Poland has Kraków for the tourists and Warsaw for the business travellers, and then it has Poznań, quietly getting on with being one of the most enjoyable cities in the country. Daryna’s tour covers both sides of it - the historic and the modern, the grand landmarks and the easy, lived-in corners that give a city its real character.
The Old Market Square is where it starts, and it earns a proper amount of time. Third largest in Poland after Kraków and Wrocław, it dates back to 1253 and is framed by colourful Renaissance townhouses and the ornate Town Hall at its centre.
Every day at noon, two mechanical goats emerge from the clock tower and butt heads, a tradition locals have watched their whole lives and tourists never quite believe until they see it. The Warta River runs through the city nearby, and the walk along its banks is the kind of thing you do without any particular plan and end up staying longer than expected.
Architecture meets genuine ambition
Plac Kolegiacki and the Poznań Fara, the Jesuit parish church, are just off the square and together form one of the most architecturally striking parts of the old town. The Fara’s Baroque interior is one of the finest in Poland, and it tends to stop people mid-step. Plac Wolności opens up a little further on as a wide, elegant square that transitions you from the old town into the city’s more modern rhythm. The Imperial Castle on Święty Marcin Street is a neo-Gothic behemoth built at the turn of the 20th century - once Hitler’s headquarters during the occupation, now a cultural centre hosting exhibitions, concerts and festivals. History here has layers.
Park Cytadela sits on the site of a 19th-century fortress and offers one of the greenest, most expansive breathing spaces in the city - sculptures scattered among the trees, wide open lawns, and a calm that feels earned after a day of walking. Malta Lake on the eastern edge of the city is where Poznań goes at the weekend: rowing boats, cycling paths, a thermal bath complex and the kind of relaxed outdoor energy that a city of this size does well. The Filipiny Complex nearby adds to that riverside, nature-close feeling that runs through a lot of what makes Poznań different.
And then there’s Stary Browar - the Old Brewery which is exactly what happens when industrial architecture meets genuine ambition. A former 19th-century brewery converted into a shopping and arts complex, it combines galleries, theatre spaces and design shops under the same roof as the original brick vaulting. Worth a visit even if you’re not there to shop.
Poznań was featured on Tourizzy by Daryna, a local from Poznań.