Lviv - Lwów

Lviv
Львів
Lviv - View from the Town Hall Tower 01.jpgPanorama of Lviv to the east from the town hall tower
Arms
Coat of arms of Lviv.svg
Map
Lviv-Ukraine-Map.png
Information
CountryUkraine
RegionLviv region
Surface171.01 km²
Height296 m above sea level
Populationapprox. 760,000
Area code( 380) 32
Postal Code79000–79490
website

Lviv (ukr. L'viv, Львів, ros. Львов, not M. Lemberg) - the largest city in the west Ukraine and one of the country's cultural centers. The Lviv Old Town was entered on UNESCO World Heritage SiteLviv is situated on the border Eastern Roztocze (Roztocze Lwowskie) and Podolia Upland, by the river The fullness. It is an important industrial center, as well as an air, rail and road junction. The seventh largest city in Ukraine.

Characteristic

Demographic data: Population - 728 thousand, (2013) including approximately 80% - Ukrainians, 15% Russians, 2% Jews, 1% - Poles.

History

The city has a multicultural history. Founded in 1256 by a Ruthenian prince, re-located by Casimir the Great in 1356 under Magdeburg law. For centuries it was inhabited by the Polish and Jewish communities and, to a lesser extent, by the Ukrainian and German communities. Since 1991, within the borders of independent Ukraine, it is one of the cities with the highest percentage of the population using the Ukrainian language. Nevertheless, the most commonly known foreign languages ​​are Russian and Polish, although it is becoming easier and easier to meet young people who use relatively understandable English.

The buildings in the historic center have a Central European climate. Lviv is still underused for tourism, especially compared to Krakow or Prague. The stay is relatively cheap.

The first written mention of Lviv dates back to 1256. The city's founder is traditionally considered to be Daniel Halicki, the Duke of Halych and Volyn, and the city's name would derive from the name of his son, Lew. Archaeologists claim that the first Lędzian (Lachów) settlements in this place already existed in the 5th century. Based on the excavations, it has been established that in fact there was a settlement there in the form of a borough with a characteristic element of layout - an elongated market square. The foundation of the castle by Daniel was in fact another reconstruction after the Batu Khan invasion of 1240.

Convenient location at the intersection of trade routes contributed to the quick economic development of the city. Lviv has become an important commercial, political and economic center. In 1339, after the childless death of the last ruler, Bolesław Trojdenowicz of the Mazovian Piast dynasty, Lwów was inherited by his uncle Casimir III the Great. In 1356, Lviv was granted the Magdeburg Law. The craftsmanship developed, and guilds were established. In 1444, King Władysław III of Varna granted the city the right to store, the basis of Lviv's economic power. Two defensive castles were built: Niski (in the city) and Wysoki - on the mountain near the city, it also allowed the establishment of a school nobilium et ignobilium at the church of St. The spirit.

XVI-XVII centuries - the period of the greatest development of the city. Merchants from all over the world come to Lviv for commercial purposes. Lviv then becomes an almost cosmopolitan city: apart from Poles, Germans, Armenians, Jews, Ruthenians, Tatars and Moldovans lived here. Karaims, Serbs and others. Well-situated townspeople and noblemen build beautiful tenement houses for themselves, and do not spare money for the construction of sacred buildings, numerous churches and monasteries are built. In 1661, on the basis of the Collegium of o.o. Of the Jesuits, the Lviv University-Jan Kazimierz University is established, currently the oldest university in Ukraine.

Lviv defended itself against foreign troops many times: in 1648, the city defended itself against the Cossacks by paying a huge ransom to Chmielnicki, and from September to November 1655, Bohdan Chmielnicki besieged Lviv again, this time supported by Russian troops led by Vasyl Buturlin. In 1656, King Jan II Kazimierz returning from Silesia to Poland. Here, on April 1, 1656, in front of the miraculous image of Our Lady of Graces, he made his famous Lviv vows, in which he undertook, inter alia, to improve the well-being of the rural people fighting heroically against the Swedish army. In February 1657 another invader tried to conquer Lviv, the Transylvanian prince Jerzy II Rakoczy, but defeated by the field hetman of the crown, Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski. After the fall of Kamieniec Podolski in 1672, the army of Sultan Mehmed IV stood at the gates of Lviv, defended under the command of Eliasz Łącki. The siege of the city lasted from September 20 to October 6. Peace, humiliating Poland, was concluded in Buczacz, although the Turks, supported by Doroszeńka's Cossacks, did not conquer the city this time. In 1675 the battle of Lviv took place. Jan III Sobieski defeated the overwhelming forces of the Tatars.

