Gdynia Aquarium


Gdynia Aquarium is a public aquarium and sea museum operated by the National Marine Fisheries Research Institute in Gdynia, Poland. Previously called the Oceanographic Museum and Sea Aquarium of the Sea Fisheries Institute in Gdynia, the aquarium has a zoological garden status and is situated along Aleja John Paul II on the South Pier.

History

The museum has operated since 21 June 1971, although attempts were made to establish it in the 1920s and 1930s. The outbreak of World War II delayed the planned expansion and building of a new exhibit hall until 1971 when construction on the first true expansion started.

Exhibits

Exhibitions presented within the museum are on oceanography and hydrobiology, while the aquarium contains both sea and freshwater flora and fauna.
Educational activities were developed during exhibition modernizations. In 2005, a Cinema-Conference Hall was unveiled, as were rooms equipped with microscopes and computer equipment for conducting laboratory activities. In 2007 a Wet Room was opened - a place where one can put their hands into an open-top aquarium tank and touch fish. The Marine Education Section was expanded with a Preschool Room full of soft marine toys, which is very frequently visited by the youngest school children.
In 2019, an expansion of the educational path in Gdynia Aquarium and the addition of a new exhibit called “Cold Seas – from the Atlantic to the Baltic” was announced. It includes 12 new aquariums with a total volume of and more than 30 Atlantic animal species, including Atlantic nettle jellyfish, lumpfish, garfish, sharks, rays, lobsters and European flounder. The expanded exhibit opened in 2024.