“The narrowest main street in Valletta. Once sailors, bars and red lights. Now jazz, wine and the best evening atmosphere on the island.”
If walls could talk, the ones on Strait Street (Triq id-Dejqa) would need to be censored. It is the narrowest main street in Valletta but has the widest history on the entire island.
For centuries — from the 16th to the mid-20th century — it was known as "The Gut." The place where British Royal Navy sailors sought entertainment after long voyages: bars, taverns, women, alcohol. When the fleet left Malta in the 1970s, the street went silent. And it stayed that way for decades.
The last fifteen years transformed Strait Street. Restaurateurs, jazz musicians and artists discovered that this narrow alley with its balconies overhead and stone steps has a magic that cannot be bought. Today it is the centre of Valletta's nightlife — with class.
Look for traces of the old entertainment district: shop signs from the 1950s, remnants of original bar signs. Some facades are untouched for 70 years. The street is a living museum with no entrance fee.
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