Top 5 Abandoned Places in Poland (Best Urbex Spots)

Poland is one of Europe's most extraordinary destinations for urban exploration — a country where three layers of 20th-century history have each left their abandoned places: German Wehrmacht bases, Nazi forced labour camps, and Soviet military installations all within a single landscape. Abandoned places in Poland span medieval castle ruins, WWII labour camp sites, Soviet-era ghost towns, and the vast industrial ruins of Silesia's coal and steel belt. Here are the 5 best, selected from our Urbex Poland Map500+ GPS locations across Poland.

Why Poland Is One of Europe's Best Urbex Destinations

Poland's turbulent 20th century produced abandoned places at a density and historical weight found nowhere else in Europe. German occupation, Soviet annexation, Communist industrialisation, and post-1989 economic transformation have each left their physical traces — often in the same building, in the same town. Every abandoned site in Poland is simultaneously a piece of German, Soviet, and Polish history.

📍 All locations below are referenced on our Urbex Poland Map — GPS coordinates, access notes, condition ratings, and explorer reports included.


1. Kłomino – Poland's Only Official Ghost Town (Known Location)

The most extraordinary ghost town in Central Europe. Kłomino in West Pomerania is the only settlement officially recognised as a ghost town by the Polish government — a military base that was German Wehrmacht in the 1930s, Soviet Army from 1945, and completely abandoned when the Red Army withdrew from Poland in 1993. For decades it existed only on Soviet military maps, invisible to the outside world. Today: derelict apartment blocks that once housed 5,000 soldiers and their families, a collapsed cinema with Soviet propaganda murals still on the last standing wall, and five permanent residents who refuse to leave.

Architecture Soviet military garrison town — residential, civic
Condition ⭐⭐☆☆☆ Deteriorated
Access ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Easy
Photo potential ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Exceptional

👉 Story: Built as Wehrmacht Westfalenhof in the 1930s. Converted to Soviet base 1945 — hosting 60,000 troops at peak. Removed from all Western maps for decades. Red Army withdrew 1993. Offered for sale at €2 million by the Polish government — no buyers found. Recognised as Poland's only official ghost town.

🔗 More on Kłomino: Wikipedia – Kłomino


2. Liban Quarry – The Schindler's List Filming Location, Kraków (Known Location)

The most historically charged abandoned site in Poland. Liban Quarry in Kraków's Podgórze district was a limestone quarry established in 1873, turned into a Nazi forced labour camp in 1942 using prisoners from the nearby Płaszów concentration camp. In 1993, Steven Spielberg filmed Schindler's List here — reconstructing Płaszów's barracks, watchtowers, and gate on the original site. The film props were largely left in place. Today the quarry is overgrown with vegetation, its rusting machinery, barbed wire fences, and Spielberg's film barracks slowly being consumed by nature and swamp.

Architecture WWII forced labour quarry + 1993 film set
Condition ⭐⭐☆☆☆ Overgrown
Access ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Easy
Photo potential ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Exceptional

👉 Story: Limestone quarry established 1873 by two Jewish families. Converted to Nazi forced labour camp 1942. Used as filming location for Schindler's List 1993 — Spielberg reconstructed the Płaszów camp here. Props left in place. Now an overgrown memorial site accessible on foot from Kraków city centre.

🔗 Also read: Top 5 Abandoned Places in Kraków →


Discover the best abandoned places near you – Carte Urbex


3. The Abandoned Silesian Coal Mine – Upper Silesia (Exclusive on our Map)

A derelict coal mine in Upper Silesia — headframes rising above the industrial landscape, production halls with original Soviet-era machinery still on the floor, and a miners' changing room where the last shift left their boots in the lockers.

Architecture Silesian coal mine — headframe, halls, processing
Condition ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ Medium
Access ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ Medium
Photo potential ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Exceptional

👉 Story: Upper Silesia was one of Europe's most important coal regions for over a century. Post-1989 economic transformation made dozens of mines unviable — closed in waves from the 1990s to 2010s. Several preserve their original infrastructure intact, including headframes, sorting facilities, and miners' welfare buildings. Exact location available on our Urbex Poland Map.


4. The Abandoned German Palace – Lower Silesia (Exclusive on our Map)

A neo-Gothic or neo-Baroque German aristocratic palace in Lower Silesia, abandoned after 1945 when its owners were expelled and the building changed hands repeatedly without ever finding a stable new purpose.

Architecture German aristocratic palace — 19th century
Condition ⭐⭐☆☆☆ Deteriorated
Access ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Easy
Photo potential ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Exceptional

👉 Story: Lower Silesia contains hundreds of former German aristocratic estates abandoned after 1945 when the German population was expelled and Polish settlers moved in. Many mansions were used as collective farm storage, then left when the farms collapsed. Their German owners never returned. Exact location available on our Urbex Poland Map.


5. The Abandoned Soviet Military Base – Western Poland (Exclusive on our Map)

A decommissioned Soviet military installation in western Poland — barracks, a parade ground, a canteen with Soviet murals still on the walls, and a vehicle depot with abandoned military trucks slowly rusting in the forest.

Architecture Soviet military base — barracks, depot, civic
Condition ⭐⭐☆☆☆ Deteriorated
Access ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ Medium
Photo potential ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ Very good

👉 Story: Poland hosted hundreds of Soviet military installations from 1945 to 1993. When the Red Army withdrew, it left behind barracks, vehicle depots, and infrastructure across western and northern Poland — many never converted to civilian use, simply sealed and left. Exact location available on our Urbex Poland Map.


Urbex Poland – Safety & Legal Reminder

Urban exploration in Poland is a legal grey area. Entering private or abandoned property without permission is trespassing. Always:

  • Research each site thoroughly before visiting
  • Explore with at least one other person
  • Wear protective gear — mask, gloves, and sturdy boots
  • Never force access or cause damage to any structure
  • Respect the spaces and leave no trace

The urbex code applies everywhere: "Take nothing but photographs, leave nothing but footprints."


❓ FAQ – Urbex Poland

What is the most famous abandoned place in Poland?
Kłomino is the most internationally recognised — Poland's only official ghost town, a Soviet military base abandoned in 1993, still visible with derelict apartment blocks, Soviet murals, and a population of five. Liban Quarry in Kraków is the most historically powerful — a WWII forced labour site that became the filming location for Schindler's List.

How do I get to Kłomino?
Kłomino is located near Borne Sulinowo in West Pomeranian Voivodeship, approximately 12 km from Szczecinek. There is no public transport — a car is required. From Szczecin allow approximately 2 hours; from Warsaw approximately 4 hours.

What makes Poland unique for urbex compared to other European countries?
Poland is the only country in Europe where German Wehrmacht bases, Nazi forced labour camps, and Soviet military infrastructure coexist in the same landscape — often in the same building. Added to this are hundreds of abandoned German aristocratic palaces in Lower Silesia, the industrial ruins of the Silesian coal belt, and the vast textile mill complexes of Łódź.


🎯 Conclusion

Poland offers the most historically layered urban exploration in Europe — a country where every abandoned place is simultaneously German, Soviet, and Polish history. From the ghost town that existed only on Soviet maps to the quarry where Spielberg filmed the Holocaust, every derelict site in Poland carries a weight that no other European urbex destination can match.

Thanks to our Urbex Poland Map, you get access to over 500 unique locations — GPS coordinates, access ratings, photos, and explorer reports for every spot.

🗺️ Explore the full Urbex Poland Map →

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