Meet Lotte: The Story of Estonia’s Beloved Cartoon Character
By Lottemaa Team • Updated May 22, 2026.
If you’ve travelled in Estonia or Latvia in the last twenty years, you’ve almost certainly seen her – a curious, big-eared dog with the kind of restless inventor’s mind that lights up a child’s imagination. Her name is Lotte, and she is, by some distance, the most influential children’s character to come out of the Baltic states this century. In Estonia and Latvia, she’s the dog every parent grew up watching and now shares with their own kids. And in a 17-hectare pine forest just south of Pärnu, she has a real, walkable home – Lottemaa, the only theme park in the world built around her story.
Who Created Lotte? The Estonian-Latvian Origin Story
Lotte was born in 2006 as the heroine of an animated film called Leiutajateküla Lotte – in English, Lotte from Gadgetville. The film was co-produced by Eesti Joonisfilm – Estonia’s oldest animation studio – and Rija Films, based in Riga, making Lotte a genuinely cross-border creation from the very first frame. The Estonian directors Janno Põldma and Heiki Ernits, already well-known across the Baltics for the Naksitrallid series, wrote and directed the original together.
What surprises many international visitors is just how Latvian Lotte is. The film’s funding, animation work, and several of its key creative voices came out of Latvia. This is why Latvian families often feel as much ownership of the character as Estonian families do, and why both countries claim her with equal warmth. Lotte isn’t quite an Estonian export and isn’t quite a Latvian one – she’s a shared Baltic creation, which is rarer than it sounds.
The film won awards across Europe and became, by Baltic standards, a cultural moment. A generation of children grew up watching it. By the time the first sequel arrived in 2011, the universe of Gadgetville – its houses, its inventors, its small daily mysteries – had become a fixed point in the regional family imagination.

The Lotte Franchise: Films, Television, Books, and a Theme Park
The franchise has expanded in steady waves since 2006. There are three feature films, each separated by roughly five years of careful production:
- Leiutajateküla Lotte (Lotte from Gadgetville), 2006
- Lotte ja kuukivi saladus (Lotte and the Moonstone Secret), 2011
- Lotte ja kadunud lohed (Lotte and the Lost Dragons), 2019
Alongside the films sit an animated television series, picture books in multiple languages, music albums, school programmes, and merchandise that fills whole shelves in Estonian and Latvian bookstores. The films have been dubbed into English, Russian, Finnish, Latvian, and several other languages, which means a Finnish or Latvian family visiting Lottemaa can often watch the films in their own tongue before they arrive.
For international comparison: Lotte is roughly what Peppa Pig is to British families, or what the Moomins are to Finnish ones. She’s a generational icon – a character every Estonian and Latvian parent recognises instantly and shares with their kids as a matter of cultural transmission. She’s not famous globally, but inside her home region she is unmissable.
The latest expansion of the franchise is the theme park itself. Lottemaa opened in 2013, on a 17-hectare site south of Pärnu where the cartoon’s pine-forest setting could be reproduced at full scale. The park’s founders wanted Estonian and Latvian families to step into Lotte’s world – not just watch it on screen. Today it is the largest theme park in the Baltics, with character houses that mirror the films almost exactly.
The Characters of Gadgetville (Leiutajateküla)
Every household in Gadgetville is run by an inventor with a particular obsession. Here are the ones your family will meet on a visit to Lottemaa:
- Lotte – the protagonist, a young dog whose curiosity is endless and whose enthusiasm for inventing knows no off switch. Cheerful, loyal, and quietly braver than she looks.
- Bruno – Lotte’s best friend, a steady and unflappable companion who balances her excitable energy. The first friend most children mention by name after a visit.
- Klaus the Inventor – Lotte’s father in the cartoons, a tinkerer whose workshop is the engineering heart of the village. His house at Lottemaa is full of simple mechanical puzzles children can try.
- Susumu the Turtle – a quiet, philosophical Japanese turtle who keeps a small zen garden. His corner of the park is one of the calmest spots in the village.
- Albert – Klaus’s apprentice and a recurring secondary character in the films.
- Anne and Roosi – the rabbit twins, mischievous and inseparable.
- The Fox Brothers – the village’s lovable scoundrels, who run a child-safe “casino” that’s really a series of simple games.
In total there are more than a dozen named characters with their own houses inside the park, plus dozens more secondary characters from the films and books who appear in murals, signs, and small details around the village.