After the first partition of Poland in 1772, Galicia became part of Austria (later the Austro-Hungarian Empire). Back then, she was one of the most backward provinces of hers. Under the ordinance of the new authorities, the old town fortifications were demolished and numerous religious congregations were abolished. The intensive development of industry took place in the second half of the 19th century. Crude oil deposits were opened in Borysław, a railway and a tram line were installed, gas, and with time electric lighting of the city were introduced. New districts are expanding, theaters, hotels, banks and official buildings are opening up. In 1870, Galicia gains autonomy. After the First World War, the Austro-Hungarian Empire fell apart. Countries included in its composition gained independence.

On November 1, 1918, Polish-Ukrainian fights broke out in Lviv. The Ukrainians proclaimed the West Ukrainian People's Republic. The Ukrainian coup met with the contraction of the Polish society of Lviv, which pushed the enemy out of the city after fierce fighting. The youth of Lviv, referred to as the Lviv Eaglets, has gone down in history. Attempts to take control of Lviv by the Ukrainian army lasted until June 1919, and finally the Ukrainian army was repulsed by the Polish army coming to the rescue. During the Polish-Bolshevik war in 1920 near Zadwórze, Lviv youth stopped the attack of Budyonny's cavalry and saved the city from Bolshevik occupation. November 22, 1920 - the city was awarded the Order of Virtuti Militari by the Chief of State, Józef Piłsudski.

Lviv becomes the capital of the voivodeship in the Second Polish Republic and one of the most important urban centers in the country (third after Warsaw and Łódź in terms of population). The Eastern Fair is held here. There are also three Catholic metropolises here. In 1921, an unsuccessful Ukrainian attack on Józef Piłsudski took place in Lviv. In 1926 - the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists in Lviv assassinated the curator of the Lviv school district, Sobiński. In 1929, in Lviv, which is the capital of the Lviv Province, there are 4 universities, 15 state gymnasiums (including two with Ukrainian as the language of instruction), 16 private gymnasiums (including two Jewish and one German), 8 teachers' seminars, 45 municipal primary schools and 23 private ones.

In 1939, after German aggression against Poland, Lviv successfully defended itself against the Germans and surrendered to the Soviets. The arrival of the Red Army in Lviv resulted in cruel repressions against the Polish population, exile to Siberia, and executions. In 1941, the Soviet troops withdrew from these areas under pressure from the German army. Before leaving Lviv, the NKVD murdered around 7,000. prisoners. Ukrainians announce the act of restoration of the Ukrainian state alongside Nazi Germany, but the government is arrested by the Nazis a few days later. In July and August, Ukrainian-German pogroms of the Jewish population continue. On the night of July 3–4, 1941, the Gestapo, with the participation of Ukrainian soldiers from the Nachtigall battalion, brutally arrested dozens of professors from Lviv universities, who were later shot. In 1944, Lviv was liberated by the Red Army and the Home Army. As a result of the Yalta Conference, the Western Allies agreed after the fair with Stalin to take Lviv from Poland. The Polish population of Lviv in 1946 was displaced to the so-called Recovered Earth.

At the end of the 1980s, Lviv played a leading role in the fight for independence and democracy. August 24, 1991 - the day on which the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine passed the Declaration of Independence of Ukraine.

