Nadole, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Rural settlement in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland.
Nadole is a village in Gmina Gniewino, in the Pomeranian Voivodeship of northern Poland. It is made up of scattered farmsteads and houses set across a gently rolling landscape edged by forests and small waterways.
The village sits in the historical region of Pomerania, which passed through the hands of Polish dukes, the Teutonic Order, and later Prussia over the centuries. After World War Two, the area was incorporated into Poland and became part of the present administrative system.
The name Nadole comes from Polish and roughly means "down below" or "in the hollow," pointing to the low-lying position of the settlement. Walking through the village, you can see how the land dips and shapes the layout of the houses and farmsteads.
The village is reached by local secondary roads, and having your own vehicle makes getting there much easier. Basic supplies and services are better found in nearby larger towns before arriving, as the village itself has very little on offer.
The Gmina Gniewino area is known for one of Poland's largest wind energy hubs, and the turbines are visible from many points around the village. This makes Nadole part of a landscape that mixes old farmsteads with modern energy infrastructure in a way that is hard to miss.
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