[Meet all the Gadgetville residents at Lottemaa →]
How Lotte Became a Cultural Icon in Estonia and Latvia
There are a few reasons Lotte stuck where so many other children’s characters have not. The first is the tone of the films: gentle, curious, slow-paced by modern standards, with no real villains and no manufactured drama. Parents trust the franchise to be a calm thing in a noisy culture, and that trust accumulates across generations.
The second is the world. Gadgetville is a coherent, lovingly drawn place – a real village with real geography, where every house belongs to someone and every character has a backstory. Estonian and Latvian children develop a sense of living inside Gadgetville the way British children inhabit Beatrix Potter’s Lake District or Finnish children inhabit Moominvalley.
The third is the language. Lotte’s vocabulary, sayings, and small phrases have entered everyday Estonian children’s speech. Families quote the films at dinner. Teachers use Lotte books to introduce literacy and basic science concepts. The Estonian Children’s Literature Centre in Tallinn maintains a literary game built around the franchise. The character has become, quietly, infrastructure.
You can see this every time an Estonian or Latvian parent walks into Lottemaa with their child for the first time. The parent’s face changes before the child’s does. They are not just visiting a theme park – they are walking through a place they imagined as a child themselves.
From Screen to Theme Park: Why Lottemaa Was Built
When Lottemaa opened in 2013, it answered a question Estonian and Latvian families had been asking for years: can we go to Gadgetville? The answer, until then, had been “only in your imagination.” A small team built the answer in pine forest 15 minutes south of Pärnu, on a 17-hectare site that could host the village at one-to-one scale.
Each year since, the park’s off-season crew (14 people in winter, scaling up to 114 in peak summer) has added new houses, new workshops, and new attractions – always keeping faithful to the films. The result, after more than a decade of slow, careful construction, is a park where families don’t just see Lotte’s world. They walk through it, eat in its restaurant, swim at its beach, and watch its theatre. Estonian and Latvian children especially treat their first visit as something close to a pilgrimage.
If you want to read what to actually do once you’re there – tickets, the day plan, how to get there from Tallinn, Riga, or Helsinki – that’s covered in our complete guide to Lottemaa.
How to Introduce Your Kids to Lotte Before You Visit
If your child has never seen the films, watching one or two before the trip transforms the visit. Suddenly every house, every character, every painted detail in the park is recognisable. Children move through Lottemaa with the satisfaction of fans recognising things they already love.
A short watch-before-you-visit plan:
- Watch Lotte from Gadgetville (2006). The original. About 80 minutes. Sets up the characters and the world.
- Read at least one picture book. Available in English, Finnish, Latvian, Russian, and several other languages. Bookshops in Pärnu carry them.
- (Optional) Watch Lotte and the Moonstone Secret (2011) or Lotte and the Lost Dragons (2019). If your child wants more, both are excellent.
By the time you arrive at Lottemaa, your child won’t just be visiting a theme park. They’ll be visiting friends.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who created Lotte? Lotte was created as a co-production between Eesti Joonisfilm (Estonia) and Rija Films (Latvia), with the Estonian filmmakers Janno Põldma and Heiki Ernits writing and directing the original 2006 film.
How old is the Lotte franchise? The first film, Lotte from Gadgetville, was released in 2006. The franchise is therefore around two decades old as of 2026.
How many Lotte films are there? Three feature films so far: Lotte from Gadgetville (2006), Lotte and the Moonstone Secret (2011), and Lotte and the Lost Dragons (2019), plus an animated television series.
Can you watch Lotte films in English, Finnish, or Latvian? Yes. The films have been dubbed into multiple languages and are available on Estonian streaming services, on DVD in regional bookshops, and on some international platforms.
Where can you actually visit Lotte’s world? Only at Lottemaa, the theme park 15 minutes south of Pärnu in Estonia, where the village of Gadgetville exists at one-to-one scale across 17 hectares of pine forest.
Plan your visit: [See 2026 opening dates and buy tickets →]
Author: Lottemaa Team, Content & Family Travel Editor at Lottemaa (Lotte Village Theme Park).
Lottemaa Team writes practical planning guides for visiting Lottemaa and the Pärnu region with children, covering seasonal opening dates, ticket inclusions, accessibility, and transport logistics from Tallinn, Riga, and Helsinki. This guide was last updated on

The Largest Theme Park in the Baltics: A Complete Guide to Lottemaa
By Lottemaa Team • Updated May 17, 2026.
