Wisła Kraków Stadium (Synerise Arena)
Roughly 45,000 fans crammed in for a 1976 UEFA Cup clash with Celtic — the rebuilt ground now caps at 33,326.
Coming soon on iOS — be first to walk Krakow offline.
Wisła Kraków's home has stood on this spot since 1953 — the third stadium the club has used since 1914. Fully reconstructed by October 2011 with four new stands and a media pavilion, it meets UEFA Category 4 standards and carries the name of club legend Henryk Reyman, enshrined by city council in January 2008.
What to look for
- The 'Brandenburg Gates' — a characteristic feature of the original 1953 stadium, positioned on the stands behind the goals; whether any trace of them survived the complete 2003–2011 rebuild is not confirmed
- The fully roofed four-stand bowl: all 33,326 seats covered, the result of an eight-year rebuild completed in October 2011
- The stadium name itself — Henryk Reyman Municipal Stadium — honoring the legendary Wisła player whose name the city formally attached by council resolution in January 2008
Check Wisła Kraków's fixture list before visiting — the stadium comes alive on match days and non-matchday access varies.
Wisła Kraków Stadium (Synerise Arena) is one of 37 sights worth the detour in Krakow, all bundled offline in Voyage GO — download the Krakow pack and it sits on your map with no signal, filling your travel passport the moment you walk past.
More to see in Krakow
- Wieliczka Salt MineSeven centuries of miners carved chapels and statues out of grey rock salt — 327 metres underground.
- Wawel CathedralPolish kings were crowned here for centuries, and a young priest named Karol Wojtyła said his first Mass in its crypt on 2 November 1946 — thirty-two years before becoming Pope.
- Wawel Royal CastlePolish monarchs were crowned and buried here — the limestone hill above the Vistula is where a nation kept its memory.
- St. Mary's BasilicaEvery hour, a trumpeter plays from the taller tower and stops dead mid-note — commemorating a 13th-century trumpeter who was shot in the throat mid-signal before a Mongol attack on the city.
- Wawel CastlePolish monarchs were crowned and buried here — and their palace now holds Europe's largest collection of Ottoman tents.
- National Museum in KrakówPoland's largest museum holds 780,000 objects — and a Bruegel the Nazis stole in 1939 that never came back.