a visual thing and I cant tell you where to go to see that beauty. I ve spend 3 weeks there and had the privilege of walking around many areas, taking the metro and visit both the sea and the hills on the north.
    Its certainly chaotic when you have to live ,work and drive daily in those streets but if you are a visitor, its definitely an experience.
    And what a great wish that was: for our building to one day be indistinguishable from the natural world. Cant wait for that.

  • @nicholasdemetriades3480
    @nicholasdemetriades3480 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    Very nice and interesting video. Athens is a concrete jungle but has way more life than other beautiful cities like sydney. It has life and culture

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Exactly! This is the very reason why I made this documentary series. I was intrigued why Athens has this liveliness everywhere, while cities with a similar population and density don’t.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Greeks do not have the money to create fabulous wrappings (as others do), but they have the energy, the spirit and the culture.
      We don't care to be the most beautiful, we care to be the Greeks, either the others like or don't like us. And we don't force anyone to love or like us or recognize us. Take care thanx for your comment.

    • @gmeachim3270
      @gmeachim3270 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@user-oi4cn7rt8t I don't know what you mean by "wrappings" but Greeks do have money (and even more so before the crisis) to improve the aesthetics and overall beauty of their urban environment but chose not to. Their priorities lie elsewhere like bouzoukia, expensive clothes and expensive vacations. Greeks are proud of their culture but part of that "culture" is vandalizing public and private spaces, littering everything around them and treating their urban spaces like public toilets.
      And as for your comment about not caring if others like you or recognize you, I think that is also not true about most Greeks, as they feel somewhat insecure about their place in the world and their identity as modern Greeks. It's nice to be unique as a people but in a rapidly globalising and changing world, no one should choose to isolate themselves.

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @gmeachim3270 1.Stereotype that Greeks waste their money in expensive clothes and bouzoukia. I know many Greeks who do 2 and even 3 jobs to get by and have never gone to bouzoukia. Example is me and most of my friends.
      2.All the foreigners say that the Greeks are poor and poor, so now do we have the money??? Glad that you see us as not poor at once 😊 so at least we are not inferior to you as we are used to listen all our lives. 😊
      3.We don't feel insecure about our identity, we know we are the Greeks and our heritage. It is not our problem if the others can or can't accept that.
      4.It is better not to judge a people's if you haven't lived with it and its difficulties or its worries.
      At the very end for you Athens is maybe an ugly city. For me Athens is my capital and my life and I do love her. It is your business if you like or don't like my capital, my country, my city, my language, my identity, not mine. I know who I am and I do love my Athens and my country.

    • @gmeachim3270
      @gmeachim3270 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@user-oi4cn7rt8t Calm down dude. I am also Greek and I live abroad in England so I have a better perspective that you. You and your friends might not be the best examples. There are A LOT of Greeks who buy expensive cars, boats etc and can't be bothered to clean their gardens or paint the front of their house. That is a FACT. I lived in Greece for 28 years. I know more than you do.
      Greeks are poor compared to Western Europe and America but not very poor like the Middle East, Asia or Africa. It is a middle income country. What makes it annoying is the mentality of people like you who don't want to improve, open their minds and become more educated and just hide behind their ignorance and mediocrity.
      No one used the word "inferior". That is your complex and insecurity that you project on other people including me.
      I love my country as well but loving your home city and country doesn't mean always "protecting" her from any criticism. Constructive criticism is important to improve. Otherwise you stay stagnant and nothing ever improves. I suggest you save some money and travel abroad at least once a year to see other places. It will be good for you. Not everything revolves around Athens😉

  • @rosafilippidi6440
    @rosafilippidi6440 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is excellent!!! I feel very emotional. As a local, I love the chaos of all the different architectures and how history has shaped the design of the city ...
    Excellent work !!!
    Congratulations !!!!

