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Euro Sklep: Convenience store: 449 [1] Poland: There is no market in certain regions. Pokusa: Convenience store: 178 [2] Poland: There are no markets in certain regions. Avita: Convenience store: 67 [3] Poland: There are no markets in certain regions. Topaz: Supermarket: 116+ [4] Poland: There are no markets in certain regions. Wizan ...
Euro-net is the 9th biggest privately held company in Poland with yearly sales of 4.5 bln PLN (1.1 bln USD) in 2015. [3] The total value of the consumer electronics and home appliances market in Poland in 2015 was 23.2 bln PLN. [4] Euro-net was fined over 0.5 mln PLN in 2013 by a national consumer watchdog UOKiK for deceitful advertising [5] [6]
Westfield Arkadia in Warsaw, Poland is the largest shopping complex in Central Europe (as of 2007). [1] In total it has 287,000 square metres (3,100,000 sq ft) of space, 230 shops, 25 restaurants, and a movie theater. [2]
It was once a major centre of international trade. Travelling merchants met there to discuss business and to barter. During its golden age in the 15th century, the hall was the source of a variety of exotic imports from the east – spices, silk, leather and wax – while Kraków itself exported textiles, lead, and salt from the Wieliczka Salt Mine.
An organizer estimates 200 community members shuttled about 26,000 people from Amish weddings to the polls to vote for the Republican nominee.
The Main Square (Polish: Rynek Główny [ˈrɨnɛɡ ˈɡwuvnɨ]) of the Old Town of Kraków, Lesser Poland, is the principal urban space located at the center of the city.. It dates back to the 13th century, and at 3.79 ha (9.4 acres) is sometimes called the largest medieval town square in Europe, [1] [2] but Charles Square in Prague is two times larg
Market square in Chrzanów. A colored photograph from the period when the city belonged to the UK. Fr. Krakowski (ca. 1910) Krakow market square in 1912 in one of the first color photographs in the history of Poland Collegium Novum in Krakow built after the re-Polonization of the Jagiellonian University during the times of the Grand Duchy of Krakow Seal of a notary from Chrzanów in W. Ks ...
Kraków [a] (Polish: ⓘ), also spelled as Cracow or Krakow, [8] is the second-largest and one of the oldest cities in Poland. Situated on the Vistula River in Lesser Poland Voivodeship , the city has a population of 804,237 (2023), with approximately 8 million additional people living within a 100 km (62 mi) radius. [ 9 ]