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Whats your favourite Polish city and why?


pip  10 | 1658  
11 Aug 2011 /  #31
you are lucky. we were just there this past week end for the flea market. Unfortunately, we have to live in Warsaw- because of work.
paulinska  9 | 86  
12 Aug 2011 /  #32
I have Krakow at heart......I just love it there & i've been to quite a few other major cities in Poland. they just don't compare.

Cities aside, 2 weeks ago i visited family relatives in a small village called Bierna (£odygowice). Beautiful, doesn't do this place any justice. Mountains, lakes, ponds, forests, you name it, this place has it all. I'm a city lad born & bred, but life in villages can be so fulfilling sometimes. People are so calm, polite & humble.

I asked babcia, how come you don't lock doors at night?! well, because there's no need to...she replied! Is this common in Polish small villages?!
Peter Cracow  
3 Dec 2011 /  #33
I have to advice you to see (at last) smaller cities too. Townlets. Foreigner probably wouldn't survive there (no pub, no university, no job, no E-speakers, no laundry, no car wash...), but they still can be favourite. There are in example: Sandomierz (medieval city at the Vistula rover), Przemyśl (Austrian stronghold, famous of 7 monasteries), Kazimierz at the Vistula river (small town in a picturesque landscape), Krynica Gorska (the best resort in the mountains), Kowary (a kind of post-German Krynica), Biecz (site of famous executioners school) and many others I visited in my life and loved. What is important: their architecture didn't hurt too much during Russian/Soviet domination era.

Cracow itself (where I use to live since my birth) consists in fact of 4 cities (and many villages). Pre-medieval Old Town, medieval Kazimierz and its Jewish district (behind the old riverbed), XIX c. Austrian Podgórze (behind the present riverbed), XX c. Nowa Huta (Communist district biult as a separate town). If you don't like one you can emigrate to another.
rybnik  18 | 1444  
3 Dec 2011 /  #34
Good synopsis
PennBoy  76 | 2429  
3 Dec 2011 /  #35
Gdansk. The old town and the architecture. I think Krakow is a nice town but it's overrated.


  • Gdansk2.jpg

  • Gdansk3.jpg
elioug  1 | 22  
3 Dec 2011 /  #36
Gdansk: Have Old Town, History, Sea, Trojmiasto park - trees, New Stadium for Euro :D, and if you want a change or need other things you are close to Sopot and Gdynia.
teflcat  5 | 1024  
3 Dec 2011 /  #37
Białystok, of course! Great place, and on the up. No polar bears walking up Lipowa, contrary to popular belief, and a state-of-the-art opera house opening soon.
pantsless  1 | 266  
7 Dec 2011 /  #38
and a state-of-the-art opera house opening soon.

How could you quote something you love about a city that doesn't even exist yet?
teflcat  5 | 1024  
8 Dec 2011 /  #39
It exists. They had a concert there last week. It won't be fully functioning (with the most modern scene-changing equipment in Europe, by the way) until next year, but it's nearly ready.

It's always puzzled me why this city, just two hours from WAW, has been disregarded by the rest of the country. Come and have a look for yourself.
Zman  
8 Dec 2011 /  #40
I like Białystok, and even better... its environs. And the people living there have such a sweet accent, reminiscent of Wilno and beyond.
polly  1 | 3  
8 Dec 2011 /  #41
Białystok hahahahha there's nothing except pigs" even I can't find any airport always i need to travel warsaw
teflcat  5 | 1024  
8 Dec 2011 /  #42
even I can't find any airport always

Sorry you couldn't find the airport Polly. Did you look for a long time?
Where do you live, by the way?
FlaglessPole  4 | 649  
8 Dec 2011 /  #43
Białystok hahahahha there's nothing except pigs" even I can't find any airport always i need to travel warsaw

Sorry you couldn't find the airport Polly.

yeah no wonder, he was probably chasing some free-grazing herd of pigs, yelling "when will you fly?!" all day long... seriously how about getting a taxi to the airport instead
polly  1 | 3  
8 Dec 2011 /  #44
unfortuanately i have to tell you that i'm from Białystok
Sidliste_Chodov  1 | 438  
8 Dec 2011 /  #45
Warsaw: because I know it better than anywhere else in Poland, and I prefer big cities, having lived in one for most of my life. There's far more to the place than meets the eye, if you can look beyond the ugly concrete, but few bother to find out.

Wrocław: the friendliest, most easy-going city I've visited in Poland. I've only been three times, but even the flooding didn't spoil things too much. Would love to go back.

Places I really want to visit: Poznań, £odź and Białystok. Just to say I've been, really. And Katowice - mainly because I like Silesians.

Places I have no intention of visiting: Bydgoszcz. My ex is from there; and if she and her friends are anything to go by, it must be a dreadful place. Mind you, she wouldn't tell me what ends she was from, so I strongly suspect that "Bydgoszcz" actually meant "backward Kujawsko-Pomorskie village", so I may be wrong ;) Either way, I doubt that it can even come close to somewhere like Wrocław or Gdańsk.

