About Gdańsk
• Location
Among the Best European Destinations of 2017, Gdańsk was ranked on the third place. The 837,000 guests who visited the city during the summer season of that year, including 289,000 foreigners, rated their stay 9.1 out of 10. Situated on the Baltic Sea coast, Gdańsk is the heart of the metropolitan area known as Tricity, formed by Gdańsk and two neighbouring cities of Gdynia and Sopot, of total population reaching 700,000 people.
Gdańsk is also the capital of the Pomeranian Voivodeship, an area where the Baltic Sea meets sprawling woods and fields, towering hills and captivating lake districts. Within this voivodeship lies Kashubia, widely believed to be one of the most beautiful regions of Poland. A number of breathtaking landmarks, such as the towns of Kartuzy and Kościerzyna, lie only a stone’s throw away from Gdańsk and are easily reachable by train or bus.
• History and Internationalisation
The city is proud of its rich history, dating all the way back to the Middle Ages. It was an important member of the Hanseatic League, a confederation of market towns dominating the Baltic trade, and has remained a prosperous economic centre ever since. It is where the World War II started, but also where Solidarity, the movement directly responsible for the fall of communism in Eastern Europe, was created.
From its inception Gdańsk has remained truly multicultural. The authorities estimate that Gdańsk is a home for circa 20,000 foreigners, including 2000 international students. It is also a vibrant centre of technological innovation. Numerous global corporations can be found in the area, recruiting well-educated graduates of local higher education institutions for their workforce. 150,000 enterprises and corporations, 3000 foreign investors and 30 leading international companies operate in the city itself.
• Transport and Climate
Contemporary Tricity ranks among the ten safest and most tolerant cities in Poland. It can be conveniently reached via the international Gdansk Lech Walesa Airport, located only 12 km from the city centre. There is a wide selection of bus, train and ferry connections with other major cities in Poland and abroad. A well-developed network of public transport makes it easy to travel also within the Tricity itself.
The air of Tricity is smog-free and, for such a vast metropolitan area, relatively unpolluted. Gdańsk has an oceanic climate, with moderate winters, when temperature falls near or below 0°C, and mild summers, although in July and August it can get as hot as 30–35°C. At this time of the year both inhabitants and tourists visit the beautiful city beaches, the closest one lying only 6 km away from the campus of Gdańsk University of Technology.