Warsaw on the Rise
A new crop of skyscrapers symbolizes the Polish capital's effort to rebuild its downtrodden image
- By Rudolph Chelminski
- Photographs by Tomas van Houtryve
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Certainly Warsaw of the late ‘30s was a place of sharp intellectual activity, avant-garde theater, poetry readings, Chopin recitals and the like, but some critics of the skyscraper movement go further than Stelmach and overly romanticize the city’s past. The old Warsaw was not necessarily a civic paragon. There were also poverty, discord and social injustice—the same dark underside as any urban center.
Still, Warsaw’s long history of oppression by Russians and Germans, the terrible efficiency of its destruction and its dogged persistence in reclaiming the past make it a place apart: a city that has been obliged to reinvent itself. Even as the aesthetes and the philistines argue about what it should become, that reinvention continues. Remarkably enough, a sensible compromise seems to be falling into place.
“Yes, the center of Warsaw is going to be skyscraper city,” says Dariusz Bartoszewicz, a journalist specializing in urban matters at the Gazeta Wyborcza. “That’s its destiny. Twenty or 30 of them will be built for sure. Not in the next five years, but over time. It will happen.”
At the city’s fringes, a second wave of innovative design is beginning to reshape the Vistula River’s largely undeveloped banks. The Warsaw University Library is not only low, a mere four stories high, but meant to disappear. Topped by a 108,000-square-foot roof garden and draped with climbing plants whose greenery melds into the green of oxidized copper panels on the building’s facade, this ultramodern repository for two million books is what happens when architects are willing to share glory with a gardener.
The lead architect, Marek Budzynski, is a renowned university professor, but the landscape architect, Irena Bajerska, was virtually unknown until she was brought onto the design team. Her garden has become so popular it is now part of the regular Warsaw tourist routes. Bajerska beams and points out the young couples suited up in their tuxedos, white dresses and veils posing within her foliage for formal wedding photographs, while kids romp on the winding paths and retirees take their ease, reading newspapers and enjoying views of the city and the river.
Across the street, low-rise, riverfront apartment buildings are going up, and a series of planned projects, beginning with the Copernicus Science Center, next to the library, will perpetuate the human-scale development along the riverbank: bicycle, pedestrian and bridle paths, pleasure boat wharves and reconstruction of the Royal Gardens below historic Old Town.
“Warsaw is now in the middle of great, great things going on,” Wojciech Matusik assures me as he sips a drink in the posh bar of the Bristol Hotel, a five-minute walk from Norman Foster’s Metropolitan Building. Formerly the city’s director of planning, Matusik was once in charge of development, a position that allowed him to anticipate much of what is happening today.
I had frequented the Bristol in the ‘70s when it was a shabby, down-at-the-heels palace way past its prime (and I had known Matusik when he was a modestly paid functionary). Now renovated, the Bristol is one of Warsaw’s finest hotels, and Matusik, elegantly tailored, today a real estate consultant, is right at home. The man and the hotel have both prospered, and illustrate the distance Warsaw has come since I first passed through here 50 years ago.
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Related topics: Renovation and Restoration World War II Poland Cities and Urban Areas
Additional Sources
Nowa Warszawa: New Warsaw by Wojciech Krynski and Jerzy Majewski, Buffi Press, Bielsko-Biala, Poland 2005









Comments (8)
Warsaw depiction is mostly condensending; typical for most articles in US press about Poland. That is very inappropriate in view of the fact that it was USA who sold us to Stalin at Teheran and Yalta conferences.
Posted by Andrzej M Jasek on January 12,2012 | 12:54 PM
I think the person who is complaining about the gardener being called a gardener is being a little immature. In my opinion, the gardener is lucky to be mentioned at all. In my country we give this job to illegal immigrants whom we treat poorly and pay very little. The fact the gardener was mentioned at all I find unusual.
