Six places worth starting your city tour

Wrocław Market Square with colourful tenement houses and the Town Hall

10 min walk · Old Town

Market Square (Rynek)

The second-largest medieval market square in Poland. Surrounded by Renaissance tenement houses, with a Gothic Town Hall in the centre — one of the best-preserved examples of secular architecture in the country.

Best visited early in the morning (before 9 am) or in the evening after 7 pm, once the tourist wave passes. The square hosts cultural events almost daily and a beloved Christmas market in December.

Cathedral Island in Wrocław with gothic spires and cobbled streets

15 min by tram · line 8 or 9

Cathedral Island (Ostrów Tumski)

The oldest part of Wrocław — the city’s history began here in the 10th century. The Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist with its two neo-gothic spires, the Church of Our Lady on the Sand, intimate alleys and gas lamps lit by hand every evening.

Best at sunset, when the brick of the cathedral glows and the historical gas lighting begins (the only one of its kind in Europe). From the Market Square, walk along the Odra River and over Tumski Bridge.

Centennial Hall in Wrocław — modernist UNESCO heritage site

20 min by tram · line 4 or 10

Centennial Hall (Hala Stulecia)

A modernist icon from 1913 designed by Max Berg — the largest reinforced concrete dome in the world at the time of its completion. On the UNESCO World Heritage list since 2006.

The hall sits inside Szczytnicki Park, with the Pergola and the Multimedia Fountain (operating May to September). The complex also includes the Zoo and Afrykarium and the Japanese Garden — easy to spend half a day here.

Odra River boulevards in Wrocław at sunset

5 min walk · from the centre

Odra Boulevards

Wrocław is built on twelve islands connected by more than a hundred bridges — more than Venice or Hamburg. Dunikowski Boulevard, Słonecznikowy Boulevard and Słowackiego Embankment are the best riverside walks.

In summer the waterfront comes alive: Goplana riverboat cruises, floating cafés (Barka Tumska, Barka Mleczna) and open-air evening concerts. A great way to start exploring the city.

Walking path in Szczytnicki Park in Wrocław

20 min by tram · line 4 or 10

Szczytnicki Park + Japanese Garden

One of the largest urban parks in Poland at over 100 hectares. Founded in the 19th century and carefully restored after WWII. Perfect for a 2- to 3-hour walk among old oaks and plane trees.

At the heart of the park is the Japanese Garden (paid entry, open April to October). It’s the only authentic zen garden in Poland, with bridges, a koi pond and a tea pavilion. During cherry blossom season (April) it gets busy — come right after opening.

Modern interactive water knowledge centre Hydropolis in Wrocław

15 min by tram · Na Grobli street

Hydropolis

A water knowledge centre housed in a 19th-century underground drinking water reservoir. Eight thematic zones — from the deep ocean to glaciers, from humans and water to water in civilisation.

Excellent for a rainy afternoon and especially good for families and the science-curious. Buy tickets online a few days ahead — weekend slots sell out.

Wrocław Zoo with the Afrykarium oceanarium next to Centennial Hall

20 min by tram · line 4 or 10 · Wróblewskiego street

Wrocław Zoo + Afrykarium

The oldest and one of the largest zoos in Poland, founded in 1865. Over 14,000 animals from 1,100 species — Antarctic penguins, manatees, lemurs, African elephants and Nile crocodiles inside the famous Afrykarium-Oceanarium.

Afrykarium is unique in Poland — a full cross-section of African fauna with hippos viewed underwater, a shark tunnel and a panoramic coral-reef view. Easily a full-day visit, perfect for families with kids. Buy tickets online in advance — weekend queues at the gate can be long.

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