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The Motława River has shaped Gdańsk for centuries and remains one of the most iconic parts of the city. Flowing directly through the historic center, it connected Gdańsk to the Baltic Sea and made the city one of the most important ports in Northern Europe. Długie Pobrzeże, the long waterfront promenade, developed in the Middle Ages as the heart of Gdańsk’s port life. Merchant houses, granaries, and warehouses once stood here, directly connected to river traffic. Goods such as grain, timber, amber, beer, and salt were unloaded straight from ships to the buildings along the river. The colorful facades along Długie Pobrzeże are mostly reconstructions. Before World War II, this area was densely built with historic townhouses. In 1945, nearly the entire waterfront was destroyed. After the war, it was rebuilt in a simplified historic style, inspired by old engravings and paintings rather than exact reconstructions. Rybackie Pobrzeże, meaning “Fishermen’s Quay,” was traditionally linked to fishing activities and smaller river vessels. It was a working zone rather than a representative one. Today, it has transformed into a modern riverside area with hotels, apartments, and marinas, showing how Gdańsk blends history with contemporary urban life. One of the most recognizable symbols of the city is the Żuraw, the medieval port crane. Built in the 15th century, it was the largest harbor crane in Europe at the time. Powered by human strength, with workers walking inside massive wooden wheels, the Żuraw could lift cargo weighing several tons and was also used to install ship masts. The Żuraw served both commercial and defensive purposes. Its brick towers were part of the city’s fortifications, protecting the port from attacks coming from the river. Like much of Gdańsk, the Żuraw was heavily damaged during World War II and carefully reconstructed in the postwar years. For centuries, the Motława waterfront was a place of intense international exchange. Gdańsk was a member of the Hanseatic League, trading with cities across Europe. This made the city wealthy, multicultural, and architecturally unique. Today, the riverfront is one of the most visited areas in Gdańsk. Walking along the Motława offers views of historic ships, modern marinas, museums, and cafes — all layered on top of centuries of maritime history. Even now, the Motława is not just a scenic backdrop. It remains a living part of the city, connecting past and present, commerce and culture, everyday life and tourism. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎥 Filming: 🕙 Time – Afternoon (2PM) 📅 Date – Saturday, December 6, 2025 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎧 This video features stereo, binaural-style sound for an ASMR-like walking experience, so headphones are recommended. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ☕ Support the channel: Buy me a coffee – https://buymeacoffee.com/romanwalks ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ If you enjoyed this walk, don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more relaxing city walks and hidden gems in Warsaw. Where should I walk next? Let me know in the comments!