Yellow, 21 stops, 2-4 hours
Lublin, the largest city east of the Vistula River, has had a long and eventful history. The first settlers appeared here in the 6th c. but it was in 1317 that Lublin received a municipal charter from duke Ladislaus Łokietek and became a town. Over centuries Lublin's architecture developed in a variety of styles ranging from Romanesque to contemporary modern, and with distinctive local style of Lublin Renaissance. Architectural monuments vary in forms and functions: sacral and secular, defensive and residential, private and municipal. The Architectural Trail calls on the most outstanding buildings designed by famous architects and erected by renowned master builders.
- The Architectural Trail - Cracow Gate
- The Architectural Trail - The New Town Hall
- The Architectural Trail - Church of the Holy Spirit
- The Architectural Trail - St. Joseph’s Church
- The Architectural Trail - Church of the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady
- The Architectural Trail - The Czartoryski Palace
- The Architectural Trail - The Europa Hotel
- The Architectural Trail - The Church and Monastery of the Order of Capuchin Friars Minor
- The Architectural Trail - The Former Bank of Lublin Industrialists
- The Architectural Trail - The Centre for Culture
- The Architectural Trail - Juliusz Osterwa Theatre
- The Architectural Trail - Church of the Assumption of Our Lady of Victory
- The Architectural Trail - Church of the Conversion of St. Paul
- The Architectural Trail - Former St. Casimir Church and Monastery of the Reformati Order
- The Architectural Trail - The Former Missionary Church and The Seminary
- The Architectural Trail - The Complex of Bishop Palaces
- The Architectural Trail - The Lublin Cathedral and The Trinitarian Tower
- The Architectural Trail - Church and Monastery Complex of the Dominican Order
- The Architectural Trail - The Old Theatre
- The Architectural Trail - The Old Town Market Square
- The Architectural Trail - The Castle Hill