Most parents planning a family trip to the Baltics don’t realize there’s a full-scale theme park hiding 15 minutes south of Pärnu. Lottemaa isn’t a fairground with a few rides bolted together – it’s a 17-hectare cartoon village built around Lotte, Estonia’s most beloved children’s character, with over 100 attractions, daily theatre shows, a planetarium, an adventure park, and the kind of unhurried, walkable scale that exhausted parents actually want. If you’re driving down from Tallinn, crossing over from Riga, or arriving by ferry from Helsinki, here’s everything you need to know before you go.
What Makes Lottemaa the Largest Theme Park in the Baltics
When parents hear “theme park in the Baltics,” most picture something small – a half-day stop, maybe an afternoon. Lottemaa breaks that assumption. The park covers 17 hectares of pine forest sloping toward a private beach on the Pärnu coast, which puts it on a different scale from anything else in Estonia, Latvia, or Lithuania. For context, that’s roughly the size of 24 football pitches.
Compared to the bigger Nordic players – Linnanmäki in Helsinki, Liseberg in Gothenburg, Gröna Lund in Stockholm – Lottemaa is smaller in total acreage but built around a fundamentally different idea. Where those parks are urban, vertical, and ride-driven, Lottemaa is rural, horizontal, and story-driven. You don’t queue 45 minutes for a roller coaster. You wander through a real, walkable village where every brightly painted house belongs to a character from the Lotte cartoon universe, and where actors in costume actually live in those houses during the day.
What this means for families with kids aged 2–10 is simple: there’s no “you must be this tall to ride” anxiety. The 100+ attractions range from a planetarium and a small adventure park to a maze, a beach, theatre performances four times daily, themed playgrounds, and seasonal workshops. A typical family spends 6–8 hours and still hasn’t seen everything.
The other thing that sets Lottemaa apart is seasonality. Most Baltic outdoor attractions are summer-only. Lottemaa runs a full summer season (mid-June through August) plus a separate Christmas season in December, which transforms the same village into a snow-covered winter wonderland. That’s genuinely rare in the region.

Who Is Lotte? The Cartoon Behind the Park
If you’ve never heard of Lotte from Gadgetville, here’s the short version: she’s a curious, inventive young dog who lives in a village full of eccentric animal inventors. The franchise started as a 2006 animated film co-produced by Estonian and Latvian studios, followed by two sequels and a children’s TV series. In Estonia and Latvia, Lotte is roughly what Peppa Pig is to British families or what Moomins are to Finland – a generational cultural icon that parents grew up with and now share with their kids.
The park brings the cartoon world to physical scale. Lotte’s house is a real, walkable building. So is Bruno’s. So is the inventor Klaus’s workshop, where kids can try simple mechanical puzzles. Susumu the Japanese turtle has a Zen garden. The fox brothers run a (non-functional, child-safe) “casino.” Every detail in the village maps to something in the films, which makes the visit a layered experience: kids who know the cartoon recognize everything, and kids who don’t are introduced to a story-world they’ll likely watch on the drive home.
[Meet Lotte: The Story of Estonia’s Beloved Cartoon Dog]
Ticket Prices and What’s Actually Included
Lottemaa’s pricing is refreshingly simple compared to most theme parks – no per-ride fees, no upcharges for shows or workshops, no “fast pass” tier. One ticket covers everything inside the gates.
2026 ticket prices:
| Ticket type | Price |
| Regular ticket (age 2+) | €28 |
| Two-day ticket | €41 |
| Child 0–1 | Free |
| Pensioner | €21 |
| Special needs adult | €21 |
| Disabled child (2+) | €16 |
| Disability companion | Free |
| Parking | €4 (€3 with Snabb app) |
| Park train (one-way) | €2 |
The two-day ticket is the single best-value option for any family driving more than two hours to reach the park – and that includes everyone coming from Riga, Tallinn, or off the Tallinn ferry. The price difference is €13 per person, and a one-day visit genuinely doesn’t cover the full village. We hear this repeatedly from visitors in reviews: “We thought one day would be enough – it wasn’t.”
What’s included with the ticket: every attraction inside the park, all four daily theatre performances, planetarium shows, the adventure park, beach access, the maze, all playgrounds, and entry to every character house. What’s not included: food, drinks, souvenirs, and parking.
Best Time to Visit
The summer season runs from mid-June through the end of August. Peak crowds hit in July, especially the second and third weeks when Estonian, Latvian, and Finnish schools are all simultaneously on holiday. If you can flex your dates, mid-June or the last week of August are the sweet spot: full park operations, manageable crowds, and the Baltic weather is at its best.
The Christmas season runs through December and is a completely different experience – the village under snow, illuminated cottages, indoor workshops, and a much quieter atmosphere. Locals know this; most international visitors don’t.