Note that I haven't mentioned Kraków :D
teflcat  5 | 1024  
8 Dec 2011 /  #46
i'm from Białystok

Then it is indeed unfortunate that you write as you do about your home city. Haven't you seen any positive changes in the last five or ten years? The lack of a regional airport is a joke, of course, but apart from that you must agree that the city has really improved in many ways.
beliall  - | 25  
8 Dec 2011 /  #47
Wrocław for me is the best city in poland followed closely by Krakow
Teffle  22 | 1318  
8 Dec 2011 /  #48
£odź

It's much better than it looks - put it that way.
a.k.  
8 Dec 2011 /  #49
so I strongly suspect that "Bydgoszcz" actually meant "backward Kujawsko-Pomorskie village", so I may be wrong ;)

I've never been there too but on pictures it looks very good. I'm actually suprised that you want to visit place like Białystok but not Budgoszcz.

It's much better than it looks - put it that way.

Really?
Teffle  22 | 1318  
8 Dec 2011 /  #50
Really?

Well I think so. I think virtually everyone can agree that it's far from an attractive city but one man's delapidated and dull can be another man's gritty and edgy sometimes? : )

Parts reminded me of a run down Paris.

I thought there was a youthfulness, a bit of a countercultural vibrancy, a friendliness - despite the negatives.

Maybe partly due to the movie scene influence & being a bit downtrodden generally?

Dunno.
OP Wroclaw Boy  
8 Dec 2011 /  #51
9 votes for Wroclaw so far, it must be a clear winner - im not going to count the others as i cant be bothered.
Wroclaw  44 | 5359  
8 Dec 2011 /  #52
with the most modern scene-changing equipment in Europe, by the way

only until the new place is built in wroclaw, which will be the biggest in Poland btw.
scottie1113  6 | 896  
8 Dec 2011 /  #53
Bydgoszcz

I've been there several times. Nice city, some interesting architecture and lots of green in and around the city. Walking along the Brda is a pretty stroll and there's a rynek.

I just wouldn't want to live there.
Sidliste_Chodov  1 | 438  
8 Dec 2011 /  #54
I'm actually suprised that you want to visit place like Białystok

Just to say I've been, really

but not Budgoszcz.

My ex is from there; and if she and her friends are anything to go by, it must be a dreadful place.

;)

It's much better than it looks - put it that way.

My mum went to Uni there, so I kind of feel that I have to go there at some point. And I've got an interest in industrial history, so that's another reason ;)
Teffle  22 | 1318  
8 Dec 2011 /  #55
industrial history

You're laughing then!

From the UK perspective, I suppose it's a Birmingham in many ways - second city, ugly with industrial past, boring/miserable reputation, cultural armpit etc.

I found it refreshingly "street" - if you know what I mean.
OP Wroclaw Boy  
8 Dec 2011 /  #56
From the UK perspective, I suppose it's a Birmingham in many ways - second city, ugly with industrial past, boring/miserable reputation, cultural armpit etc.

IMO from a PL - UK perspective:

Warsaw = London obviously
Lodz = Birmingham
Manchester = Krakow
Brighton = Gdansk
Wroclaw = Sheffield
Poznan = Bristol
Bialystok = Newcastle
Gydnia = Bournemouth
Sopot = Weymouth

Thats it for now....
a.k.  
8 Dec 2011 /  #57
second city

According to recent news £ódź is third now.

cultural armpit

There are many festivals there. Unfortunately one of the most famous - Camerimage - was moved to... Bydgoszcz! :)
sascha  1 | 824  
8 Dec 2011 /  #58
IMO from a PL - UK perspective:

Warsaw = London obviously
Lodz = Birmingham
Manchester = Krakow
Brighton = Gdansk
Wroclaw = Sheffield
Poznan = Bristol
Bialystok = Newcastle
Gydnia = Bournemouth
Sopot = Weymouth

intersting approach, but 'comparing' isnt really the thing. ;)

i liked it best when staying longer periods in pl(and there were quite a lot) in breslau ;), maybe because of the 'germanisation' still visible there. i also like lodz a lot. warzsawa was for me always just a meet and travel place, though i visited almost all of the historical spots, esp. in old town, what the nazis left of it.
Sidliste_Chodov  1 | 438  
8 Dec 2011 /  #59
Lodz = Birmingham

Manchester = Krakow

Kind of. Manchester's way more important than Birmingham (despite what Brummies think), and £ódź was (for industrial reasons) even known as "the Polish Manchester" ;)

Wroclaw = Sheffield

I've always thought of Katowice as being the Polish Sheffield.

Gydnia = Bournemouth

Full of pensioners? lol

I wonder where will become the "Polish Bradford" though. :0 lmao.
OP Wroclaw Boy  
8 Dec 2011 /  #60
Kind of. Manchester's way more important than Birmingham (despite what Brummies think), and £ódź was (for industrial reasons) even known as "the Polish Manchester" ;)

Exactly it all depends on the perspective, i was basing my opinions based on a share point of view from the business and historical, aesthetic aspects.

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