SUP Private Tour in Motlawa River
5 Ratings
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- Private Tour
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Best way to experience Gdańsk. Let's learn about the city from the water perspective and see the city in the way sailors had seen it many years ago.
Itinerary Details
Operated by: Adamus on tour
This is a typical itinerary for this product
Stop At: Motlawa River Embankment (Dlugie Pobrzeze)
A place where you can feel the spirit of the old Hanseatic League.
Duration: 15 minutes
Stop At: Crane (Zuraw)
One of the defining symbols of Gdańsk and represents what little is left of the city’s great trading age.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: Wyspa Spichrzow
Granary Island used to be the centre of Gdańsk trade for centuries and a major source of the city’s historic wealth. By 1643, there were 315 granaries on the island capable of storing up to 250,000 tons of grain and servicing over 200 ships, which helped make Gdańsk the largest harbour on the Baltic and one of Europe’s richest cities. Granary Island is being brought back into public use, thanks to a series of huge construction projects.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At:
Opened in June 2017, the footbridge connects the main town near to the Hilton hotel with the Ołowianka
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Wyspa Olowianka
Ołowianka Island gets its name from the Polish word 'Ołów' (English: Lead) due to the fact that lead metals, sailed upriver from Silesia, were stored on the Island in the Teutonic era. Centuries later, these warehouses were used as granaries, examples of which you see beside The Philharmonic Hall and also The Royal Granary.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: SS Soldek
The first steamship built in Polish Gdańsk after 1945. It has been turned into a living museum.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At:
A shadowy gothic gate with the most beautiful street in Gdańsk behind it.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Green Gate (Brama Zielona)
This magnificent four-arched gatehouse on the waterfront was built as a palace for Polish monarchs. No Polish king ever stayed in the building, but Lech Wałęsa had his office here before moving to the European Solidarity Centre.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At:
Cow Gate is set on the Motława end of ul. Ogarna. The name probably comes from the road along which the cattle were driven.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Motlawa Channel Fortifications
Gdańsk was surrounded by a bastion fort and a stone lock was built in Motława, which could be used to flood the surroundings of the city. We will see what's left.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: Motlawa River Embankment (Dlugie Pobrzeze)
A place where you can feel the spirit of the old Hanseatic League.
Duration: 15 minutes
Stop At: Crane (Zuraw)
One of the defining symbols of Gdańsk and represents what little is left of the city’s great trading age.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: Wyspa Spichrzow
Granary Island used to be the centre of Gdańsk trade for centuries and a major source of the city’s historic wealth. By 1643, there were 315 granaries on the island capable of storing up to 250,000 tons of grain and servicing over 200 ships, which helped make Gdańsk the largest harbour on the Baltic and one of Europe’s richest cities. Granary Island is being brought back into public use, thanks to a series of huge construction projects.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At:
Opened in June 2017, the footbridge connects the main town near to the Hilton hotel with the Ołowianka
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Wyspa Olowianka
Ołowianka Island gets its name from the Polish word 'Ołów' (English: Lead) due to the fact that lead metals, sailed upriver from Silesia, were stored on the Island in the Teutonic era. Centuries later, these warehouses were used as granaries, examples of which you see beside The Philharmonic Hall and also The Royal Granary.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: SS Soldek
The first steamship built in Polish Gdańsk after 1945. It has been turned into a living museum.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At:
A shadowy gothic gate with the most beautiful street in Gdańsk behind it.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Green Gate (Brama Zielona)
This magnificent four-arched gatehouse on the waterfront was built as a palace for Polish monarchs. No Polish king ever stayed in the building, but Lech Wałęsa had his office here before moving to the European Solidarity Centre.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At:
Cow Gate is set on the Motława end of ul. Ogarna. The name probably comes from the road along which the cattle were driven.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Motlawa Channel Fortifications
Gdańsk was surrounded by a bastion fort and a stone lock was built in Motława, which could be used to flood the surroundings of the city. We will see what's left.
Duration: 10 minutes