
Warsaw Featured Hotels
Browse Warsaw hotels. Featuring Premium Warsaw Center Studio, Apartament Zurawia Street and more.
Warsaw is the capital and largest city of Poland, home to 1.8 million residents on both banks of the Vistula River. The city's defining characteristic is its post-war resurrection - over 85 percent of the historic centre was destroyed during World War II, and what stands today in the Old Town is a painstaking reconstruction so faithful that UNESCO granted it World Heritage status specifically for the achievement of rebuilding. This gives Warsaw a unique dual identity: the Old Town looks centuries old but dates from the 1950s, while the surrounding districts showcase genuine pre-war architecture alongside bold modern towers.
The city divides into distinct areas. The Old Town and New Town occupy the northern riverbank. The Royal Route (Trakt Krolewski) runs south from the Old Town along Krakowskie Przedmiescie and Nowy Swiat to Lazienki Park and Wilanow Palace. West of the centre, the Palace of Culture and Science - a Soviet-era skyscraper that remains the tallest building in Poland - anchors the modern commercial district. The Praga neighbourhood across the river preserves pre-war street character and a growing arts scene.
Warsaw's metro system has two lines (M1 north-south, M2 east-west) supplemented by an extensive tram and bus network. A 24-hour transport ticket costs 15 PLN (about EUR 3.50). Warsaw Chopin Airport (WAW) is 10 km south of the centre, connected by train (SKM line S2/S3) in about 25 minutes for 4.40 PLN. The city is affordable by European capital standards - a main course in a good local restaurant averages 35 to 55 PLN (EUR 8-13).
Hotels in Warsaw
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