A solvothermal reaction between Ln(NO)·6HO (Ln: Gd, Tb and Dy), 2-hydroxy-1-naphthaldehyde, 2-OH-naphth, and ethylenediamine, en, in MeOH in the presence of a base, NEt, led to the formation of the 1D coordination polymers [Ln(L)(MeO)(MeOH)]·MeOH (Ln = Gd (1·MeOH), Tb(2), Dy (3·MeOH); HL = 1,1'-((1E,1'E)-(ethane-1,2-diylbis(azanylylidene))bis(methanylylidene))bis(naphthalen-2-ol), the Schiff-base ligand derived from the condensation of 2-OH-naphth and en), while a similar reaction in an excess of NaN yielded 1D coordination polymers [Ln(L)(N)(MeO)(MeOH)] (Ln = Gd (4), Tb (5), Dy (6)). Finally, upon replacing ethylenediamine with o-phenylenediamine, o-phen, we managed to isolate the discrete dimers [Dy(L')(MeOH)]·2MeOH (7·2MeOH) and [Gd(L')(MeOH)]·2MeOH (8·2MeOH) (HL' = 1,1'-((1E,1'E)-(1,2-phenylenebis(azanylylidene))bis(methanylylidene))bis (naphthalen-2-ol), the Schiff-base ligand from the condensation of 2-OH-naphth and o-phen). Polymers 1-3 describe one-dimensional chains, containing alternating seven- and eight-coordinate Ln metal centers, polymers 4-6 contain eight-coordinate lanthanide ions, while in both 7 and 8 the two Ln centers are eight- and seven-coordinate, adopting square antiprismatic and "piano-stool" geometry, respectively. The magnetocaloric properties of the three Gd analogues were determined from magnetic measurements, yielding the magnetic entropy change -ΔS = 21.8, 23.0 and 16.0 J kg K at T = 3.0 K on demagnetization of 7 T to 0, for 1, 4 and 8, respectively. The study of the magnetic properties also revealed that all three Dy analogues (3, 6 and 7) display out-of-phase signals, therefore suggesting slow magnetic relaxation, while such behaviour was not established in the Tb analogues.