Tricity in one day: Gdańsk, Sopot and Gdynia

Description

If you have little time and want to see as much as possible, this is the trip for you. Gdańsk, Sopot and Gdynia in one day.
As part of the tour, you will experience a walk through the oldest streets of the Tricity, see one of the largest brick religious buildings in the world, take a closer look at the legendary shipyard cranes, listen to an 18th-century organ concert, enter the largest wooden pier in Europe, and, for a quiet moment, take a walk along the path health at the top of a sandy cliff. During the trip, I also invite you to: coffee or tea, and traditional Polish fast food.

Together we will see the most important attractions of the Tricity:

  • Gdańsk:
    – Main Town: Upland Gate, Torture House, Długa Street, Długi Targ, Długie Pobrzeże with a view of Granary Island, Crane (the oldest port crane in Europe), Mariacka Street, St. Mary's Basilica (one of the three largest brick churches in the world)
    – Młyniska: European Solidarity Center – building interior / observation deck (without museum exhibition) 🕜
    – Oliwa: Oliwa Archcathedral (the longest church in Poland), Oliwa Park
  • Sopot:
    – Monte Cassino Heroes Street, Plac Zdrojowy 🕜
    - The Sopot molo (the largest wooden in Europe), Grand Hotel
  • Gdynia
    – Orłowo: Pier in Orłowo, Orłowski Cliff, Kępa Redłowska Reserve
    – Kamienna Góra: Viewpoint 🕜
    – downtown: Southern Pier, destroyer ORP "Błyskawica" (the world's oldest preserved destroyer).

    🕜 – we will see the place/object depending on the amount of time we have. Please remember that we will be traveling by car, so the duration of the tour may be affected by traffic jams.

The tour price includes:
– local guide
– private transport
– entrance tickets (where needed)
– bottled water, coffee or tea and Polish fast food.

Place

Tricity

Duration

approx. 8 hours

price from

PLN 1,300

also check

Learn the history of the German concentration camp, the longest operating (1939-45) on occupied Polish soil.
Learn about the history (from the Middle Ages to the present) of the over 1,000-year-old city by walking around its historic center.