Official Name: | Tricity |
Native Name: | Trójmiasto |
Settlement Type: | Urban area |
Image Map1: | Gdansk-Gdynia-Sopot.png |
Map Caption1: | Powiats of Gdansk, Gdynia and Sopot (in red) |
Pushpin Map: | Poland |
Pushpin Label Position: | bottom |
Coordinates: | 54.4333°N 51°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Poland |
Subdivision Type1: | Voivodeship |
Subdivision Name1: | Pomeranian |
Leader Title: | Mayor of Gdańsk |
Leader Name: | Aleksandra Dulkiewicz |
Leader Title1: | Mayor of Gdynia |
Leader Name1: | Aleksandra Kosiorek |
Area Total Km2: | 414.81 |
Population Total: | 749,786 |
Population As Of: | 2021 |
Population Density Km2: | 1806 |
Population Metro: | 1,098,379 |
Demographics Type2: | GDP |
Demographics2 Footnotes: | [1] |
Demographics2 Title1: | Urban area |
Demographics2 Info1: | €23.781 billion (2021) |
Area Code: | +48 058 |
Leader Title2: | Mayor of Sopot |
Leader Name2: | Magdalena Czarzyńska-Jachim |
Timezone: | CET |
Utc Offset: | +1 |
Timezone Dst: | CEST |
Utc Offset Dst: | +2 |
Blank Name: | Car Plates |
Blank Info: | GA, XA, GD, XD, GSP |
Tricity, or Tri-City (Polish: Trójmiasto; pronounced as /pl/, Kashubian: Trzëgard; pronounced as /csb/; German: Dreistadt), is an urban area in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland, consisting of three contiguous coastal cities in Pomerelia forming a row on the coastline of the Gdańsk Bay, Baltic Sea, namely the cities of Gdańsk, Gdynia, and Sopot, along with other cities and towns in their vicinity. In 2021, the three core cities were inhabited by 749,786 people, while the Tricity together with its metropolitan area had a combined population of between 1 and 1.5 million, depending on the definition of the boundaries of the latter.
The designation has been used informally or semi-formally only. A strategic cooperation declaration, the Tricity Charter (Polish: Karta Trójmiasta), was signed by the three city mayors on 28 March 2007. The only incorporated common management authority in the Tricity metro is the Gdańsk Bay Public Transport Metropolitan Union (Polish: Metropolitalny Związek Komunikacyjny Zatoki Gdańskiej) which is, despite the name, an inter-municipal union and not a metropolitan one.
Nearly 35% of taxpayers from Tricity are in the middle and high taxable income groups (average for Poland 10%). Approximately 12% of Tricity taxpayers are in the highest taxable income group (Polish average 3%).
The total population of the 3 cities comprising Tricity (Gdańsk + Gdynia + Sopot):
The Tricity metropolitan area also includes Wejherowo, Reda, Rumia, Pruszcz Gdański, and several other communities. The total population in 2006 was 1,100,500, in an area of 1580.69 km2.
The Tricity continuous urban area includes following cities:
City | Area 1996 km2 | Area 2017 km2 | Pop. 1996 | Pop. 1999 | Pop. 2003 | Pop. 2019 | Pop. 2023 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gdańsk | 265.03 | 261.96 | 462,336 | 457,937 | 461,011 | 470,907 | 486,492 | |
Gdynia | 135.49 | 135.14 | 251,932 | 255,014 | 253,500 | 246,348 | 242,141 | |
Sopot | 17.31 | 17.31 | 43,360 | 42,333 | 41,017 | 35,719 | 32,115 | |
Pruszcz Gdański | 16.47 | 16.47 | 21,470 | 21,757 | 23,187 | 31,326 | 32,093 | |
Rumia | 32,86 | 30.10 | ? | 40,200 | 43,000 | 49,230 | 52,931 | |
Reda | 26.39 | 33.46 | 15,422 | 17,510 | 17,868 | 26,307 | 28,588 | |
Wejherowo | 25.65 | 26.99 | 47,357 | 47,038 | 46,900 | 49,505 | 46,271 | |
Total | 513.42 | 504.96 | 882,871 | 884,080 | 885,240 | 909,342 | 920,631 |
According to official EU publication[2] the population of Larger Urban Zone of Tricity is 1,098,379.
The Tricity is an important center of education.
Some of the universities in the Tricity:
Cinemas:
Theatres:
Opera house and Philharmonic
Museums and art galleries
Tricity has a temperate climate with warm summers and mild winters. The climate regime differs significantly between cities with Gdańsk belonging to a humid continental climate (monthly mean temperature below zero for two months a year) and Gdynia to oceanic climate (no monthly mean temperature below freezing) according to Koppen-Geiger classificiation. Rain is possible all year round. Autumns are warmer than springs due to the warming effect of the adjacent Baltic Sea. Winters are wet, windy and mild, compared to the interior of Poland. Sea temperatures have been rising significantly during last decades prolonging the summer season to five months in recent years.
See main article: Sport in Tricity. Tricity has a number of professional teams, which compete in basketball, volleyball, speedway, handball, rugby union and football.
The most known football clubs, contesting the Tricity Derby, are Lechia Gdańsk and Arka Gdynia.
