Minoan Palace of Zominthos Earns UNESCO World Heritage Status
The headline of the week belongs to archaeology: the Minoan palace site of Zominthos, perched on the slopes of Mount Psiloritis in central Crete, has been formally inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The high-altitude sanctuary — already one of the more intriguing Bronze Age sites on the island — now joins Crete's most protected heritage. The designation is expected to accelerate investment in access infrastructure and visitor facilities, and puts Zominthos firmly on the cultural-tourism map alongside Knossos and Phaistos.
Encampment Waste Threatens the 3,700-Year-Old Malia Palace
A less welcome heritage story: residents near the Malia archaeological site are raising alarms about an unauthorized encampment located just metres from the ancient Minoan ruins. Accumulated waste poses a direct contamination and preservation risk. With summer visitor numbers building, authorities face pressure to act before the situation worsens at one of Crete's most-visited Bronze Age sites.
First 10 km of BOAK Highway Set for Summer Delivery
Good news for drivers navigating the north coast: the first 10 kilometres of Crete's long-awaited BOAK east-west highway are on track for delivery this summer, confirmed at the Economist/Powergame conference in Chania. The project will meaningfully cut journey times between Chania and Heraklion. Full island-crossing completion will follow in stages — check Greek road authority updates before planning long drives.
New Airport and Wider Transport Overhaul Target 2028
The Chania conference also confirmed the broader infrastructure picture: road upgrades, port expansions, and the new Kastelli international airport — due to open in 2028 with capacity for up to 18 million passengers a year — are part of a coordinated push to make Crete a genuine year-round destination. The island already generates 19 % of Greece's total travel revenues; these investments are designed to grow that share further.
Heraklion Coastal Road: Traffic Delays This Week
Drivers in the capital should plan ahead: resurfacing works are underway on Nearchus Avenue (the coastal road) from the Antistaseos Avenue junction through the Pateles area. Lane closures and delays are likely during peak hours. Allow extra time or use inland alternatives until the works are complete.
Dining Out in Crete: Budget More Than You Think
A practical heads-up for visitors: restaurant prices across Greece have risen sharply, driven by higher food, energy and labour costs. Greece now sits in the mid-to-upper range for dining costs in Southern Europe. The best value remains family tavernas away from seafront tourist strips — ask locals, not the hotel concierge.
Wildfire Drill "ARIADNI 2026" — 4 June in Chania
With wildfire season approaching, Chania municipality will run a full civil protection exercise on 4 June simulating a wildfire evacuation. Expect temporary disruptions around Chania City Hall that morning. Residents and tourists alike are encouraged to familiarise themselves with Crete's emergency alert channels before the hot, dry months ahead.
Today's weather: 29 May brings 28 °C with partial cloud cover and a chance of afternoon showers — not yet peak summer heat. Good beach conditions in the morning; keep an eye on the sky from mid-afternoon onward.
