Uncover Nowa Huta’s communist past on a golf cart tour. Explore architectural marvels and hear captivating stories of life in socialist Poland.
Uncover Nowa Huta’s communist past on a golf cart tour. Explore architectural marvels and hear captivating stories of life in socialist Poland.
- Plac Centralny Imienia Ronalda Reagana - At the core of Nowa Huta lies Central Square, the birthplace of the district. It serves not only as a junction of streets and tram lines but also as a convergence of history, ideology, and the vision of a new society. Designed as the main square of an ideal city—a city without God or churches, but with a…
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Plac Centralny Imienia Ronalda Reagana - At the core of Nowa Huta lies Central Square, the birthplace of the district. It serves not only as a junction of streets and tram lines but also as a convergence of history, ideology, and the vision of a new society. Designed as the main square of an ideal city—a city without God or churches, but with a “better human being”—it was intended to be the pride of the People’s Republic of Poland, symbolizing a new beginning.
Construction commenced in 1949, with the architectural vision crafted by Tadeusz Ptaszycki, the chief urban planner of Nowa Huta, alongside architects Marta and Janusz Ingarden. In June 1950, the foundation stone was laid for the Lenin steelworks, the industrial heart of the district. Central Square was meant to be its representative showcase, the “salon” of the workers’ city. -
Pomnik Solidarności “Bądź wierny, idź” - A poignant reminder of those times, deeply ingrained in the identity of Nowa Huta and its residents, is the Monument to Solidarity. Modest and almost unnoticeable, yet profoundly moving, it is nestled into the rhythm of everyday streets near Central Square, speaking volumes more than many history books. It is not a monument to leaders, generals, or battles, but a tribute to ordinary people who, in extraordinary times, demonstrated true courage.
The monument was unveiled on November 10, 1999, symbolically on the eve of Poland’s Independence Day. It was created at the initiative of steelworkers from the Zgniatacz Rolling Mill, a department of the Tadeusz Sendzimir Steelworks (formerly Lenin Steelworks), which in the 1980s was a key center of resistance against the communist regime. In 1988, a strike committee operated here, marking one of the last uprisings before the fall of communist Poland. -
Szpital Specjalistyczny im. Stefana Żeromskiego SP ZOZ w Krakowie - Nestled in the shade of Nowa Huta’s oak trees, near General Anders Avenue, stands a building that, despite lacking the monumentality of socialist realist structures, has been a quiet hero of this district for over seventy years. The Stefan Żeromski Specialist Hospital, the first and most important hospital of Nowa Huta, was established to care for the health of a city designed as a model socialist housing estate.
Construction began in 1951 as one of the first hospital projects in postwar Poland. It officially opened in 1954, with the design led by Tadeusz Ptaszycki, the chief architect of Nowa Huta and author of the concept for Central Square. From the outset, the hospital was not just a medical institution. In the ideology of the Polish People’s Republic, it was meant to be proof of the state’s care for its citizens: the worker of the new system was not only to work but also to benefit from free healthcare, education, and leisure. -
Klasztorna - Amid the industrial order of Nowa Huta, where the blocks end and silence begins, runs Klasztorna Street, one of the oldest and most symbolic arteries of this part of Kraków. Its history predates the founding of Huta by hundreds of years. It leads to the former village of Mogiła, now a district of Kraków, where the spiritual heart of this land beats—the Cistercian Abbey, founded in 1222 by the Bishop of Kraków, Iwon Odrowąż. He brought the white monks from the French monastery in Lubiąż, establishing one of the most important monastic communities in Lesser Poland.
Klasztorna Street, once a rural road passing through fields and orchards, served for centuries as a pilgrimage route, leading to the famous miraculous life-sized wooden crucifix from the 15th century, located in the Church of the Holy Cross. -
Bulwarowa - Bulwarowa Street is one of those places in Nowa Huta where urban geometry gives way to nature, and the concrete everyday life loosens up in the shade of trees and by the water’s edge. Stretching between the Wanda and Szklane Domy neighborhoods, it has for decades served as a natural axis connecting city life with the rhythm of nature. It is along this green corridor that we head toward the Nowa Huta Reservoir, one of the district’s most valuable natural and recreational spots.
