Slow Travel Stockholm is a spin off
of Slow Travel Berlin which was founded in January 2010 by British guidebook author, travel journalist and photographer Paul Sullivan.
The move here was fundamental in opening up a whole new way of living in and exploring cities for me, hence the formation
of Slow Travel Berlin in 2010.
On April 22 we are running our Divided City tour of Berlin for $ 1 per person in honor
of Slow Travel Berlin's annual gathering.
While visitors will find a lot of information about Berlin on the Slow Travel Berlin website, those looking for a more hands - on experience can book one
of the Slow Travel Berlin walking tours.
As Sullivan told Young Germany
of Slow Travel Berlin's publishing projects:
Read more: More German blogs on Blogs of the World An interview with Paul Sullivan
of Slow Travel Berlin Independent artists in Germany and Ireland
Not exact matches
Slow Travel Berlin's book «Mauerweg: Stories from the
Berlin Wall» takes the reader on a walk down this path and collects the stories
of the people who authors Paul Scraton and Paul Sullivan meet along the way.
Whilst we were developing the tours, creating a weekly what's on guide to the city, and the team
of over twenty writers and photographers were keeping the website full
of fascinating articles about the city, Paul, Marian, and Giulia were working with a good number
of contributors to put together
Slow Travel Berlin's first book — 100 Favourite Places — which is available in print and e-versions and will be launched with a party in the city next week.
Next Thursday (November 6), I will be hosting the launch
of the Mauerweg (
Berlin Wall Trail) book
of my esteemed colleagues Paul Scraton (Under A Grey Sky / Traces
of a Border) and Paul Sullivan (
Slow Travel Berlin).
Sullivan founded
Slow Travel Berlin in 2010, and his «Walking the City» project is a homage to the slow - travel spirit of what has now become a very popular Berlin webs
Slow Travel Berlin in 2010, and his «Walking the City» project is a homage to the slow - travel spirit of what has now become a very popular Berlin we
Travel Berlin in 2010, and his «Walking the City» project is a homage to the
slow - travel spirit of what has now become a very popular Berlin webs
slow -
travel spirit of what has now become a very popular Berlin we
travel spirit
of what has now become a very popular
Berlin website.
We understand the concept
of Slow Travel — what is the idea behind
Slow Travel Berlin?
Our fellow bloggers from
Slow Travel Berlin have dedicated their second book to the
Berlin Wall which makes a lot
of sense considering it's the 25th anniversary
of the fall
of the
Berlin Wall this month.
Probably one
of the lesser known but not less interesting sites featured in
Slow Travel Berlin's «100 Favorite Places:
Berlin.»
There are so many website and projects that are based in
Berlin, and in particular in English, that do not truly engage with the city, or if they do only within a very small, expat - dominated bubble, and I think it is to Paul and the rest
of the team's credit that
Slow Travel Berlin covers such a wide variety
of topics about life in the city and has, when you look at all the facebook fans and other commentators, a large amount
of local readers, whether German or otherwise.
If you'd like to have a closer look at what's the city life
of Berlin like, browse by «
Slow Travel Berlin» and get inspired by the lately published guidebook.
I took the philosophy
of Slow Travel and applied it to the city I'm living in —
Berlin — as a way
of encouraging visitors and residents alike to explore and engage with their surroundings more.
I have been running a number
of different tours for
Slow Travel Berlin over the past year, including a neighbourhood stroll through my home kiez
of Wedding and some walks along the
Berlin Wall Trail, which also tie into my new project at Traces
of a Border.
If Grantourismo was focused on one place instead
of many, it might be something like
Slow Travel Berlin, a wonderful blog that speaks to our slow travel so
Slow Travel Berlin, a wonderful blog that speaks to our slow travel
Travel Berlin, a wonderful blog that speaks to our
slow travel so
slow travel travel souls.
In 2014, to mark the 25th anniversary
of the Mauerfall,
Slow Travel Berlin editor / founder Paul Sullivan decided to walk the entire 155 km length
of the Mauerweg (
Berlin Wall Trail)... Read more
I found myself positively surprised when discovering that there is even a local chapter
of slow travel in one
of the hippest European capitals,
Berlin.
To celebrate
Slow Travel Berlin's fifth birthday: a curated anthology
of articles and photography on a wide range
of topics and places that you won't find in the guidebooks.
«
Slow Travel Berlin» founder Paul Sullivan talks to Hg2 about what motivates him to promote
Berlin and the concept
of sustainable tourism... Read more
The
Slow Travel Berlin team, run by British Photographer and Author Paul Sullivan, consists
of listings editor Ilona Cerowska and assistant editor Laura Harker alongside a rotating cast
of anywhere between 20 and 30 casual contributors.
«The move here was fundamental in opening up a whole new way
of living in and exploring cities for me» says Paul Sullivan, English writer and photographer, about starting his blog,
Slow Travel Berlin.
With a striking combination
of storytelling, online journalism and photo documentary presented through
Slow Travel Berlin and other personal photography projects, Paul Sullivan has effectively captured a compelling new style
of online media..
We're super proud
of our sister site,
Slow Travel Berlin, which has just published its third book: a large format, 208 - page full colour anthology
of roughly 30 best articles that have appeared on the site since its inception in 2010 — «re-edited, re-photographed and re-designed — along with several newly commissioned pieces and exclusive photo - essays.»
Head over to
Slow Travel Berlin to learn more and pick up your copy
of the book.
We're super proud
of our sister site,
Slow Travel Berlin, which has just published its third book: Stories from the city...
After living and exhibiting in New York,
Berlin and New Orleans during the 80s and 90s, Miller achieved critical acclaim with his debut novel,
Slow down Arthur, Stick to Thirty (2000), the story
of a kid who
travels around northern England with a David Bowie impersonator.