Posted by mitch on February 20,2011 | 10:25 AM
I have been to Warsaw many times since my first visit in 1981 when I was conducting Jewish ethnographic research. Since then I have seen the city tear down and rebuild many parts of the former Jewish ghetto. I am happy to say that parts of the ghetto particularly Proszna Ulica are being kept the same as they were after the Warsaw Ghetto uprising of April-May 1943. Though the facades of the buildings are old, dilapidated, some with bullet holes still clearly visible all these decades later I am happy to see the city elders have chosen to preserve this part of the former Jewish quarters. When one walks down Proszna Ulica one is not only reminded of the tragic times for the inhabitants of this street/neighborhood but also the glorious times that enriched the lives of so many years before WW II.
Posted by Yale Strom on February 19,2011 | 06:24 PM
RE: "Warsaw on the rise" Feb. 2011; page 28; by Rudolph Chelminski
Thank you for this very interesting update. It is encouraging to see Poland's attempt to resurface from the terrible ghosts of the past. The only concern I have is if Poland is looking for investors to help with this ambitious agenda please exert whatever influence you have to find architects who will add solar panels on the south side of these skyscrapers. Poland's building agenda is an opportunity to incorporate energy sources to reduce global warming. Also, Poland should consider off-shore wind turbines along the Baltic coast as a reduction on relying on oil. If the Russian Palace of Culture & Science is a constant reminder of Russian communist regime, which the Poles dread, then it only stands to reason that Poland distance itself from relying on Russian oil.
Best Wishes!
Posted by Halina Biernacki on February 19,2011 | 03:30 PM
I enjoyed the article until this comment...
"...this ultramodern repository for two million books is what happens when architects are willing to share glory with a gardener."
There are few more condescending terms for a landscape architect than 'gardener'. Landscape architects go through the same college career, at an accredited school as architects do, and at some schools it's a more competitive program to get into.
Landscape architects are licensed professionals who often take a lead on interdisciplinary projects and have a broad view of the landscape, including all of the components which sit on it, buildings and trees alike.
Landscape architects have suffered for years under a misinformed public who assume they are gardeners or landscapers. Landscape architects are design professionals and deserve the same respect as architects.
Posted by Kelly Brenner on February 4,2011 | 09:31 PM
"After 1989, the year the Berlin Wall came down, signaling Communism’s fall"
This is incorrect. It is well known and established in political science, that fall of the soviet domination and system in Poland and in other countries of the Soviet Block started not with falling of the Berlin Wall but with the unprecedented Solidarity Movement in Poland.
Posted by Jerzy Barankiewicz on February 1,2011 | 01:59 PM
Dear Sir
It is a deep irony that your article's feature photo is a photo of perhaps one of the most embarassing projects that Warsaw city planners allowed to go ahead. Stalled for years its gaping emty floors are a painful reminder of the recent economic trouble. And given its permitting issues it is likely to ruin the skyline for yeas to come. Perhaps if you had not researched your article on Wikipedia and had not based it on a mere passing visit to Polands capital the readers woud have stood a better chance of being presented with interesting facts on challenges of Warsaw's urban planning and how it ties up with local history and not just with your shallow piece of second hand journalism.
R. Martinek
Posted by Richard Martinek on January 30,2011 | 05:05 PM
I guess we all have our own Warsaw. I travelled to Poland as a teenager in the 60's and probably had more pleasant memories of it because the touring was in the summer. Poland was the place of first teenage love, so that tends to color the memories. I finally did go in December of 1970 and was a peripheral witness to the crackdown that brought in Gierek. However, the smell that I remember was the coal that heated Poland and the soot that made Poland such a depressing place in the winter. In 2010, the Polish Museum of America, of which I am director, organized a tour of Poland under the title "Art Deco Poland" and we saw other areas of Warsaw (to include the eastern bank part called Praga that was not destroyed). We saw stately villas from the 30's (unfortunately some are being demolished by the vain attitude of newer is always better). We also found that two areas of Warsaw proper - Stara Ochota and the area around Plac Wilsona, which had been developed in the interwar period as housing developments survived the Warsaw Uprising and are relatively intact- though not championed by city tourism. I thank Mr. Chelminski for the pleasant stroll, and hope that in this time of downsizing, the plans to "glass and steel" beautiful Warsaw are only half successful.
Posted by Jan M. Lorys on January 27,2011 | 10:28 AM