Weekday visits are noticeably less crowded than weekends. If you’re flexible, Tuesday through Thursday will save you 20–30 minutes of waiting across the day.
Weather caveat: Lottemaa is largely outdoor. Estonian summers are generally mild (18–24°C in July) but rain happens. The park doesn’t shut for weather, and there are enough indoor attractions (planetarium, character houses, theatre) to make a rainy day workable – but pack layers.
How to Get There from Tallinn, Riga, or Helsinki
Lottemaa sits in Reiu village, about 15 minutes south of Pärnu by car. The address: Kanari, Reiu, 86508 Pärnu maakond.
From Tallinn: 1h 45min drive south on the Via Baltica (E67). Buses run hourly from Tallinn coach station to Pärnu (~2h), then a 10-minute taxi from Pärnu to Lottemaa. There’s no direct public transport to the park itself.
From Riga: 2h 40min drive north on the E67. This is the most underserved route – there is no direct Riga–Pärnu coach for tourists, so driving is the practical option. Most Latvian families make this a long day trip, but the two-day ticket plus a night in a Pärnu spa hotel is the more relaxed option.
From Helsinki: Ferry to Tallinn (2h 15min), then 1h 45min drive or coach to Pärnu. Total journey ~5h with the ferry, which means most Finnish families do this as a 2–3 day Pärnu spa weekend with Lottemaa as the centerpiece day.
[Helsinki–Tallinn ferry schedules (Tallink)]
Parking at the park costs €4 (€3 with the Snabb mobile app) and there’s plenty of space – no need to arrive at opening time just to find a spot.
[How to Get from Tallinn to Lottemaa]
What to Do First When You Arrive
A 17-hectare park feels overwhelming on first walk-in, so here’s the routing most families wish they’d known:
- Pick up the park map at the entrance. It marks the four daily show times – plan your day around them, not around rides.
- Head to the far end of the village first. Most visitors cluster near the entrance for the first hour. Walking 10 minutes deeper means emptier attractions.
- Catch the first theatre show before 11am. Crowd density doubles after lunch.
- Save the beach and adventure park for mid-afternoon – that’s when energy levels need a different kind of outlet.
- Eat early or late. The on-site restaurants get crowded 12:30–14:00.
The park train (€2/direction) is genuinely useful for families with younger kids or if your group is mixed-mobility. It saves about 15 minutes of walking each way and the ride itself is a small event for under-fives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Lottemaa suitable for toddlers? Yes – children 0–1 enter free and the park is built for ages 2–10 as the core audience. There are no height restrictions because there are no large rides; the attractions are story-walkthrough and gentle-play formats.
How long do most families stay? 6–8 hours for a one-day visit, or split across two days with the €41 two-day ticket if you’re driving from Riga or Tallinn.
Is there English-language signage and staff? Signage is bilingual Estonian/English. Most staff speak English. Theatre performances are primarily in Estonian but visual enough that non-Estonian-speaking kids enjoy them.
Can we bring our own food? Picnic areas are available. The on-site cafés and restaurants offer standard family fare at typical European theme park prices.
Is Lottemaa wheelchair accessible? Most of the village is accessible. The adventure park has some restrictions. Disability companions enter free, and disabled children (2+) pay €16.
Plan your visit: [See 2026 opening dates and buy tickets →]
Author: Lottemaa Team, Content & Family Travel Editor at Lottemaa (Lotte Village Theme Park).
Lottemaa Team writes practical planning guides for visiting Lottemaa and the Pärnu region with children, covering seasonal opening dates, ticket inclusions, accessibility, and transport logistics from Tallinn, Riga, and Helsinki. This guide was last updated on

The winner of the Lotte smart phone is ALLAN ROOSIMAA!
Visit Lotte Village between 1 and 31 August 2018, FILL IN YOUR RAFFLE TICKET and drop it off in the POST BOX at Lotte Village’s main gates.
At the end of the working day on 3 September 2018, we will DRAW one ticket from all entries, the holder of which will win a HUAWEI Y5 LOTTE SMART PHONE.
The WINNER will be announced in this newsletter on 3 September 2018, right after the draw. We will contact the winner via the email address written on the winning raffle ticket.
By participating in the campaign, the participant gives the organiser his/her consent for the collection, processing and use of his/her personal data in connection with the campaign, and for the public disclosure of the winner’s name.
The campaign winner is JASPER SAKK!
Family adventures make a good summer great! Our good friends at Tallink will take a Lotte Village visitor together with their family to Helsinki. When you visit Lotte Village, make sure you fill out your raffle ticket with your contact details, and drop it in the large post box located at the entrance.
