Warsaw In Your Pocket Guide Spring 2022

Page 14

Transport

Transport

Warsaw is Poland’s most navigable city by far. | Photo by Adam Borkowski.

Warsaw Metro Tentative construction on a metro system in Warsaw first began in 1938, but WWII stopped its progress and created other priorities for postwar communist authorities. In 1995 - almost 60 years since work first began - the north-south M1 line finally opened, and has steadily grown to 21 stations. The east-west M2 line, intersecting the M1 at Metro Świętokrzyska, opened in 2015 and now consists of 13 stations, with plans for 18 by the end of 2022. An M3 line is also in the works. Tickets for the Metro are the same as for trams and buses, and can be bought from automated machines outside each station. To reach the platform you must pass through the gates; enter your ticket into the gate to validate it and hang on to the returned ticket until you leave the underground. Metro stations are labelled on our maps, and the station closest to each venue is listed with the M icon in the details after most venue descriptions.Qwww.metro.waw.pl.

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Travelling around Warsaw by bus, metro and tram is efficient, fast and cheap; driving a car through the centre, on the other hand, can be confusing indeed, and the capital is best negotiated on foot, by public transport or taxi. For detailed information about Warsaw’s airports and train stations, visit our website: www. inyourpocket.com/warsaw/travel-info

Public Transport Warsaw has an extensive bus and tram system, as well as a good metro system with the M1 line running north-south and M2 running east-west. Over 1,500 buses operate in and around the city, and run 05:0023:00. After that night buses run on most routes twice every hour. All night buses display the letter N. ‘Fast buses’ (marked with red digits) skip the smaller stops. Standardised tickets are valid for use on the metro, buses and trams, and can be bought from machines with instructions in English at all metro stations, and some bus and tram stops. Tickets can also be purchased from machines on the actual buses and trams, where you can pay by card, or using exact change only. A standard single fare costs 4.40zł, or 3.40zł for a 20min ticket. If you’re travelling to the further reaches of Warsaw you’ll need a 7zł ticket that covers both zones 1 and 2 (note that the airport is still in Zone 1). Tickets valid for 24 hours, 3 days and a special ‘weekend’ ticket might also be worth considering. Those over 70 ride


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Shopping

7min
pages 90-96

Clubs

6min
pages 86-88

Adult Entertainment

2min
page 89

Bars

1min
page 85

New & Featured

9min
pages 81-84

Food Markets

4min
pages 78-80

Casual Dining

8min
pages 74-77

Fine Dining

10min
pages 70-73

New & Featured

1min
page 69

Traditional Polish Dishes

3min
pages 66-68

Breakfast & Brunch

3min
pages 64-65

Kids & Families

4min
pages 62-63

Activities & Experiences

3min
pages 60-61

Warsaw Uprising

5min
pages 58-59

Jewish Warsaw

5min
pages 56-57

Museums

10min
pages 52-55

Art Tourism

2min
page 49

Current Exhibitions

3min
page 51

Jewish Culinary Culture at POLIN

2min
page 50

Wilanów

1min
page 44

Powiśle

2min
page 36

The Royal Route

2min
page 30

Transport

6min
pages 14-16

Urban Greens & Gastro Parks

8min
pages 10-13

Introducing Warsaw

1min
page 6

City Centre

2min
page 18

How to Use This Guide

2min
page 7

Old Town Map

13min
pages 25-29

Essential Warsaw

2min
page 17

Old Town Walking Tour

1min
page 24
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