Architecture of Poland


The architecture of Poland includes modern and historical monuments of architectural and historical importance.
Several important works of Western architecture, such as the Wawel Hill, the Książ and Malbork castles, cityscapes of Toruń, Zamość, and Kraków are located in the country. Some of them are UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Now Poland is developing modernist approaches in design with architects like Daniel Libeskind, Karol Żurawski, and Krzysztof Ingarden.

History

Romanesque architecture

Gothic architecture

Gothic architecture in Polish lands fully developed in the XIV century, when the country ended feudal fragmentation and became a kingdom. The development of architecture was influenced by the intensive growth of cities, development of economy, as well as science and education.

Renaissance

The Renaissance came to Poland as a court fashion thanks to King Sigismund, who became acquainted with this stylistics in Buda, at the court of his Hungarian uncle. Sigismund invited Italian craftsmen from Buda to Kraków, where they created the first Italian Renaissance piece in Poland, the Tomb of John I Albert in Wawel. However, in religious architecture, which followed the Gothic tradition, Renaissance influences were minimal. Renaissance in Poland is therefore a civil style.

Baroque architecture

Classicism

dominated Polish architecture during the second half of the 18th and first third of the 19th century as a manifestation of Enlightenment rationalism. New stylistics came from France, Italy, and partly from Germany as a reflection of general admiration only for the newly discovered Greco-Roman antiquity.
Late classicism, which was chronologically connected with the end of the Napoleonic Wars and capture of the former Duchy of Warsaw by the Russian Empire in 1815, was characterized by significant volumes of construction, large representative buildings, which set a new, large scale of squares and streets of Warsaw and other cities. The leading architect of late classicism in Poland is Italian Antonio Corazzi. His main buildings in Warsaw include Staszic Palace, the Treasury, Polish Bank, and the Wielki Theatre.

Style revivals

The territory of the former Polish state remained divided between Prussia, Russia, and the Austrian Empire, developed unevenly.
in Villa Oksza
The experience of Vienna Ring Road was successfully applied in Kraków where Planty Park was created. The architecture of Kraków at that time was oriented towards the Viennese model, pr so-called Ringstrasse style. Stylistically, it was an eclecticism dominated by Neo-Gothic and Neo-Renaissance. Similar stylistics dominated other Polish lands.
In German Neo-Gothic stylistics, Karl Friedrich Schinkel designed Kamieniec Ząbkowicki Palace and Kórnik Castle. S. Stompf redesigned the Lublin Castle. Neo-Renaissance monuments include the main building of the Warsaw Polytechnic, Bristol Hotel in Warsaw. Famous architects also include Friedrich August Stüler, Alexis Langer, Ludwig Schneider, Józef Pius Dziekoński, Konstanty Wojciechowski, Feliks Księżarski, Teodor Talowski, Jan Sas-Zubrzycki.
In the era of capitalism, many factory owners' villas and palaces are built, as well as numerous workers' housing estates and industrial buildings.

Art Nouveau and Folk Architecture

Art Nouveau emerged as an attempt to abandon stylization and eclecticism, invent a new architectural style that would meet the spirit of the time.
Polish architects from the 1890s were also discovering folk motives. The leading figure of this trend was Stanisław Witkiewicz, founder of Zakopane Style.
Teodor Talowski, Franciszek Mączyński, and Mikołaj Tołwiński represent the Young Poland movement.

Modern architecture

Interwar period

Poland's regaining of independence marked a new era in art, where modern architecture developed on a large scale, often combining achievements of functionalism with elements of folk art.
Examples of Polish constructivism and international style include numerous housing complexes, modern residential houses.
During the World Exhibition in Paris in 1937, Stanisław Brukalski's house in Żoliborz received an award. Construction investments took place on a larger scale, but smaller too.
Famous examples also include WUWA and the Centennial Hall by Max Berg.

After 1945

After the Second World War, the development of avant-garde was interrupted by socialist realism. Reconstruction of cities and monuments had a diverse character. A valuable example of cultural restitution can be a reconstruction of the Theater Square in Warsaw with Jabłonowski Palace.
During the urbanization, austere large-plate buildings were preferred.
A specific branch of socialist realism was the so-called Stalinist neoclassicism, which represents Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw. The planned city of Nowa Huta was also designed in a Stalinist style during the late 1940s. by Stefan Kuryłowicz
Famous architectural sights include the Warsaw Central Railway Station, Spodek in Katowice, Kiev Cinema and the Cracovia Hotel in Kraków, Ściana Wschodnia in Warsaw, works of Oskar Hansen. Sacred architecture includes Stanisław Pietrzyk's Arka Pana in Kraków, and the Church of the Holy Spirit in Wrocław.
After the creation of the Third Republic, Arata Isozaki, Norman Foster, Rainer Mahlamäki, and Daniel Libeskind had their projects in Poland. Renato Rizzi designed the Shakespearian Theatre in Gdańsk, Silesian Museum was planned by Riegler Riewe Architekten, Estudio Barozzi Veig Studio created the new Szczecin Philharmonic.
Post-modernist Warsaw University Library and the headquarters of the Supreme Court were designed by Marek Budzyński. Contemporary Polish architects also include Andrzej M. Chołdzyński, Robert Konieczny, Roman Rutkowski, Katarzyna Kobro, Przemo Łukasik, HS99 studio, Medusa Group Architects, etc.
In 2015, Szczecin Philharmonic was awarded the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture.

Architecture schools in Poland

UniversityDepartmentLocation
Politechnika GdańskaWydział ArchitekturyGdańsk
Politechnika PoznańskaWydział ArchitekturyPoznań
Politechnika WrocławskaWydział ArchitekturyWrocław
Politechnika WarszawskaWydział ArchitekturyWarsaw
Politechnika ŚląskaWydział Architektury Politechniki ŚląskiejGliwice
Politechnika RzeszowskaWydział Budownictwa, Inżynierii Środowiska i ArchitekturyRzeszów
Politechnika KrakowskaWydział ArchitekturyKraków
Politechnika LubelskaWydział Budownictwa i ArchitekturyLublin
Politechnika ŁódzkaInstytut Architektury i Urbanistyki
Wydziału Budownictwa, Architektury i Inżynierii Środowiska PŁ
Łódź
Politechnika BiałostockaWydział ArchitekturyBiałystok
Uniwersytet Artystyczny w PoznaniuWydział Architektury i WzornictwaPoznań
Uniwersytet Technologiczno-Przyrodniczy w BydgoszczyWydział Budownictwa, Architektury i Inżynierii ŚrodowiskaBydgoszcz
Zachodniopomorski Uniwersytet Technologiczny w SzczecinieWydział Budownictwa i ArchitekturySzczecin
Politechnika ŚwiętokrzyskaWydział Budownictwa i ArchitekturyKielce
Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła ZawodowaInstytut ArchitekturyRacibórz
Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła ZawodowaWydział Nauk TechnicznychNysa
Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła ZawodowaInstytut Nauk TechnicznychNowy Targ

Literature and sources