OPENING HOURS
BUILDING OPENING HOURS
Monday – Friday: from 11 AM to 6 PM
Saturday – Sunday: from 12.00 PM to 4 PM
During the opening hours you can visit current exhibitions.
The last entrance to the exhibitions takes place half an hour before the closing of the building.
OFFICE OPENING HOURS
Monday – Friday: from 9 AM to 5 PM
Saturday – Sunday: CLOSED
Admission to the building and all exhibitions is free (individual client)
Fee for using the space of the Dialogue Center for organized groups (over 10 people)
– PLN 5.00 (per person).
Price list for organized groups (over 10 people) at the Marek Edelman Dialogue Center in Łódź:
1) guided tour in Polish in the amount of PLN 150.00 (in words: one hundred and fifty Polish zlotys 00/100)
2) guided tour in English in the amount of PLN 250.00 (in words: two hundred and fifty Polish zlotys 00/100).
GUIDED TOUR
If you would like to arrange a guided tour please contact: biuro@centrumdialogu.com
LECTURES FOR SCHOOLS
If you would like to arrange a lecture for students or pupils please contact: edukacja@centrumdialogu.com
ACCESIBILITY
Dialogue Center offers accessibility for visitors using a wheelchair or walking aid. Toilets for the disabled are located on the ground floor. Lifts are suitable for wheelchairs weighing up to 500kg.
The exact number of survivors of the Lodz Ghetto is not known – it is estimated at between 7 and 12 thousand people. The Survivors’ Park is dedicated to those very people and their memory. One form of such commemoration is the idea of dedicating a tree in the Park to the Survivors. Until today, 545 such trees have been planted - the first ones in 2004 and the last in October 2011, during the 70th anniversary of the deportation of Jews from Western Europe to the Lodz ghetto.
The main compositional axis of the Park is the Arnold Mostowicz Avenue. It links the Monument of Poles Saving Jews during World War II with the Memorial Hill, on top of which the bench of Jan Karski stands. Along the avenue granite plaques are laid, engraved with the names of the Survivors of the Litzmannstadt Ghetto and the numbers of trees assigned to them in the Park.