Katowice Sights

  1. Archdiocesan Museum

    Behind the Cathedral of Christ the King, the Archdiocesan Museum has a collection of sacral art from the late 14th century, including some beautiful Gothic altarpieces.

    Read more about Archdiocesan Museum

  2. Cathedral of Christ the King

    Some 800m south of the Rynek is the Cathedral of Christ the King, Poland's largest cathedral, measuring 89m by 53m. The massive sandstone structure was erected between 1927 and 1955. The spacious interior is topped with a large dome rising 59m from the floor, but apart from colourful stained-glass windows and an unusual 'wheel' crucifix it's fairly plain.

    Read more about Cathedral of Christ the King

  3. Church of St Michael

    In Park Kościuszki is the lovely, timber-shingled Church of St Michael, dating from 1510 and brought from the Upper Silesian village of Syrynia in 1939.

    Read more about Church of St Michael

  4. Garrison Church of St Casimir

    Opposite the skyscraper is the lovely Art Deco Garrison Church of St Casimir.

    Read more about Garrison Church of St Casimir

  5. Jewish Cemetery

    Katowice has Silesia's best-preserved Jewish Cemetery. Established in 1868, it's divided into two parts, of which the front one is older.

    Read more about Jewish Cemetery

  6. Nikiszowiec

    Those with time on their hands should head for the suburb of Nikiszowiec where there is a unique housing estate built for miners (and their families) who worked at the nearby Nickisch (now Poniatowski) shaft between 1908 and 1924.

    Read more about Nikiszowiec

  7. Provincial Park of Culture and Recreation

    The enormous Provincial Park of Culture and Recreation is possibly Katowice's most popular attraction and the conurbation's most important recreation area. It includes a large stadium, zoo, amusement grounds, planetarium and the Upper Silesian Ethnographic Park.

    Read more about Provincial Park of Culture and Recreation

  8. Rondo Art Gallery

    The large roundabout called the Rondo now houses the new Rondo Art Gallery.

    Read more about Rondo Art Gallery

  9. Rynek

    The central Rynek is not lined with historic burghers' houses as you'd find elsewhere in Silesia but encircled by drab postwar blocks. It's a showpiece of the 'early Gierek style' - the term Poles sarcastically give to architecture spawned during the fleeting period of apparent prosperity in the early 1970s, when Edward Gierek's government took out hefty loans from the West to make Poland a 'second Japan'.

    Read more about Rynek

  10. Silesian Museum

    North of the Rynek, the Silesian Museum features one permanent exhibition - Polish paintings from 1800 to 1939 - as well as various temporary displays from its vast collections (fine art, archaeology, ethnography and local history and culture).

    Read more about Silesian Museum

  11. Advertisement

  12. Skyscraper

    Just east of the Jewish cemetery is the Skyscraper, Poland's first such building when completed in 1934 and considered the best example of functionalism in Poland. The 14-storey, 60m-tall tower was the highest building in the country until 1955.

    Read more about Skyscraper

  13. Spodek

    Facing the Rondo Art Gallery to the northeast is the landmark Spodek, a sports and concert stadium built in 1971 that truly deserves its name of 'Flying Saucer'.

    Read more about Spodek

  14. Upper Silesian Ethnographic Park

    The Upper Silesian Ethnographic Park features scores of traditional wooden buildings spread over 20 hectares. The park is about 3km northwest of the centre; reach it from the Rondo on tram 6, 11 or 23.

    Read more about Upper Silesian Ethnographic Park