  • @sabysoto2095
    @sabysoto2095 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Another great video ❤

  • @dkaloger5720
    @dkaloger5720 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    You mostly talked about central Athens (the municipality of Athens ) .I think the “suburbs” like ilioupoli , glyfada , kifisia are also interesting and have a lot to teach us. It’s a similar level of density but with better architecture.

    • @bestcraps4ever
      @bestcraps4ever หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Those are only the uptown rich people suburbs. Suburbs like Aigaleo, Zografou, Chalandri, Nea smyrni!!, and so much more for someone that wants to see what an Athenian lives like

    • @UrbanistExploringCities
      @UrbanistExploringCities  หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Next episode we go to the suburbs of Glyfada and Voula ;)

    • @dkaloger5720
      @dkaloger5720 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@bestcraps4ever well kifisia and glyfada are indeed higher income suburbs but ilioupoli and new smirni are middle class suburbs and I would say they have a nicer vibe and atmosphere than the richer places .

    • @demetriosnikolianos1912
      @demetriosnikolianos1912 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@UrbanistExploringCities Welcome!

    • @altrogeruvah
      @altrogeruvah หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@UrbanistExploringCities Glyfada and Voula is where all the nouveaux riches / TV personalities / Balkan mafia / Golden Visa types have all gathered. Ford Raptor trucks and broken pavements everywhere, Dubai-esque kitsch apartment complexes with balcony pools, little to no Greek cuisine etc. It's a whole different, albeit sad reality over there. Ilioupoli and Nea Smyrni still feel very true to their roots though. Lavrio is also a beautiful port town that actually feels authentically Greek.

  • @Vandenberg12561
    @Vandenberg12561 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Μην είστε μίζεροι. Η Αθήνα τουλάχιστον γλίτωσε από την παγίδα της πόλης-μουσείο. Πόλεις όπως το Παρίσι, η Ρώμη, και άλλες, έχουν εγκλωβιστεί στην αρχιτεκτονική του 18ου και 19ου αιώνα. Όπως είναι τώρα θα είναι και μετά από 100 χρόνια. Η Αθήνα όμως έχει την δυνατότητα να εξελιχθεί.

    • @user-gb3cz7wn8y
      @user-gb3cz7wn8y หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Ανθελληνες είναι. Απλά λατρεύουν να ευτελίζουν την Ελλάδα στα μάτια των ξένων. Όταν μισείς την ίδια σου τη χώρα, είσαι τελείως κενός. Μετά απορούμε γιατί μας αντιπαθούν οι γείτονες και οι ξένοι.....

    • @Vandenberg12561
      @Vandenberg12561 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@user-gb3cz7wn8y Από τα σχόλια που βλέπω, καταλαβαίνω ότι πολλοί έχουν τρικυμία εν κρανίω. Άλλο είναι το θέμα και άλλα σχολιάζουν αυτοί.

    • @Vandenberg12561
      @Vandenberg12561 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @TigiGu-uh4ro Το Παρίσι, όπως και η Ρώμη, έτσι θα είναι και μετά από 100 χρόνια. Βαρετές πόλεις με παλιά κτίρια. Μια χαρά είναι η Αθήνα. Το κέντρο της Αθήνας, απλά, θέλει νέα κτίρια για να απαλλαγεί από αυτά των 50s και 60s.

  • @geetamoonesar249
    @geetamoonesar249 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good morning, I'm checking in to see how everything is with you and your family. I saw NYC had an earthquake and many aftershocks yesterday. I hope everyone is safe.

  • @CapnChillV
    @CapnChillV หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Keep up the great work. I know nothing about modern Athens. Eye-opening stuff.

  • @evmereos
    @evmereos หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    What an insightful approach! You made me understand why I feel this guilty love for Athens

  • @alexandros1984
    @alexandros1984 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    There should be a new law that forces people to maintain their properties.

    • @gmeachim3270
      @gmeachim3270 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Spot on. I wonder though what people would say if they were forced to maintain their polykatoikies. "Junta, junta!". "Mitsotakis is the devil and Hitler would have been less autocratic" etc.

