Radomsko is a 46,000-strong city in Lodz province located in the Przedborska Highlands on the Radomka River between Lodz and Czestochowa. Due to its long history - Radomsko was granted city rights in 1266, was a royal city of the Crown of the Polish Kingdom and witnessed many historically important events - you can find many monuments and remnants of past centuries there. In particular, the Regional Museum introducing the history of the city and its surroundings, located in the Radomsko City Hall building, is worth a visit. Also noteworthy are the wooden church of St. Mary Magdalene, the Collegiate Church of St. Lambert and the villas and townhouses in the city center. The historic Tartar Homestead and the Museum of Printing of the Kaminski Family are also interesting objects to visit.
The city is located in central Poland by important transportation routes - national and provincial roads. There is a railroad station in Radomsko, from which trains leave for Warsaw, Lodz, Piotrkow Trybunalski, Czestochowa, Krakow or Wroclaw, but also for Gdansk or Szczecin. Since 1846, the city was on the Warsaw-Vienna Railway.
You should know that if you want to visit Radomsko, intercity and international buses arrive at the stop on Kolejowa Street, near the railroad station. The Radomsko PKS bus station, from which local buses depart, is located a little further away, at 5 Kraszewskiego St. Current timetables for international and domestic bus lines passing through Radomsko can be found on our website.
Brussels is one of Europe's most interesting cities. Firstly, because of its history, and secondly, because of the importance it gained after the end of the Second World War, as from 1958 the Belgian capital was the headquarters of the European Economic Community, and in 1967 the headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was also moved there.
You can get to and from Brussels, among others, by Sindbad coaches. Our buses stop on Boulevard Pacheco in front of Bruxelles Congres. From there it is close to the Brussels-North railroad station, for example.
Brussels is a large city, as evidenced by the number of extensive parks and the number of monuments the city offers. Noteworthy are the Royal Palace, the Grand Place and the Brussels Park.
There are a large number of museums in the city, including the Belgian Comic Strip Center, Europe's most famous comic strip museum, where you'll learn about the entire process of creating comic strips such as the Smurfs.
If you decide to take a trip to Brussels with our lines, it's worth knowing that the Belgian capital has four metro lines and! Two lines of the premetro, which is a kind of underground tramway.
If, on the other hand, you decide to get around the city by rental car, remember that Brussels has one of the highest shares of main roads, where the speed limit is sometimes less than 70%. Therefore, driving in the city can be frustrating.
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