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Wrocław Dwarves or Wrocław Gnomes (Polish: Wrocławskie krasnale) are small figurines (20–30 cm) that have appeared in the streets of Wrocław, Poland since 2005. The dwarves are a major tourist attraction for the city, which is the third largest in Poland. [1] Tourists often walk around the city with a map trying to find all of them.
Tickets for the 7 p.m. show start at $25. ... a gnome hunt, refreshments and more. Tickets are $15 for those ages 13 and older, $9 for kids 2-12, and free for those younger. Various dates through ...
The tickets are available for purchase in the electronic form via mobile app: mPay, Apple Pay, SkyCash, Mobill, Google Pay. Tickets are one-ride or temporary (0.25, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 24, 48, 72, or 168 hours). All buses and a significant portion of the trams are low-floor. Moderus Gamma LF07AC tram
Puppet Theater has three independent inside stages: large scene with 250 seats, small scene with 80 seats and upstairs stage with 60 seats. In 2008 Puppet Theater launched “Bajkobus” (FairyBus), a mobile scene which is a mini-version of theater building.
For the standards of the time it was both very functional and technically advanced. In the early 1930s, the theatre, called Schauspielhaus in German, was the newest and, with 1736 seats, also the biggest stage in Wroclaw. Since its beginning, the theatre functioned as a musical theatre, where mostly operetta was staged.
The Wrocław Zoological Garden (Polish: Ogród Zoologiczny we Wrocławiu), known simply as the Wrocław Zoo (Polish: Zoo Wrocław), is a zoo on Wróblewski Street in Wrocław, Poland.
The obsession over transgender women in sports has never been anything more than a witch hunt, a license for cruelty. Oh, the proponents paint their cause as noble, styling themselves as standing ...
The St. John the Baptist Archcathedral (Polish: Archikatedra św. Jana Chrzciciela, German: Breslauer Dom, Kathedrale St. Johannes des Täufers) is the seat of the Archdiocese of Wrocław and a landmark of the city of Wrocław in Poland.