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Discover Warsaw: A Self-Guided Tour

By CloudGuide S.L
Free cancellation available
Price is NZ$14 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 8h 30m
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

Discover Warsaw's storey of destruction and rebirth with our self-guided audio tour, allowing you to explore Poland's resilient capital at your own pace. Begin in the meticulously reconstructed Old Town where UNESCO honoured the rebuilding of a city that Nazi Germany systematically destroyed after the 1944 Warsaw Uprising. Wander through the Royal Castle and along the elegant Krakowskie Przedmieście where palaces, churches, and monuments were rebuilt from photographs and memories. Stand before the Ghetto Heroes Monument where Willy Brandt fell to his knees in 1970, then explore the POLIN Museum's powerful narrative. Discover the communist-era Palace of Culture and Science, its observation deck offering views across a city transformed since 1989. Stroll through the Łazienki Park where Chopin concerts beneath his monument honour Poland's most beloved composer, then experience the creative energy of Praga district where prewar buildings survived the destruction that levelled the western bank.

Activity location

  • King Sigismund's Column (Kolumna Zygmunta)
    • Castle Square, Old Town
    • Warsaw, Poland

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • plac Zamkowy
    • plac Zamkowy
    • 01-195, Warszawa, Województwo mazowieckie, Poland

Check availability

Discover Warsaw: A Self-Guided Tour
  • Activity duration is 8 hours and 30 minutes8h 30m
    8h 30m
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
NZ$13.87 x 1 AdultNZ$13.87
Total
Price is NZ$13.87
Until Tue, 24 Mar

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Digital Map.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Self-guided walking tour (app)
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Access to the audio guide for 50+ Warsaw attractions and hidden spots.
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Private transport
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.

Know before you book

  • Not recommended for travellers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travellers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Activity itinerary

King Sigismund's Column (Kolumna Zygmunta)

  • 30m
Castle Square & Sigismund's Column Warsaw's most iconic square anchors the southern entrance to the Old Town, dominated by the Royal Castle and the 22-meter column honouring King Sigismund III Vasa who moved Poland's capital from Kraków in 1596. The square was completely destroyed in 1944 but rebuilt with such fidelity that only experts can distinguish original fragments from reconstruction, the effort representing Poland's determination to recover its heritage. Today the square serves as gathering point, performance space, and the starting line for the Royal Route that stretches south through Warsaw's most elegant streets.

Zamek Krolewski w Warszawie - Muzeum (Pass by)

The official residence of Polish kings from the 16th century was deliberately demolished by German forces in 1944 and not rebuilt until 1984, its painstaking reconstruction using surviving fragments and detailed documentation creating an authentic replica that houses original furnishings saved during the war. The castle's ornate state rooms, Canaletto paintings of 18th-century Warsaw that guided reconstruction, and the crown jewels represent the cultural treasures that survived thanks to Poles who risked their lives smuggling artefacts past Nazi guards. The castle's rebirth symbolises Warsaw's entire reconstruction—a statement that cultural identity cannot be destroyed by physical annihilation.

AAA STAY APARTMENTS Old Town (diffrent locations)

  • 30m
The heart of reconstructed Warsaw preserves the appearance of a medieval trading centre destroyed in 1944 and rebuilt from rubble using historical paintings, photographs, and the determination of architects who sometimes worked from memory alone. The colourful burgher houses surrounding the square, each rebuilt to its prewar appearance, now house restaurants, galleries, and the Historical Museum of Warsaw that documents the city's destruction and reconstruction. The Mermaid Fountain at the square's centre depicts Warsaw's legendary defender, the siren whose image appears on the city's coat of arms and whose statue has become one of Warsaw's most beloved symbols.

Warsaw Barbican (Barbakan Warszawski)

  • 1h
The reconstructed 16th-century defensive fortification marks the northern boundary of the Old Town, its distinctive red brick semicircular form providing a dramatic gateway between the old and new cities. The Barbican's historical purpose as the Old Town's main defensive gate is recalled in the thickness of its walls and the remnants of the defensive moat, while today's pedestrianised passage hosts artists, buskers, and the constant flow of visitors between the two reconstructed districts. The adjacent stretch of city walls, partially original and partially reconstructed, offers a pleasant walking path with views of the rooftops below.

