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Sopot

Sights in Sopot

  1. A

    Sopot Museum

    At the southern end of the beachfront, the Sopot Museum showcases 19th-century furniture and fittings within a grand villa of that era, including some enormous, ornately carved wardrobes. There’s an English-language brochure detailing the history of the house, and its attractive architecture is worth a look in its own right.

    reviewed

  2. B

    Molo

    At the end of Monte Cassino, beyond Plac Zdrojowy, is the famous Molo, Europe’s longest wooden pier, built in 1928 and jutting 515m out into the Gulf of Gdańsk. Various attractions along its length come and go with the seasons.

    reviewed

  3. C

    Grand Hotel

    The landmark 1927 Grand Hotel, adjoins the long waterfront spa park that first popularised the town. The park backs directly onto the beach, arguably the finest in the Tri-City area and Sopot's raison d'être in the all-too-short summer season.

    reviewed

  4. D

    Crooked House

    The warped, modern Crooked House is a building well worth investigating. Concealed within its twin-level innards are a dozen bars and restaurants, and several shops, including a wine outlet.

    reviewed

  5. E

    Opera Leśna

    The Opera Leśna is an amphitheatre that seats 5000 people and it is where the prestigious International Sopot Festival has been held in late August for over 40 years.

    reviewed

  6. F

    Villas

    If you wander about Sopot's back streets, you'll find more fine Villas from Sopot's 19th-century heyday as the German resort town Zoppot.

    reviewed