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Maritime Museum

Gdańsk's Maritime Museum is made up of four individual museums that together create a complete history of the port. Straddling both banks of the Motława, tickets can be bought individually or together for a unsubstantial discount. A ticket for all four museums currently costs 15/9zł  and includes a free ride on the ferry  which sails the short distance between the Crane and the Museum opposite and now operates all year round (subject to weather). You can save yourself a 10-15 minute walk even if not visiting the museum. Tickets cost 1zł.

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Gdansk | Sightseeing | Maritime Museum

Central Maritime Museum
The main part of the museum is located inside three Renaissance granaries and if you've only got time to visit one of the four museums this is by far the most comprehensive of the lot. A complete history of Poland's nautical history is represented on several floors and includes old cannons, [...]


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ul. Ołowianka 9-13
tel. 058 301 86 11
Open 10:00-15:00, Sat, Sun 10:00-15:30, Closed Mon. From March Open 10:00-16:00, Closed Mon.
The first steamship built in Polish Gdansk after 1945 at the Lenin Shipyards, the Soldek has been turned into a living museum. Just about every inch of the ship can be accessed from the cramped engine room to the bridge to the pokey little cabins the crews lived in.  [...]


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ul. Ołowianka 9-13
tel. 058 301 86 11
Open 10:00-15:00. Closed Mon. From March Open 10:00-16:00. Closed Mon.
The Crane
The Crane is one of the defining symbols of Gdansk and represents what little is left of the city’s great trading age. First mentioned in 1367 the original structure burnt down in 1442 before its current design was created in 1442-1444. As a working crane it was used to transfer cargoes and to put up masts on ships. At one time this was the biggest working crane in the world but it also served a defence function and as one of the gates to the city. It had a lifting capacity of 4 tonnes to a height of 11 metres and this was achieved by two huge wooden wheels at its heart each with a diameter of 6 metres. These wheels were originally powered by men walking inside of them to turn the lifting mechanism. It remained a working crane until the middle of the19th century and was 80% destroyed in 1945 in the battle for Gdansk.

After the war it was rebuilt and donated to the Polish Maritime Museum of which it remains a part today. You will be able to view a collection of permanent and temporary exhibitions inside including an exhibition on port life between the 16th and 18th centuries. In Polish only, displays include models of lighthouses, the old port, life-size recreations of counting houses and old port life in general plus access to the crane's two huge drive-wheels.
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ul. Szeroka 67/68
tel. 058 301 53 11
Open 10:00 - 15:00, Sat, Sun 10:30 - 15:30. Closed Mon. From March Open 10:00 - 16:00, Sat, Sun 10:30 - 16:30. Closed Mon.