The arrival of kids need not mean the departure of urban breaks – so long as you follow these rules
Along with sleep, sex and sponaneity, the city break is one of life’s great grown-up pleasures you set aside when you become a parent. At least, that’s what I’d assumed.
The idea of city breaks with young children seemed like hard work, even a bit dangerous; we associate metropolises with adult pursuits, sybaritic and cultural and gastronomic – not to mention the crowds, traffic, and nefarious undesirables.
Yet in fact Europe’s richly diverse cities are playgrounds for children as well as for adults. Unexpectedly, I have found them easier in many ways than beach holidays, with their uncountable whatever-the-weather diversions and increasingly innovative activities. Cities engage minds and broaden horizons, not only with their big-hitting sights and museums, but through what you stumble across. Invariably it’s these unplanned, incidental bits that kids love best. Take them to the Acropolis in Athens, for example, and they’ll tell you their highlight was feeding stray cats in the cafe.
Perhaps the key to a successful family city break is managing expectations. Not your children’s, but your own. Cast aside your notions of what you should be doing, or what you want to do. That doesn’t mean hanging out at soft play centres – but considering how activities work for the whole family.