time means 5 | 1,309 22 Jun 2009 / #1The western city of Poznan has topped a list of the most citizen-friendly cities in Poland.The weekly Przekroj looked at 26 Polish cities with more than 175,000 inhabitants in twenty four categories and ranked them on: unemployment rate and average salary, the cost of real estate, the quality of medical services, the level of education, the availability of public transport and the length of bicycle paths, plus the number of kindergartens and nurseries, access to internet and entertainmentWhat say you other city inhabitants?Is Poznan the bees knees.
delphiandomine 88 | 18,163 23 Jun 2009 / #2Yep, Poznań is fantastic. :)Even bicycle paths are true - I cycled from Piątkowo to Rataje and did pretty much the entire trip on cycle paths which were seperated from the main road.
Ced 1 | 54 25 Oct 2009 / #3Poznan has topped a list of the most citizen-friendly cities in Poland.i thought it was Rzeszow.someone told me
OsiedleRuda 25 Oct 2009 / #4Is Poznan the bees kneesNext place on the list for me to visit in Poland (I've been almost everywhere else I want to go to), so this is good news ;)Full list here: przekroj.pl/pub/files/miasta_tabela_03.pdfCan't say I'm at all surprised that Radom is bottom of the list, lol
RubasznyRumcajs 5 | 498 25 Oct 2009 / #5affirmative.there is no better place in Poland than Pyrlandia
Ced 1 | 54 25 Oct 2009 / #6so Rze... comes 2nd.and Krakow third.good news.i'm surprised by Warsaw though...so low
Ced 1 | 54 25 Oct 2009 / #8oh just because it's a capital city. so i'd expect more from it. but it must be said- i have never been to Warsaw
scottie1113 7 | 898 25 Oct 2009 / #9Best city in Poland? For me it's Gdansk, hands down. Among many other reasons, it's on the Baltic and that's important to me.
sonia 31 Oct 2009 / #10scottie1113Among many other reasons, it's on the Baltic and that's important to me.Dirty and freezing water is cool to swim in it, isn't it? ;p