The history of this street dates back to the 1960s when the expansion of Nowa Huta was planned with not only work and housing in mind but also leisure. At that time, under the guidance of architects led by Tadeusz Ptaszycki, natural “lungs” were introduced into the city’s urban grid—green spaces meant to offer residents a balance between factory work and restoration. -
Aleja Solidarności - Not every street carries the weight of history, but Solidarity Avenue, formerly known as Lenin Avenue, is one of the most important and symbolic arteries of Nowa Huta, carrying decades of history and social change. Designed in the 1950s as the main axis of the socialist city, it was meant to serve a representational role, manifesting the power of the regime and its ideals. Wide, with dual tram tracks running down the middle, it was flanked by a green avenue meant to add monumentality and provide residents with places to rest. The avenue was the heart of daily life—every day thousands of steelworkers walked along it to work in the steel mill, and on holidays, massive May Day parades took place here to demonstrate the unity and strength of the new system.
However, over time, the avenue ceased to be only a symbol of power. In the 1970s and 80s, especially during economic and social crises, it became a place of resistance and rebellion. -
Nowe Centrum Administracyjne | Coworking Kraków | Wynajem biur | Sale Konferencyjne - Not every street carries the weight of history, but Solidarity Avenue, formerly known as Lenin Avenue, is one of the most important and symbolic arteries of Nowa Huta, carrying decades of history and social change. Designed in the 1950s as the main axis of the socialist city, it was meant to serve a representational role, manifesting the power of the regime and its ideals. Wide, with dual tram tracks running down the middle, it was flanked by a green avenue meant to add monumentality and provide residents with places to rest. The avenue was the heart of daily life—every day thousands of steelworkers walked along it to work in the steel mill, and on holidays, massive May Day parades took place here to demonstrate the unity and strength of the new system.
However, over time, the avenue ceased to be only a symbol of power. In the 1970s and 80s, especially during economic and social crises, it became a place of resistance and rebellion. -
Zalew Nowohucki - Nowohucki Lagoon is a unique place where Nowa Huta reveals a different, more natural side—far from the monumental apartment blocks and rigid lines of socialist-realist architecture. It is the green heart of the district, a space where the air feels lighter and time seems to slow down. Though it wasn’t included in the original plans of the “ideal city” from the late 1940s and early 1950s, over the years it has gained immense importance as a place of rest and social gathering, becoming one of Nowa Huta’s most beloved recreational areas.
The lagoon was created between 1952 and 1955 as an artificial retention basin, designed to manage water flow and prevent flooding in the young, fast-developing industrial district. From the very beginning, however, its role extended beyond the purely technical. At a time when heavy industry dominated the area and the air was filled with smoke and a metallic scent, the lagoon and its surrounding greenery became a peaceful refuge. -
Łaźnia Nowa Theatre - In the heart of the working-class district of Nowa Huta, among grey prefabricated housing blocks and socialist ideals, a completely different space emerged in 1998 on the site of a former bathhouse for steelworkers: Łaźnia Nowa Theatre.
Here, culture—long used as an ideological tool—became a space of freedom, experimentation, and breath. The building, retaining its raw, industrial character, does not pretend to be a palace of culture or a temple of art. It resembles a workshop—a place where theatre is made, constructed, and confronted with reality.
Łaźnia Nowa is a living, contemporary, and direct theatre. One that does not shy away from difficult subjects but engages with them—in dialogue with the audience, with history, with the everyday life of Nowa Huta. -
Stefana Żeromskiego - Stefan Żeromski Street, established during the development of Nowa Huta in the 1950s, is one of the main arteries of this working-class district in Kraków. Its construction was part of the socialist vision of the ideal city, where public space was to serve the community, labor, and everyday life. It runs through the central part of Nowa Huta, connecting neighborhoods, schools, bus stops, and daily stories. On one side are socialist realist housing blocks from the 1950s, and on the other, modern service points, renovated facades, shops, and meeting places. Here, the past blends with the present naturally and imperceptibly, as if one is a continuation of the other.
