Raised bogs, as a unique site in Europe, situated in the Polish-Slovak borderland, require special attention and measures in order to enhance their sustainable use through common protection and by making them accessible to tourists and the local population. As part of the project, two cross-border partners with adequate potential, experience and competence will implement a forerunner idea related to the protection and sharing of the bogs. For the first time, two natural museums with multimedia exhibitions of the bogs will be created in the Polish-Slovak borderland. Both museums will be housed in two cultural heritage buildings, restored and modernised as part of the project: the wooden historic building in the centre of Chochołów (right next to the border), whose traditional architecture is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the presbytery building located in the courtyard of the Orava Castle (near the border). In this way, one project will combine the restoration of the former glory of historical buildings and their adaptation for the purposes of promoting the natural heritage. The LP will build 2 sections of pedestrian and bicycle paths (3,68 km in length). They will open access to the bogs, where resting places for cyclists will be located, with equipment and information boards (one of these resting places will be a restored narrow-gauge railway carriage). This will allow target groups to learn about another aspect of the bogs, namely peat extraction. Investment activities will be accompanied by diverse promotion and information activities, which will disseminate knowledge on cross-border bogs (website, publications, films, competitions, workshops). As a result, a comprehensive Polish-Slovak tourism product related to the bogs will be created, considerably increasing the attractiveness of the borderland. This will make it possible for local population and tourists to discover and appreciate the bogs: a Polish-Slovak natural phenomenon, unheard of in the mountain regions in the whole of Europe.