1 Main Market Square, Wrocław, 11-400
Wrocław is the most interesting and most beautiful city in Lower Silesia. You will start the tour from the Wroclaw Main Market Square. It is one of the largest markets in Europe. It has an area of 3.8 hectares. There are many colorful tenements from different eras, many restaurants, souvenir shops, bookstores .. It is a place that attracts tourists as well as Wrocław residents. The 13th century Main Market Square features the Old Town Hall. Inside is the Museum of Bourgeois Art - a branch of the City Museum and the famous Piwnica Świdnicka - the oldest restaurant in Europe. In the north-west corner of the Market Square is St. Elisabeth's Church. Here you can climb the 91m tower for absolutely splendid views of the city. Next you will walk to see the oldest university in Wroclaw - The University of Wrocław. The University of Wrocław was founded in 1945. The main building houses the Museum of the University of Wrocław. At the university you will visit the music room of the Oratorium Marianum (a music room where concerts have been held for over 200 years) and Aula Leopoldyńska. You can also enjoy the view from the Math Tower, housed a former astronomical observatory. The next point of our trip will be Ostrów Tumski - the oldest part of Wrocław with the magnificent Cathedral from the 13th-14th century. In Ostrów Tumski you will see the historic Archcathedral of St. John the Baptist, church of St. Cross and the church of St. Giles. In addition to religious buildings in Ostrów, there are mill bridges and the famous Tumski Bridge, known as the Bridge of Lovers. After Ostrów Tumski you will go to Japanese Garden and Centennial Hall - a historic building in Wrocław, listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2006. At the end of our trip you will see popular all over the country – Wrocław Zoo. It is the oldest zoo in Poland, together with one of the most modern oceanariums in Europe. Here you will see about 250 species of fish and an impressive underwater tunnel. In total there are over 14 thousand animals!