Lviv today

The present-day Lviv is an important economic, educational and cultural center of Western Ukraine. Lviv is a kind of pearl of national culture. In terms of architecture and history, the city can be described as an open-air museum - it has more than 2,000 historical, architectural and cultural monuments. In 1998, Lviv was entered into the UNESCO international cultural heritage list. There are many museums, picture galleries, theater and music groups in the city. 12 universities in Lviv are known for their high level of teaching throughout Ukraine, as well as abroad. In addition to its enormous importance in the field of education and culture, Lviv enjoys the opinion of one of the leaders among Ukrainian cities in the field of economic reforms and the pursuit of a market system. Thanks to favorable economic conditions, there are 42,000 jobs in the Lviv region. workplaces, 775 of which have foreign investments. There are two special economic zones in the oblast, business entities that benefit from tax preferences.

Drive

By plane

Since the EURO 2012 football championship, the city has had modern airport located about 7 kilometers from the city center. The airport is landed by planes of about 18 airlines, including PLL "LOT", which maintains regular connections with Warsaw (2-3 times a day), Bydgoszcz (twice a week) and Poznań (2 times a week). Additionally, Wizz Air operates to Katowice, Wrocław and Berlin-Schönefeld. Ukrainian Airlines fly to Ivano-Frankivsk (Stanisławów), 80 km from Lviv. From spring 2018, PLL "LOT" opens a direct connection to Olsztyn, and Wizz Air to Gdańsk and Katowice.

By train

There are international trains to Lviv from several Polish cities (including Kraków and Warsaw). The journey by such a train is relatively long, due to the stopover in Przemyśl to change the bogies in the wagons (in Ukraine, the gauge of rails is different). For example, in August 2018, a stopover in Przemyśl lasted 1.5 hours. The entire journey from Krakow to Lviv takes about 8.5 hours, from Wrocław - 13 hours (an additional hour stop in Krakow Płaszów in the case of an overnight connection). We can buy tickets for international connections online on the website of the Ukrainian railway operator Ukrzaliznytsya with the help of of this manual.

An alternative may be a trip to Przemyśl and change to a Ukrainian train there. The Przemyśl - Lviv route takes less than 2 hours, the ticket costs about PLN 30 and can be purchased on the website of Ukrainian Railways [1].

By car

When choosing to travel by car, remember that there are often long lines at the border, both on one side and on the other side of the border; queues are often extended by groups of people who "arrange" faster travel (such a "service" at the Medyka-Szegini crossing costs about 150 UAH). If the owner of the vehicle is not present in the car, the driver must have its notarized authorization to use the vehicle. You should also get a green card or take out Ukrainian insurance (usually available at the border or just beyond it, the price starts from around UAH 15/2 weeks). Another inconvenience when traveling by car is the poor condition of Ukrainian roads (especially in cities) and their bad marking. There are also (although much less frequently than a few years ago) bribes are forced by the traffic police for minor traffic offenses. Recently (2013), the amount of fines collected has been changed and may reach 500 hryvnia. It should be remembered that the permissible amount of alcohol in the driver's blood is 0.0 per mille. In the city itself, you do not have to worry about car theft - there are guarded car parks for the more preventive, price approx. 5-20 UAH / day ... green card for 2 weeks it costs 49 UAH (data as of May 8, 2010) bought just after the Rawa Ruska crossing. Fuel prices in 2013 exceeded 10 hryvnia per liter (petrol) and 11 hryvnia per liter for diesel.

By bus

IN in Warsaw direct buses to Lviv depart from the Western Bus Station. Depending on the day of the week - a few or a dozen times a day. The journey takes about 7.5 to 9 hours (he crosses the border in Hrebenne / Rawa Ruska), but it should be taken into account that the waiting period at the border may extend it. The cost of a one-way ticket varies from approximately PLN 50 to PLN 90 (as of October 2017).

Direct buses also depart from Lodz (ticket price from PLN 85 - as of 02/11/2017), from Katowice (ticket price from PLN 70 - as of 02/11/2017), from Krakow (ticket price from PLN 60 - as of 02/11/2017), from Rzeszow, Lublin, Przemyśl. Buses from Przemyśl they run every hour, the ticket costs PLN 25, and the travel time is about 3.5 hours.

