During this comprehensive full day private tour you will discover the most interesting Lviv buildings from the Art Nouveau era, both in the city center and in the New World area.
Your tour will will be guided by an experienced tour guide that is an Art Nouveau expert because we want you to discover the beauty and history of Art Nouveau in the city of Lviv in the best of the ways. In order to design this tour our guides have had the support of the best academic Art Nouveau experts in Lviv.
The first part of this 7 hours tour (4 walking and 3 by minivan) will be around the city center. We will start by visiting the Center for Urban History of East Central Europe. To get a kickstart of the historical and cultural framework of Art Nouveau in Lviv you can have a conversation with your private guide in its cozy cafeteria while you have a coffee or tea.
The café is located in one of the many buildings designed by the famous architectural bureau of the Ukrainian architect Ivan Levynskyi. These apartment buildings were built for the city’s budding middle class in the early 1900s. Each is adorned with its own floral motifs, which are repeated in ceramic tiles, stained-glass windows and decorative ironwork.
We will start with the beautiful former “Dniester Insurance Company” building. We will continue our visit in the historical city to appreciate other buildings like the former Prague bank, Galician Land Credit Society and other banks.
Our tour guide will give you plenty of historic references and tell you lots of interesting stories about these and other buildings that will inform and inspire you as no other. The Armenian Virgin Mary’s Dormition Church frescoes is a hidden gem for all Art Nouveau lovers. We will also enter the Stauber’s Building to see the beautiful secession stained-glass window.
Then we will go the Shevchenko Avenue and Chaikovsky Street to see the former building of Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and we will see other buildings like Segal’s Building and others nearby. We may also visit the Museum of Ethnography that displays interesting pieces of Art Nouveau, both local and international.