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Production hall regions

Central Poland
The area of the Łódź Province is 5.8% of the total area of Poland. Lodz, the provincial capital, is the third largest Polish city, with approx. 750,000 population. Łódź and nearby cities form an urban agglomeration with over 1.1 million population. Average population density in the province is approx. 140 persons per sq. km. Unemployment rate is currently 11.6%, which is the Polish average. The province is strategically located in the heart of Poland. The province's location was of historic ...
Gdansk & Szczecin
Tri-city area Northern Poland, covering 6% of the country’s area, is one of the smaller Polish provinces. The average population density in the province is 122 persons per square kilometre. The unemployment rate is 11.9%, which is about the Polish average. Virtually all business is concentrated in the Tri-city region (the cities of Gdańsk, Gdynia and Sopot). There are two large shipping ports in the Tri-city area, in Gdańsk and Gdynia. A large distribution centre is planned in the Northern ...
Krakow
Małopolska Province covers 5.8% of the area of Poland. The average population density is relatively high at 218 persons per square kilometre. The unemployment rate is at 9.9%, which is below the Polish average. With 757,000 inhabitants, Krakow is the third largest Polish city. The province is located in mid-south Poland and has very good transport links: the main transit route from the Western Europe to Ukraine (A4 motorway), good railroad links (TINAIII European transit link), and Krakow-Balice international airport ...
Poznan
The Greater Poland Province (Wielkopolska), with its capital in Poznań, is one of the largest provinces in Poland. Population density is also high at 114 persons per sq. km. Unemployment rate is 9%, which is below the Polish average. The region is superbly located in respect of transit routes to and from Western Europe. The transit traffic runs via A2 highway south of Poznań. When the entire A2 highway soon reaches the German border and Warsaw, as planned, the main ...
Torun & Bydgoszcz
Upper Silesia
The area of Silesia Province is 3.9% of the total area of Poland, which is relatively low. The Silesia Province is one of the most densely populated regions in Poland (population density of 376 persons per square km). Unemployment rate is currently 9.6%, which is below the Polish average. The city of Katowice is the provincial capital; however the region is characterized by its specific feature, i.e. the Silesian Agglomeration, where nearly 60% population of the region reside. The agglomeration ...
Warsaw Inner
Masovia Province, with Warsaw, the capital city of Poland, is the largest of Polish provinces, both in the terms of area (11.4%) and population (13.6%). The region has the largest workforce with varied skills, sporting the highest number of universities and colleges in Poland. Other advantages of this region include the high activity and entrepreneurial spirit of the inhabitants of the Warsaw agglomeration, young workforce and a good level of education in Warsaw and other cities in the province (Płock, ...
Warsaw Suburbs
Wroclaw
The area of the Lower Silesia Province is 6.4% of the total area of Poland. Wroclaw, the provincial capital, is one of the largest Polish cities, with population of approx. 3 million. Average population density in the province is 144 persons per sq. km. Unemployment rate is currently 12.5%, which is approximately the Polish average. The fact that labour costs in the province are several times lower than in other European countries and relatively lower than in other regions of ...


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