Buses run three times a day from Tomaszów Lubelski - departure at 6:35 (during the summer season it runs on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday, and in the school year only on weekends), 2:10 pm (runs only on working days) and 2:40 pm - the travel time is approximately 3 hours. Only the 6:35 route from Tomaszów is provided by PKS Wschód, and 2 others by the Ukrainian carrier ATP Lviv. The last bus from Lviv to Tomaszów departs at 4:30 PM, arrives to Tomaszów at 7:35 pm (cost: PLN 25). PKS Tomaszów information: tel. (084) 664-34-94

At the moment, Lviv can be reached from 65 cities all over Poland. In addition to those mentioned above, these are: Białystok, Bielsko-Biala, Bydgoszcz, Chorzow, Chrzanów, Czechowice-Dziedzice, Czestochowa, Debica, Elblag, Gdansk, Gdynia, Gliwice, Gniezno, Gorzów Wielkopolski, Grodzisk Wielkopolski, Grudziadz, Jaroslaw, Jelenia Góra, Kielce, Konin, Kutno, Legnica, Leszno, Lublin, Łańcut, Nisko, Nowa Sól, Abbots, Opole, Ostróda, Piotrkow Trybunalski, Płock, Płońsk, Poznan, Przeworsk, Pszczyna, Radom, Sandomierz, Słubice, Sochaczew, Stalowa Wola, Stargard, Sulechów, Szczecin, Świebodzin, Tarnow, Tczew, Toruń, Tychy, Włocławek, Wolsztyn, Wroclaw, September, Zabrze, Zamosc, green Mountain, Zlocieniec. Almost all carriers making trips to Lviv in Poland offer their connections through the company Eurobus Sp. z o.o.

Buses run in Lviv to the Stryjski (Central) Station, which is located at the other end of the city in relation to the railway station. Bus line 18 connects both stations.

In addition, the final stops in Lviv are: West Bus Station, ul. Gródecka 359, as well as Dworcowy square in front of the main railway station.

With changes

The cheapest way (apart from hitchhiking) to get to Lviv will be a journey with changes. The first thing you need to do is get to Przemyśl, e.g. by train. Then, at the bus station, you should catch a minibus to Medyka (they leave on average every 15 minutes), journey time about 15 minutes, cost PLN 2. You can also take the private line 9 (it stops somewhere in the city) or the bus station. The border crossing in Medyka must be covered on foot (it usually takes less than when crossing a bus). Right behind the border crossing, there is the village of Szegini, from where you can go by train or marshrutka (i.e. by bus). If we want to go by train (by truck) then we go to the train stop "Derżkordon" (which means the border), from there a suburban train goes to Lviv 4 times a day. The ticket is bought from the conductor. Besides, from the bus station (avtostance) in Szegini, marshrutkas depart to Lviv every 15–30 minutes. The journey takes about 70-100 minutes (depending on the driver's nerve) and costs 34 hryvnia (about PLN 6), the bus stops at the Lviv train station.

Accommodation

Hotels

Lviv hotels can be roughly divided into three groups: the first is old, Soviet hotels, behemoths for several hundred people, few of whom have experienced even a superficial renovation, with one bathroom for the entire floor, in which, in addition, there is only water at certain times. In recent years, several hotels from this group have been adapted to higher standards, renovated, equipped with bathrooms in the rooms (sometimes one in two rooms), increasing the price per night accordingly.

The second group are hotels that used to be intended for guests from outside the USSR, often located in historic buildings, with a dozen or so hotels built in recent years. They are characterized by a high standard of rooms and usually high prices for accommodation. The third is modern and very good hotels in the center of Lviv.

Hotels in Lviv are very cheap. In the historic Georg Hotel, a night in a double room costs about 200 zlotys. Similarly in the four-star Saint Feder hotel and slightly more expensive and at the same time much better hotels such as Nobilis, Atlas Deluxe or five-star Citadel Inn. In the latter, the cost of accommodation ranges from PLN 400 for a double room.

