Architecture of Warsaw


The architecture of Warsaw has influenced and reflected the history of Polish architecture. The city of Warsaw features prominent buildings in a variety of styles by many important architects. Warsaw's palaces, churches and mansions display a richness of color and architectural details. Buildings are representatives of nearly every European architectural style and historical period. The city has wonderful examples of architecture from the gothic, renaissance, baroque and neoclassical periods, all of which are located within easy walking distance of the town centre.

Architecture by style

Gothic architecture is represented in the majestic churches but also at the burgher houses and fortifications. The most significant buildings are St. John's Cathedral, the temple is a typical example of the so-called Masovian gothic style, St. Mary's Church, a town house of Burbach family, Gunpowder Tower and the Royal Castle Curia Maior. The most notable examples of Renaissance architecture in the city are the house of Baryczko merchant family, building called "The Negro" and Salwator tenement. The most interesting examples of mannerist architecture are the Royal Castle and the Jesuit Church at Old Town. Among the first structures of the early baroque the most important are St. Hyacinth's Church and Zygmunt's Column.
Building activity occurred in numerous noble palaces and churches during the later decades of the 17th century. One of the best examples of this architecture are Krasiński Palace, Wilanów Palace and St. Kazimierz Church. The unique character of Warsaw Baroque, which gradually influenced the architecture of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was a mixture of local traditions with Western European patterns. Late Baroque architecture with palaces merging Polish mansions of the aristocracy with side towers, Italian suburban villa and a French palace entre cour et jardin with two oblong wings on each side of the cour d'honneur, funeral chapels, modelled after Sigismund's Chapel and attached to the church as well as Greek-cross plan churches, are present in Warsaw. The style was largely shaped by one individual Tylman Gamerski, showing Italian and Dutch influences. The most impressive examples of rococo architecture are Czapski Palace, Palace of the Four Winds and Visitationist Church.
The neoclassical architecture in Warsaw can be described by the simplicity of the geometrical forms teamed with a great inspiration from the Roman period. The first stage, called the Stanislavian style, followed by an almost complete inhibition and a period known as the Congress Kingdom classicism. The palladian patterns were independently interpreted by Szymon Bogumił Zug, who followed an influence of radical French classicism. A palladian by influence was also Piotr Aigner - author of the facade of St. Anne's Church in Warsaw and St. Alexander Church. Palladian ideas were implemented in a popular type of a palace with a pillared portico. Some of the best examples of the neoclassical style are the Palace on the Water, Królikarnia, Carmelite Church and Evangelical Holy Trinity Church. The economic growth during the first years of Congress Poland caused a rapid rise architecture. The Neoclassical revival affected all aspects of architecture, the most notable are the Great Theater and buildings located at Bank Square.
style
Exceptional examples of the bourgeois architecture of the later periods were not restored by the communist authorities after the war or they were rebuilt in socialist realism style. Despite that the Warsaw University of Technology building is the most interesting of the late 19th-century architecture. Lot of the 19th-century buildings is restored in Praga, though they are in a pretty bad condition. Warsaw’s municipal government authorities have decided to rebuild the Saxon Palace and the Brühl Palace, the most distinctive buildings in prewar Warsaw.
After the Warsaw area enlargement in 1916, an occasion was aroused to build new estates. Yet in 20's and 30's new workers' and villas' estates came into existence. Thanks of this the villas' estate was built in Saska Kępa. Most prewar building at this district was not destroyed during war. Nowadays still exists many examples of houses from interwar period, designed by notable architects, like Bohdan Pniewski, Bohdan Lachert, Józef Szanajca, Lucjan Korngold or Szymon and Helena Syrkus. The workers' estates were Ochota and Rakowiec, Koło, Grochów, Żoliborz. The villas' estates – Higher Mokotów, Czerniaków, Saska Kępa as well as Żoliborz. The Żoliborz estate is an interesting example of an estate, where four groups of society lived next to each other: workers, writers and periodists, state clerks and army officers.
Notable examples of contemporary architecture include the Palace of Culture and Science, a Soc-realist skyscraper located in the city centre, and the Constitution Square with its monumental Socialist realism architecture. The central part of the right-bank Praga borough it is a place where very run-down houses stand right next to modern apartment buildings and shopping malls.
Like in all former communist countries, there are also several blockhouse estates in Warsaw. They were built between 1960 and 1985, mainly in the areas incorporated in 1951. The greatest are: Ursynów-Natolin, Bródno, Wawrzyszew, Bemowo, Gocław, Stegny, Tarchomin.
and Warsaw Financial Center.
Modern architecture in Warsaw is represented by the Metropolitan Office Building at Pilsudski Square by Lord Foster, Warsaw University Library by Marek Budzyński and Zbigniew Badowski, featuring a garden on its roof and view of the Vistula River, Rondo 1 office building by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, Golden Terraces, consisting of seven overlapping domes retail and business centre and skyscraper Złota 44 by Daniel Libeskind.
It has been said that Warsaw, together with Frankfurt, London, Paris, Moscow, Istanbul and Rotterdam is one of the tallest cities in Europe. Warsaw is ranked as 48th in the List of cities with the most skyscrapers around the world. It is also ranked as 78th in The World's List of cities with the most buildings taller than 100m with a number of 16.
Of the 20 buildings in Poland which are 100-meters high or above, 16 are situated in Warsaw. The tallest structure, the centrally located Palace of Culture and Science, is the European Union's seventh-tallest building: with the TV-tower, to the roof. The first skyscrapers in Poland were also built in Warsaw. The first was the building of the Polish Telegraph Company –, probably the highest building in the Russian Empire at that time. The second was the building of the Insurance Company Prudential –. Up to date, apart from the Palace of Culture and Science, the highest buildings in Warsaw are: Warsaw Trade Tower, InterContinental Warszawa Rondo 1, Warsaw Financial Center.