The draw will take place on 1 August 2018.
Terms and Conditions of Lotte Village “Adventure with Tallink” campaign:
1. The “Adventure with Tallink” Lotte Village consumer game is a consumer game taking place at the Lotte Village theme park (Reiu village, Häädemeeste parish, Pärnumaa County) during the period of 1–31 July 2018 (hereinafter, the Campaign), which is organised by Lottemaa Teemapark OÜ (hereinafter the Organiser).
2. In order to participate in the Campaign, participants are required to complete a raffle ticket with their details during a visit to the Lotte Village theme park during the period of 1–31 July 2018 and deposit it in the post box located at the main gates of Lotte Village. There is no limit to the number of entries for the Campaign that may be submitted.
3. Campaign prize:
3.1 With the framework of the Campaign, one entry will be drawn for one return ferry trip for up to four people on the route Tallinn–Helsinki–Tallinn.
3.2 The prize draw will take place on 1 August 2018. The winners’ names will be published on the Lotte Village website at www.lottemaa.ee/meist/uudised. The winner will be contacted via the email address written on the winning raffle ticket.
3.3 The Campaign prize will be delivered to the winner by 31 August 2018 (inclusive) and the prize is valid until 30 October 2018.
3.4 The prize may not be replaced by another prize or reimbursed in cash. A prize that loses its validity will not be extended or replaced.
4. By participating in the Campaign, the participant gives the Organiser of the Campaign the right to collect, process, use and publish the participant’s personal data in relation to the Campaign, and the Participant consents to Lottemaa Teemapark OÜ’s sending offers by email.
5. All disputes arising from the Campaign will be resolved in accordance with the laws of the Republic of Estonia. Fees associated with the issuance of prizes will be paid by the Organiser.
6. The Organiser of the Campaign has the unilateral right to discontinue the Campaign and to terminate the issuance of the prizes in the event of the occurrence of circumstances of force majeure, immediately informing participants in the Campaign of this via the Lotte Village website.
7. All complaints regarding the organisation and/or carrying out of the Campaign must be submitted in writing to Lottemaa Teemapark OÜ via email at info@lottemaa.ee or via post to Reiu village, Häädemeeste parish, Pärnumaa County 86508, with the subject line “Adventure with Tallink” Campaign.
The winner of the prize is LAURA KOLGA!
1. Lotte Village consumer game ‘Win an amazing Lotte smartphone` is a consumer game taking place from 9 June to 30 June 2018 at the Lotte Village theme park (Reiu village, Häädemeeste rural municipality, Pärnu County), organised by Lottemaa teemapark OÜ, address: Reiu village, Häädemeeste rural municipality, Pärnu County 86508, Estonia (hereinafter the Organiser).
2. In order to participate in the campaign, you have to write down you details on a lottery coupon during your visit to the Lotte Village theme park between 9 June and 30 June 2018 and leave the coupon in a post box by the main gate of Lotte Village. The number of times you can enter a coupon in the campaign is not limited.
3. Campaign prizes.
3.1 During the campaign, 1 prize will be Lotte´s phone Huawei Y3
3.2 The prize will be drawn 30June at the evening (between those who have left their coupon in the post box). The names of the winners will be announced in the Lotte Village homepage at www.lottemaa.ee/meist/uudised/. The winners will be contacted via the e-mail address written on the lottery coupon.
3.3 The prizes will be sent to the winners by registered mail.
3.4 The campaign prizes will be issued from 2 July to 31 August 2018 (included).
4. The costs related to receiving the prizes won shall not be compensated, the prizes won shall not be replaced with other prizes and the price of the prizes shall not be paid out in cash.
5. By participating in the campaign, the participants give the Organiser the right to gather, process and use the participants’ personal data in relation to the campaign and the right to disclose the participants’ name.
6. Any disputes arising from the campaign shall be settled in accordance with the legal acts of the Republic of Estonia. The taxes related to issuing the prizes shall be paid by the Organiser.
7. The Organiser of the campaign shall have the unilateral right to discontinue the campaign and to stop issuing the prizes upon the occurrence of force majeure circumstances, giving immediate notice thereof to the participants via the Lotte Village homepage.
8. Any complaints related to the organisation and/or implementation of the campaign must be sent in writing to Lottemaa teemapark OÜ by e-mail: info@lottemaa.ee or by post to Reiu village, Häädemeeste rural municipality, Pärnu County 86508, keyword ‘Win an amazing Lotte smartphone!`