Private accommodation

Many tourists visiting the city use the guest rooms of Lviv families. Even though the standard is not a hotel standard, you can see the city life inside out this way. It is also one of the most expensive accommodation - the price is about PLN 40 per person, which is more than renting the entire apartment in the center. Some families also offer meals (at an additional cost).

At the railway station and on the market square (near the center of Polish culture) you can meet people offering accommodation with Poles living in the center of Lviv. The price per night (August 2006) is $ 6.

Flats (apartments)

Lviv has a large base of flats rented for days, prepared especially for tourists. Most of them are refurbished premises, adapted to European standards, without problems with water supply. They have an equipped kitchen, allowing you to prepare simple meals on your own. In terms of price, they can easily compete with better hotels - the cost of an apartment ranges from about PLN 60 to a maximum of PLN 100 for a studio apartment and usually around PLN 140 for a multi-person apartment. It is best to look for offers in legally operating companies or on the Internet on Booking and Airbnb.

Hostels, campsites

Hostels and campsites are still not very popular form of accommodation in Lviv. There are several hostels, usually located in adapted former dormitories, the price of which is comparable to that of rooms in private families, or more, they are mostly located close to the center. There is also one campsite near Lviv.

  • Mini Hostel Lviv, Sichovyh Streltsov St., 12, Ap. 16, 380-97-9315628, e-mail: . Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour). 380-97-9315628, e-mail: [[2]]. Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour). 380-97-9315628, e-mail: [[3]]. Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour). 380-97-9315628, e-mail: [[4]]. Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour). 380-97-9315628, e-mail: [[5]]. Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour). 380-97-9315628, e-mail: [[6]]. Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour). 380-97-9315628, e-mail: [[7]]. Check-in: 12:00, check-out: 11:00. From € 5. The Mini Hostel is a stone's throw from the Opera House. Free wi-fi, maps, coffee, tea and free pub crawl (local pub tour).

Districts

City transport

Marshrutkas

The most common means of transport in Lviv are marshrutkas. This name is used to describe buses that run on a specific route. There are several dozen lines of marshrutkas, they reach almost every corner of the city. They do not have designated stops (apart from a few in the center), they stop on request. The journey costs 7 UAH (February 2019) - you pay the driver upon boarding. There are also suburban marshrutkas that run to places around Lviv and even beyond the borders of the region. They stop at suburban stations.

Trams

Tram

Electric trams have been running around Lviv since 1894 and were the first in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Lviv is one of the few cities in Europewhere trams pass through the market square. The tram tracks are quite often arranged along curbs (Ruska, Kopernika streets). For this reason, drivers often park their cars in the middle of the street.

There are 9 tram lines:

  • 1 (Railway Station - Market Square): main Railway Station - Czerniwiecka - Gródecka - Bandery - Kopernika - Słowackiego - Doroszenki - Rynek - Ruska - Pidwalna - Franki - Witowskiego - Neczuja-Lewicki - Kotlarewskiego - Kijowska - Rusowych - Bandery - Gródecka - Czerniowiecka - Dworzec;
  • 2 (Konowalca - Pasieczna): Konowalca - Melnyka - Czuprynki - Copernicus - Słowacki - Doroszenki - Ruska - Pidwalna - Łyczakowska - Pasieczna;
  • 3 (Fr. Olgi - Soborny Square): Fr. Olga - Sakharov - Vitebski - Franki - pl. Soborny;
  • 4 (Muszaka - Zamarstynowska): Zamarstynowska - Chmielnickiego - Gonty - pl. Daniel Halicki - Pidwalna - Franki - Swiencicki - Muszak;
  • 5 (Zamarstynowska - Fr. Olgi): Fr. Olgi - Sakharowa - Witowskiego - Franki - Pidwalna - pl. Daniel Halicki - Gonta - Chmielnicki;
  • 6 (Dworzec - Promysłowa): Promysłowa - Chmielnickiego - Hajdamacka - Zamarstynowska - Chmielnickiego - Torhowa - Gródecka - Czerniowiecka - Railway Station;
  • 7 (Shevchenko - Wachnianina): Shevchenko - Gródecka - Torhowa - Gonty - Pidwalna - Łyczakowska - Mecznykowa (cm. Łyczakowski) - Wachnianyna;
  • 8 (Fr. Olga - Wachnianyna);
  • 9 (Railway Station - Market Square): same as 1, only in the opposite direction.