Krakowskie Przedmiescie

  • 30m
Warsaw's most elegant boulevard stretches from Castle Square southward past palaces, churches, and monuments that document Poland's royal, religious, and intellectual heritage. The Church of St. Anne, Presidential Palace, University of Warsaw, and Church of the Holy Cross (containing Chopin's heart) line a street that has served as processional route for coronations, funerals, and the national celebrations that mark Polish identity. The boulevard's successful reconstruction and the vibrant street life of students, tourists, and residents create an atmosphere that connects contemporary Warsaw to its illustrious past.

Polin Museum Of The History Of Polish Jews (Pass by)

This extraordinary museum tells the 1,000-year storey of Jewish life in Poland through immersive exhibitions that culminate in the Holocaust and post-war chapters but begin with centuries of coexistence, culture, and contribution to Polish society. The striking contemporary building by Finnish architects Lahdelma & Mahlamäki rises on the site of the former Warsaw Ghetto, its organic interior spaces guiding visitors through reconstructed streets, synagogues, and the devastating Ghetto exhibition. The museum's location beside the Ghetto Heroes Monument creates a memorial complex that honours both the living civilisation destroyed and the armed resistance that challenged Nazi genocide.

Monument to the Heroes of Warsaw

  • 30m
This powerful monument honours the Jewish fighters of the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising who chose armed resistance over deportation to Treblinka, their desperate battle lasting nearly a month before German forces suppressed the revolt and destroyed the ghetto. The bronze figures emerging from the stone depict both the fighters and the civilians who perished; the monument's rear shows the march to death of those deported to the camps. Willy Brandt's spontaneous genuflection here in 1970, an act of atonement that shocked Germans and moved the world, marked a turning point in German memory politics and added another layer to this site's profound significance.

Palace of Culture and Science

  • 1h
Stalin's 'gift' to Poland remains Warsaw's tallest building and most divisive landmark, its socialist realist wedding-cake architecture dominating the skyline as either triumphalist imposition or ironic survivor depending on perspective. The palace's 3,000 rooms house theatres, museums, cinemas, and offices while the observation terrace on the 30th floor provides panoramic views that reveal Warsaw's extraordinary transformation since 1989. Whether you consider it eyesore or icon, the Palace of Culture represents the communist era that shaped postwar Poland and the complex feelings Poles maintain towards a gift they never requested.

Amphitheatre - Lazienki Park

  • 30m
Warsaw's largest and most beautiful park spreads across 76 hectares of English-style landscaping surrounding the Palace on the Isle, the summer residence of Poland's last king that somehow survived World War II largely intact. The park's lakes, peacocks, neoclassical buildings, and the Chopin Monument where free summer concerts honour Poland's beloved composer create an oasis of calm that Varsovians treasure. The Belvedere Palace, orangery theatre, and romantic 19th-century additions reveal the evolving tastes of Polish royalty and the park's continuing importance as cultural and recreational escape.

Praga Polnoc

  • 1h
The area on the Vistula's east bank largely escaped the destruction that levelled western Warsaw, preserving prewar buildings, bullet-scarred facades, and the gritty authenticity that has attracted artists and entrepreneurs seeking relief from the reconstructed perfection across the river. The area's transformation from dangerous district to creative hub has brought galleries, craft breweries, and nightlife venues to streets where Orthodox churches and working-class tenements reveal the multicultural Warsaw that existed before 1939. The Praga Museum, Różycki Bazaar, and the Neon Museum document both the neighborhood's history and its contemporary renaissance.

Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego (Pass by)

This powerful museum documents the 1944 Warsaw Uprising when the Polish Home Army attempted to liberate the city from German occupation before Soviet forces arrived, fighting for 63 days before surrender and the systematic destruction of Warsaw that followed. The immersive exhibitions include a replica bomber, reconstructed sewers through which fighters moved beneath German positions, and personal testimonies from survivors who experienced the uprising as children. The museum's emotional impact and comprehensive documentation make it essential for understanding Warsaw's destruction and the determination that drove its reconstruction.

Copernicus Science Centre

  • 1h
Poland's largest science museum honours the astronomer who revolutionized humanity's understanding of the cosmos with interactive exhibitions that draw families and school groups to the Vistula riverfront. The planetarium, rooftop garden, and hands-on experiments provide educational entertainment while the surrounding riverside park has become one of Warsaw's most popular gathering spaces. The centre represents Warsaw's forward-looking ambitions, celebrating Polish scientific achievement while inspiring future generations in a city determined to lead rather than merely recover.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    King Sigismund's Column (Kolumna Zygmunta)
    • Castle Square, Old Town
    • Warsaw, Poland

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    plac Zamkowy
    • plac Zamkowy
    • 01-195, Warszawa, Województwo mazowieckie, Poland

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