The street is named after Stefan Żeromski, a prominent Polish writer and publicist known for his social commitment and defense of workers’ and the oppressed’s rights. His works, such as The Homeless and Springtime Before the Storm, resonated with ideals of equality and justice that the regime of the time aimed to promote. -
Aleja Róż - In the heart of old Nowa Huta, like an axis setting the rhythm of the district, runs Rose Avenue—a street that, though short, carries the weight of an entire era. Here, among symmetrical facades, massive cornices, stone colonnades, and carefully designed flowerbeds, the ideological heart of the “ideal city” was meant to beat.
The avenue was not just a place for walks—it was a stage. A showcase for the “new man” and a “new world,” where socialist realism was not just an aesthetic but a way of thinking. Built at the turn of the 1950s and 60s, in accordance with the principles of socialist realism, it formed part of a broader vision of a city for workers, equality, and collective order.
The most symbolic point of the avenue was the monument to Vladimir Lenin, unveiled in April 1973—a monumental sculpture by Marian Konieczny, facing the steelworks. He looked toward the Lenin Steelworks as a guardian and ideological guide. -
Teatr Ludowy - In the heart of Nowa Huta, right next to a square with a telling name—Theatre Square—stands a building that for decades has been the cultural heart of the district. The Ludowy Theatre, opened in December 1955, was one of the first cultural institutions in the area. Originally designed to serve the working class, making culture accessible and educational, it quickly went beyond those intentions, becoming a stage of artistic courage, social reflection, and dialogue with reality.
Its architecture, designed by Jan Dąbrowski in the spirit of socialist realism, is monumental and symmetrical, with a portico and columns. It was meant to convey that culture is serious business, part of the citizen’s upbringing in a new system. But from the beginning, the theatre’s interior pulsed with something different—full of emotion, truth, and human drama. -
Our Lady Queen of Poland Church - Amidst concrete housing estates and the urban geometry of the socialist city rises a completely different structure—monumental yet organic, raw yet full of spirituality. The Ark of the Lord. A church that is not just a place of worship—it is a manifesto of faith, a symbol of resistance, a monument of hope, and a silent testimony to the struggle for the right to God in a city originally designed to be godless.
Designed in the shape of a boat floating on the waves of history, the Ark of the Lord has always carried symbolic meaning. It recalls the biblical ark that was meant to save the most precious things—faith, dignity, humanity. Its construction from 1967 to 1977 was not only an architectural act but a heroic victory of the spirit over ideological concrete.

- Pick up from meeting point
- Transport by golf cart to Nowa Huta district
- Audio guide in 27 languages
- Ticket entrance to administrative center and English guided tour
- Time for photo
- Drop off at meeting point
- Pick up from meeting point
- Transport by golf cart to Nowa Huta district
- Audio guide in 27 languages
- Ticket entrance to administrative center and English guided tour
- Time for photo
- Drop off at meeting point
Discover Krakow’s distinctive Nowa Huta district, a model of socialist urban planning, with a relaxing golf cart tour. Stroll through its expansive avenues and grand squares while gaining insights into the architecture and everyday life during the communist period. This engaging tour unveils the rich history of a district crafted to embody the power of…
Discover Krakow’s distinctive Nowa Huta district, a model of socialist urban planning, with a relaxing golf cart tour. Stroll through its expansive avenues and grand squares while gaining insights into the architecture and everyday life during the communist period. This engaging tour unveils the rich history of a district crafted to embody the power of the People’s Republic of Poland. Explore the remarkable Administrative Center, famously called the “Palace of the Doges,” and admire its grand interiors and unique ambiance, as stories and anecdotes from the era bring the past to life.
- Discover Nowa Huta comfortably by golf cart
- Uncover the architectural marvels of this socialist city
- Gain insights into life during the communist era with captivating stories
- Explore the renowned “Palace of the Doges” and its historic interiors
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.