Worth seeing

Market

The historic center of Lviv was inscribed on the UNESCO National Heritage List in 1998. The most valuable monuments include: the Latin Cathedral built in the Gothic style (Archcathedral Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary) and the 14th-century Armenian Cathedral, St. Jura (the cathedral church of the Halych metropolis), the complex of the Renaissance Wallachian Church (Uspieńska) located on Ruska Street, the Baroque Dominican and Jesuit Churches and the Renaissance Bernardine Church, the Market Square with the Classicist Town Hall, the Union of Lublin Mound, the Arsenal, Baszta, Baszta, erected at the beginning of the 19th century. Powder Tower, the City and Skarbkowski Theater, Ossolineum, the Main Railway Station built in the Art Nouveau style (1903), the oldest in Ukraine, founded in 1661, the University and the Lviv Polytechnic, operating since 1844, and Lychakiv Cemetery. Being in Lviv you must visit Cemetery of the Lviv Eaglets - it is of particular importance to Poles.

In addition, everyone who visits Lviv must walk one of the main promenades of Lviv, called Aleja Wolności. It was created at the end of the 19th century, when the Pełtew riverbed was sealed and originally it was called Wały Hetmańskich.

It is worth a try

Nearest neighborhood

Science

work

Shopping

Gastronomy

A wide range of restaurants in the city center. Prices several times lower than in Poland. In the cheapest places, dinner costs about PLN 10 per person. A middle-class two-course dinner with liqueur and dessert costs about PLN 30. In luxury restaurants like Mon Chef we will pay less than PLN 100. It can be somewhat confusing to refer to some restaurants as "Cafe" or "Kaviarna".

You can recommend Galician tripe in the restaurant "Kumpel" (Volodymyra Vynnchenka 6). Restaurant owned by Buddy groups (owner of, among others, Baczewskie Restaurants and Cafe 1) has its own mini-brewery.
If someone wants to combine sightseeing with viewing photos of pre-war Lviv, we can recommend the restaurant "Kupol" (ul. Czajkowskiego, at the foot of the Citadel, former Willa Zawiata), but it is better not to order food there because it is on a tragic level. A similar set of souvenirs can be seen in the little-known Art cafe.

In addition, in Lviv, local beer "Lviv Live" is highly recommendable. It is worth seeing the list of the most interesting restaurants in Lviv and ranking TripAdvisor.

Parties

Security

Lviv is considered a relatively safe city. Tourists in the city are safe. In 2018, the city was among the top places in Ukraine where they most often occur new measles outbreaks.

tourist information

Логотип Львова англійською.png
  • "Tourist Information Center in Lviv" has been operating since 2009. In preparation for the Euro 2012 football championship, a Tourist Information Center was opened at the railway station and at the airport.

The Tourist Information Center provides free of charge: necessary information about the city; city ​​maps; brochures with individual tours and other printed matter (including English-speaking guides Lviv In Your Pocket); information about current events in the city; information on public and national transport; any other information regarding e.g. food and accommodation in Lviv.

You can communicate with the employees of the Center in the following languages: Ukrainian, Russian, Polish, English and German.

Tourist Information Center in Lviv, Lviv, Rynek 1 (premises No. 124, in the building of the Town Hall), 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: . Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services. 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: [[8]]. Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services. 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: [[9]]. Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services. 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: [[10]]. Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services. 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: [[11]]. Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services. 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: [[12]]. Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services. 38 (032) 254 60 79, fax: 38 (032) 254 60 79, e-mail: [[13]]. Mon-Fri 10: 00-20: 00 Sat 10: 00-19: 00 Sun 10: 00-18: 00. free services.

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This website uses content from the website: Lviv published on Wikitravel; authors: w editing history; Copyright: under license CC-BY-SA 1.0
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