Ten cities are throwing spectacular parties for this New Year's Eve. Here's the skinny.
By Summar Ghias/Budget Travel
Bangkok: Brand new tradition
For the first time, a
68-foot-high Greeting Ball Tower will offer light and sound effects at
midnight in the capital of Thailand. The event will happen outside of
the giant CentralWorld shopping mall, where more than 200,000
merrymakers will join hands to count down to the New Year. Earlier in
the evening, free events will include a cutting-edge fashion show and
eight concert performances by Thai stars. Grab a Chang or Heineken from
an outdoor beer garden. (A roughly 30 ounce pour costs $6). Details: handsbangkokcountdown.com or tourismthailand.org. Hot tip: If
you want to see traditional Thai dance and folk music, head to the
city's historic parade ground, Sanam Luang. At midnight, fireworks will
explode over the nearby banks of the Chao Phraya River.
Berlin: The best and the wurst
Despite subzero
temperatures, Berliners host an open-air New Year's Eve party, and the
city claims that it is the largest such party in a specific space in
the world. Roughly one million people pack the mile-and-a-quarter-long
stretch between the Victory Column and the Brandenburg Gate, where
colorful lasers illuminate the sky while music—mostly pop—blares from
giant speakers. Germans are as law-abiding on Silvester (New Year's
Eve) as always, lighting their private fireworks in designated spaces
under police watch. But they also cut loose with practical jokes, such
as filling homemade doughnuts with mustard instead of the usual jelly. Details: silvester-berlin.de. Hot tip:
If you need a breather, duck into one of the scattered party tents,
which offer free benches and specialty sausages, such as bratwurst for
around $3. Or else head to Unter den Linden Boulevard, which offers a
clearer, less claustrophobic view of the fireworks.
Cape Town: Where the Second is best
A slave's only day off in
18th-century South Africa was on January 2, and so it's on Tweede Nuwe
Jaar (Second New Year) that Cape Town parties the hardest. Up to 13,000
minstrels will paint their faces white for the Cape Town Minstrel
Festival. Clad in bright reds and blues, participants carry instruments
and umbrellas while parading from Keizersgracht Street past City Hall
and into Rose Street. South African wares and local delicacies are
hawked along the route, and troupes compete for titles like Best
Dressed. Details: capetownminstrels.co.za and tourismcapetown.co.za. Hot tip:
Pop into a café along the cobblestone streets of the Bo Kaap
residential neighborhood. Watch from indoors as minstrels perform
patterned dances past brightly painted houses.
Edinburgh: Viking night lights
The Scottish capital toasts
every New Year with a four-day festival called Hogmanay (pronounced
hog-muh-NAY). On the Saturday before New Year's, a torchlight
procession along Princes Street whisks a 40-foot Viking-style longboat
to Calton Hill, where it's torched. Then on New Year's Eve, indie
rockers blast away in concerts at the Princes Street Gardens. Nearby,
there's a ceilidh, a traditional Scottish party where locals dance gigs
and reels to a piper's beat. Details: edinburghshogmanay.org and visitscotland.com. Hot tip: Practice the traditional Scottish song "Auld Lang Syne" in advance. Everyone belts it out when the clock strikes 12.
Hong Kong: Reaching for the stars
At the waterfront promenade
Tsim Sha Tsui, seasonal messages to loved ones hang near handprints of
Chinese celebrities and a life size statue of kung fu star Bruce Lee.
Make wishes and resolutions for the coming year at the Avenue of Stars,
which becomes the Wishing Trail during this season. Then use this
waterfront vantage point to take in the Symphony of Lights, a noisy,
colorful show set on the rooftops of 44 buildings. Near midnight,
pyrotechnics light up the city's tallest building, 2 IFC. Details: discoverhongkong.com. Hot tip: For a memorable view, jump aboard the Sunshine Star Ferry
for a two-hour cruise of Victoria Harbour. It departs from the Tsim Sha
Tsui pier; $17 per adult, with free snacks and nonalcoholic drinks on
board.
Las Vegas: The glittering Strip
Vegas celebrates New Year's
Eve the only way it knows how, with lunatic stunts, a massive light
display, and performances by well known entertainers. The Strip hosts
the free portion of America's Party, an extravaganza with an
eight-minute-long fireworks display launching from seven rooftop
locations. On Fremont Street, folks pay $60 a head to step under a
four-block-long canopy and watch a motorcycle daredevil team perform
stunts inside a roughly 14-foot globe. They also hear the Bangles and
the Doobie Brothers jam. Details: vegasexperience.com. Hot tip: The Las Vegas Monorail runs until 3 a.m.; a special one-day pass costs $9.
New Orleans: Gumbo and pigskin
As in years past, New
Orleans offers its own take on New York City's ball drop: a spotlit
gumbo pot that drops from the Jax Brewery at midnight. Its fall prompts
a nightlong bar crawl in the historic French Quarter. This year's Sugar
Bowl matchup between the Georgia Bulldogs and the Hawai'i Warriors on
January 1 will provide a football theme for most of the city's New
Year's events. For example, in Jackson Square after the gumbo pot drop,
a light-and-sound display will synchronize each team's fight song with
the appearance of each team's colors in the sky. Details: neworleansonline.com. Hot tip: Take the ferry from Canal Street to Algiers Point (friendsoftheferry.org),
where you can get a comparatively peaceful view of fireworks. The free
ferry departs every 30 minutes from 6 a.m. to midnight. [Correction:
Due to an editing error, this story erroneously said that Ohio State
and Louisiana State would be the contestants in the game on January 1.
We regret the error.]
Reykjavík: Fantasy and flames
Icelandic
law allows a firework free-for-all on New Year's Eve, making for a
raucous night in the capital city. Elves, trolls, and other costumed
creatures sing and dance at 11 bonfires scattered across Reykjavík.
Note that on this holiday, local bars and clubs open a little after
midnight. Details: visitreykjavik.is. Hot tip: The warmest way to enjoy the subzero celebrations is to take a coach tour. Iceland Excursions' Gray Line stops at the largest bonfires and offers a midnight toast with sparkling wine for $90 per adult.
Rio de Janeiro: Beach party
The two-and-a-half mile
stretch of Copacabana Beach plays host to more than two million
partygoers decked out in traditional white. Cariocas (as the locals
call themselves) make offerings of red roses and white gladioli to
Iemanjá, the Goddess of the Waters, before an all-night whirlwind of
dancing. This year, Rio's live concerts will stick to homegrown
Brazilian music, including performances by the four samba schools that
won the competitions at the most recent Carnival. Details: rioconventionbureau.com.br. Hot tip: Looking for passion? Wear a hint of red and you'll send the right message.
Sydney: First to party
Because of its location, the
Aussie capital is among the first major cities to greet the new year.
The city will synch up its pyrotechnics with colorful lighting effects
on the arching Sydney Harbour Bridge. The partying begins earlier in
the day, though, with the one o'clock firing of a cannon at nearby Fort
Denison. Waterfront events attract crowds of Sydneysiders in T-shirts
and shorts—plus indigineous people in traditional garb. When darkness
falls, 50 illuminated ships circuit Sydney Harbour, foreshadowing the
barrage of light and sound to come. Details: cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/nye. Hot tip: Lay down a blanket at North Head at Sydney Harbour's National Park, a relatively uncrowded hangout offering a great vantage point for the fireworks.
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