  • @MrSebfrench76
    @MrSebfrench76 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    By the way, i forgot to congrat your work. Admirable.

  • @Maiko818
    @Maiko818 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you so much for this video, I absolutely loved how Mr.Nikos observes random beautiful things around the city. Truly a beautiful city! I'm Greek and I lived abroad for 23 years. I missed Athens so much and now that I'm back I feel like it's the most beautiful city in the world.I think people who live in Greece , should learn to love their country more , respect and love each other (despite our differences , race or opinions always peacefully). After all we are all living together.

  • @user-yc3pb1ij7g
    @user-yc3pb1ij7g หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Athens isn't ugly except for some uninspiring neighborhoods like Ano/Kato Liosia, Agioi Anargyroi, etc. It's just very compact, crowded, and there are lot's of bipedal apes that can ruin your mood.

  • @nikospapadopoulos168
    @nikospapadopoulos168 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Athens is like this girl in movies that she looks ugly but then she does a lifting and becomes beautiful. Athens in the same way with some ''lifting'' can become one of the best cities in europe, just because its weather (chill winters) and location (next to the sea and dozens of islands or other unique historical places in the mainland). Athens just needs to fix its problem with graphiti, put some order in the streets, some extra parks and classic architecture and lastly make the polikatikies look a bit nicer, for example with some kind of roof tiles, now it looks ugly and chaotic, especially from above.

  • @dorincaragia8334
    @dorincaragia8334 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dude, I find your documentary captivating cause streets and buildings that I see on a daily basis, seemed richer in history through your discussions with the urbanists. (Fun fact you filmed one block away from my home).

  • @tanofinearts
    @tanofinearts หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great movie. Congratulations to everyone who made it happen and thank you.

  • @theatisgr
    @theatisgr หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Athens is a bit like Georgia Vasileiadou: she was the ugliest Greek actress ever, but everybody liked her because of her kindness and the way she acted. 😃

  • @SuperTommox
    @SuperTommox หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I'm italian and i must say this: Athens is never ugly.

  • @wernerdanler2742
    @wernerdanler2742 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video!

  • @JensScheider
    @JensScheider 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    One of the best documentaries i saw for months. :-)

  • @v4v777
    @v4v777 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    As an Athenian.. i have one thing to say... For Athens to be a nice livable city.. it has to be Demolished to the ground, (apart from the parts around Acropolis) half of its population to move out and live back in the country, and built up from scratch, with a city plan in mind, and with lots of Nature between buildings ... there is no other way that this city will ever look good.. no -matter what these people say in this video...(of course they have their opinion.. and i have mine, about city aesthetics.)

  • @stii.baschet
    @stii.baschet หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    bro. I don't think you know the meaning of architecture 'chaos'. just visit Bucharest

    • @chirichesmihai4010
      @chirichesmihai4010 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bro trust me, Bucharest it's beautiful compared with Athena.

    • @chirichesmihai4010
      @chirichesmihai4010 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bro, trust me, Bucharest is beautiful compared with Athens.

  • @AT-xp1pj
    @AT-xp1pj หลายเดือนก่อน

    Masterfully captured the aesthetic of Athens. This should have more views!

  • @oliverrainer5771
    @oliverrainer5771 หลายเดือนก่อน

    excellent!! i love the music too!

  • @georgegreek5357
    @georgegreek5357 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Come on now everyone knows that Athens is a picturesque city of course there are nice and ungly views like anywhere else but Athens is a unigue elegant city with huge history and a modern style which is noticable in every step you do despite the bad views that only need some improvment. And sorry that we dont build skyscrapers like USA but we have to maintain the view of the Acropolis you see no other bulding should overcome this greatness. This is Athens! Welcome to Greece! Cheers! 🇬🇷

    • @user-oi4cn7rt8t
      @user-oi4cn7rt8t หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Athens has its unique character. You may like her you may not like her, but that is Athens. 🇬🇷💙🇬🇷