Gorzow

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Gorzow Wielkopolski is not only the largest town in the province but is also the region’s true centre, a real junction where administration, economic, cultural and social threads intertwine. Their mutual reaction consolidates Gorzow’s standing in Poland and the World. That is no exaggeration. For year’s Gorzow has been proud of its openness and excellent contacts with foreign partners. But how could it have been otherwise in a border city in which transborder trade and lively social contacts have flourished down the centuries.
The city’s unusually advantageous location is clearly visible at the first contact. This city on Warta River is where international road routes from Scandinavia to the Balkans intersect with those from Germany and the Baltic states. Such metropolises as Berlin, Poznan and Szczecin are within a radius of 100 kilometers, while the largest border crossing points in West Poland are situated in Gorzow region: in Slubice, Swiecko, Kunowice and Kostrzyn on Odra, with 50 million persons using them every year. Gorzow Wielkopolski covers an area of 86 sq km and has a population of around 130,000. Following the national administration reform in 1999, the city become the seat of the province head and one of Lubuski Province’s two capitals. Potential visitors may arrive using excellent road, rail and waterway connections and, in the near future, also by air.

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