Both clubs also possess highly successful rugby teams, RC Arka, who play at the National Rugby Stadium and RC Lechia. There is a third top-flight Polish rugby team Ogniwo Sopot, making the Tricity Poland's rugby capital.
The third football club is Bałtyk Gdynia, in the past also a multi-sports club with over 20 different sections.
Wybrzeże Gdańsk are the Tricity's speedway team, formerly a multi-sports club, now its only other remaining section is the reactivated handball team, former ten-times men's Polish champions.
Arka also fields a men's and women's professional basketball team while Trefl Sopot is the other men's professional basketball club in the Tricity.
Stoczniowiec Gdańsk is the local ice hockey team.
The Tricity has a well-developed traffic infrastructure and public transport system. Development of the Tricity was smoothed by the construction of the rapid transit rail (SKM) 1951, binding the whole area from Tczew by Gdańsk, Sopot 1953, Gdynia 1956, Reda, Rumia to Wejherowo 1957. In 1975, the Tricity Beltway was constructed.
The Gdańsk Bay Public Transport Metropolitan Union (MZKZG), a body incorporated by the municipalities in the area to act as a common public transport authority, issues tickets valid both for the SKM Rapid Transit Rail, as well as for all or some of the trams and buses in Gdańsk or trolleybuses and buses in Sopot and Gdynia.
The backbone of the Tricity is the inner highway. It starts in Gdańsk and goes through Sopot, Gdynia, Rumia and Reda to Wejherowo. It consists of 2-4 lanes in each direction.
The dual carriageway Tricity Beltway (Obwodnica Trójmiejska) starts in the vicinity of Pruszcz Gdański and goes through the western districts of Gdańsk to Gdynia-Chylonia.
The variety and number of public bus lines and coach connections facilitates the travel around the Tricity and surrounding areas. One of the most popular means of transport in the Pomerania province is the public coach. The high number of bus lines covers every quarter of the three cities within the metropolis. In addition to usual buses, the cities of Gdynia and Sopot also operate trolleybuses.
The city of Gdańsk operates a well-developed tram system.
The Tricity area is served by the SKM rail network (known in Polish as Szybka Kolej Miejska w Trójmieście or "Tricity Rapid Transit Rail"). It currently provides regular service primarily on two dedicated railways complemented by some of the ordinary railways in the region, both as a commuter rail connecting some of the peripheral towns and villages with each other and with the principal cities of Gdańsk, Gdynia and Sopot, as well as internal rapid transit service within the urban core formed by the three cities. The intervals range from every 6 minutes during peak time on the main common section between Gdańsk and Gdynia to 30 minutes at the farthest ends.
The rapid transit rail network has achieved since its inception in 1951 a unifying effect on the metro area formerly divided by a frontier, by linking the connected localities with a frequent and reliable service. More recently, a pre-war railway destroyed in 1945 by the retreating German army has been reconstructed as the 19.5 km Pomorska Kolej Metropolitalna (Pomeranian Metropolitan Railway) or PKM line, also been operated by the SKM, and put into service in 2015, providing connection of the downtown station of Gdańsk Wrzeszcz Station with the Gdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport, with further service to the Gdynia Główna Station provided via an earlier existing railway, thus forming a loop connected to the primary SKM line directly at its southern terminus, while the northern terminus is connected indirectly through an earlier existing line. The primary SKM line has been served by overhead-powered electrical multiple units since its inauguration, while the PKM line is currently serviced by oil-powered units, though it is scheduled for imminent electrification.
The area is well connected to the rest of the Pomerania region, as well as Poland and the rest of Europe. Polregio network provides a regional rail service connecting the cities and towns of the Pomerania. Gdańsk Główny and Gdynia Główna serve as major rail hubs for the area, with these stations and five others, Gdańsk Wrzeszcz, Gdańsk Oliwa, Sopot, Wejherowo and Rumia offering inter-city services to cities around Poland and in other countries, operated by Polish State Railways under the PKP Intercity branding. Most of the stations that are served by regional and inter-city rail are also part of the above-mentioned SKM network.
Gdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport is one of the three busiest Polish international airports. Its position is associated with a well-developed network of domestic and international transport connections provided in response to the growing demand for business and tourist travel.
The Gdańsk Airport is located 10 km from the centre of Gdańsk, about the same distance from the centre of Sopot and 23 km from the centre of Gdynia. The continually expanding road system which connects the airport with the city centres allows drivers to cover the distances in about 15–20 minutes. The close vicinity of the Tri-city by-pass and junctions with state motorways nos. 1, 6 and 7 facilitates access from areas outside the Tri-city. The convenient location of the airport makes it easy for travellers and cargo carriers to transfer from air to road, and also to the railway network and seaports. Gdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport has its own railway siding which can be used for handling large lots of cargo dispatched by air.
The Gdańsk Airport operates even the biggest planes and allows thousands of tourists to visit the Pomerania province every day. Just in front of the main entrance to the passenger terminal, the visitors can find a bus that will take them to the city centre. There are frequent SKM trains running from the train station in front of the airport to Gdynia, Gdańsk Wrzeszcz, Kartuzy and Kościerzyna. A passenger may also choose to take a taxi.
A failed attempt was undertaken to partially repurpose the Military Gdynia-Kosakowo Airport into a dual-use military and civil one.
Gdańsk:
Gdynia:
Sopot: