
An underwater archeological station- âmedieval portâ.
A small fragment of the foundations of the castle of the Teutonic Knights erected in the 14th -16th centuries(the north-west part of the town) which was excavated during archeological works. In its place a protestant church was built.
The former convent of the Sisters of St Elizabeth.(Nowadays it is a hospital)
A former orphanage building, so called âLittle Hospitalâ, (ul. WaĹowa). It was built in 1757 (according to other sources in 1725). Along with the adjacent half-timbered building from the first half of the 19th century it has housed the ethnographic department of the Puck Region Museum since 1971 (in summer, open on Tue- Fr from 9am to 5pm , on Sat-Sun from 10am to 2pm, outside the season on Mon-Fr from 9am to 3pm, on Saturday from 10am to 2pm)
The town centreâs grid of streets with the rectangular market square in the middle has survived from the town foundation times. Two- and three-storey tenements in the market square dating from the 18th century were converted in the 19th and the beginning of 20th centuries. The old 18th-century âGolden Lion Innâ (pl. WolnoĹci 17) and a tenement with an adjacent small corner tower (pl. WolnoĹci 33) are surely worth seeing.
The Town Hall, built in 1865 on the basements of old tenements in neo-Gothic style. Nowadays it is Registry Office and non-governmental organizations centre.
St Paul and Peter the Apostles Church. A Gothic brick building erected in the 14th and 15th centuries with the 13th âcentury relics. Apart from the short protestant period falling in the years 1556-1589, this parish church was used by Catholics. An oriented, multi-nave building with three naves, an isolated chancel, side chapels and a massive western tower with two adjacent chapels, the Wejhers Chapel from the south and the Baptism Chapel form the north. The towerâs frieze dated to the 13th century cannot escape oneâs attention. The interior dĂŠcor of this parish church might leave the visitor enchanted with multiplicity of styles. There are, among others, paintings from the latter half of the 17th century and the Renaissance portraits of Ernest Wejher and his wife, Anna. The Renaissance altar with the Hermann Hanâs painting presenting the Crucifixion and the forged grille closing the Wejhers Chapel are works of high artistic quality.













