Wojska Polskiego Avenue, Szczecin

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Wojska Polskiego Avenue
Wojska Polskiego Avenue in Szczecin, 2015 (4).jpg
Native name Aleja Wojska Polskiego  (Polish)
Former name(s) Falkenwalder Straße
Namesake Polish Army
Type Avenue
Maintained by Szczecin Roads and Public Transport Authority
Length 6.9 km (4.3 mi)
Addresses 248
Location Szczecin, Poland
Coordinates 53°27′01″N 14°30′54″E / 53.45025°N 14.515°E / 53.45025; 14.515
South-eastern end
Major
junctions
North-western end Emila Zegadłowicza Street
Other
Known for second longest street of Szczecin
Website wojskapolskiego.szczecin.eu

The Wojska Polskiego Avenue (before 1945 Falkenwalder Straße) is one of the main streets of the Polish city of Szczecin[1] (length 6.9 km), running from the south-east to the north-west. It lies on the territory of eight municipal neighbourhoods: Centrum, Śródmieście-Zachód, Śródmieście-Północ, Łękno, Pogodno, Arkońskie-Niemierzyn, Zawadzkiego-Klonowica, and Głębokie-Pilchowo. It constitutes a section of voivodeship road 115.

Some press articles,[2] tourist brochures, websites[3] and even the official website of claim that Wojska Polskiego is the longest street in Szczecin.[4] However, the longest street is (formerly Autostrada Poznańska), which is approximately 8.5 kilometres long.[5]

History[]

Before 1945[]

Today's Wojska Polskiego Avenue was originally a route leading from the to the towns north-west of Szczecin.[1] In 1858 a complex of Stoewer factory buildings was built at the intersection with Unii Lubelskiej Street. In 1870s by the section of the avenue between its intersection with Piotra Skargi Street and villas of the Westend housing estate were erected. In 1879, at the junction with Piotra Skargi Street, a complex of buildings of a horse tram depot was built.[6] From that depot the first horse trams left on 23 August 1879 on the route leading from Wojska Polskiego Avenue to Stanisława Staszica Street.[7] In the 1890s the tram line was electrified, and the northern part of the avenue was partly developed with villas belonging to the Neu Westend housing estate. At the same time, plots on both sides of the avenue were developed from Szarych Szeregów Square to Zgody Square by erecting multi-storey tenement houses.[1] Further construction investments along the avenue were carried out after the end of World War I, when blocks of flats were built north of Piotra Skargi Street.[1] In 1938 the old tram depot at the junction with Piotra Skargi Street was closed and the new tram depot Straßenbahnhof West (today ) was opened.[7]

1945–1973[]

As a result of the during World War II, part of the buildings within the area of were destroyed.[1] In 1959 on the plot at the intersection with Małkowskiego Street a building for the Kosmos Cinema was constructed according to the design of .[8] In 1962 one of the corners with was filled with a block of flats designed by J. Karwowski.[9] In 1963 a competition was announced for developing the plots created after removing the ruins of destroyed tenement houses.[10] The competition was decided in favour of Szczecin architects and ,[11] who designed four identical 10-storey blocks of flats. Two of them were built near the intersection with Edmunda Bałuki Street, the third near the intersection with Bohaterów Getta Warszawskiego Street, and the fourth in the frontage between Zgody Square and Jagiellońska Street.

1973–2015[]

On 1 December 1973, by decision of Mayor , tram traffic was withdrawn from the section of the avenue between Szarych Szeregów and Zwycięstwa Square. A year later, the section was modernised by renovating the pavements and roadways, installing traffic lights, planting trees and renovating the façades of buildings.[1] At the junction with Piotra Ściegiennego and Królowej Jadwigi Streets a fountain in the form of a mosaic wall was erected, commonly referred to as the "Wailing Wall".[12] From the early 1980s to 1994, the avenue was also repaired, along with the tram tracks, in the section from Szarych Szeregów Square to Bogumiły Street and further towards Głębokie Lake.[1] In 1994, the depot at the junction with Piotra Skargi Street was cut off from the tram line.[13]

In the 1990s, vacant plots between Zwycięstwa and Zgody Squares were filled with new houses.[1] On 25 November 2001 the "Wailing Wall" was demolished and replaced by a fountain in the form of a pitcher pouring water, which after less than three years was devastated and finally dismantled.[12]

After 2015[]

In July and August 2015, the Szczecin Sociological Society (Polish Szczecińskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne) and the Centre for Social and Economic Development (Polish Centrum Rozwoju Społeczno-Gospodarczego) held public consultations on the future appearance of the section of Wojska Polskiego Avenue between Szarych Szeregów Square and Zwycięstwa Square. In the public consultation, residents rejected the possibility of reconstructing the tram track or turning the avenue into a pedestrian zone.[14][15] In January 2017, the city held a second public consultation in which members of the neighbourhood councils and residents were able to choose between four concepts for the reconstruction of the avenue:[16]

  • 1st concept: two carriageways with one traffic lane each, separated by parking spaces and greenery, 30 km/h speed limit zone;
  • 2nd concept: two carriageways with two traffic lanes each, with the central lanes shared with the tramway track, limiting passenger car traffic, allowing access to the avenue only for taxis, resident cars and buses,
  • 3rd concept: maintaining the current solution, i.e. two carriageways with two lanes each, limiting parking spaces by introducing greenery,
  • 4rd concept: return to the pre-1973 traffic model, i.e. two carriageways with two traffic lanes each, tram tracks in the two central lanes, restriction of parking spaces by introducing greenery.

Eventually, 1st concept won.[17] In response to the abandonment of the restoration of the tram line, the Association of the Aesthetic and Modern Szczecin (Polish Stowarzyszenie Estetycznego i Nowoczesnego Szczecina) demanded that the city re-run the public consultation. In May 2017, city activists started collecting signatures for a civic resolution project on the restoration of tram traffic on Wojska Polskiego Avenue.[18] A vote in favour of restoring the tram line was cast by 1,554 people, after which the resolution was put to a vote at a city council session.[19] Ultimately, with 9 votes in favour, 9 against and 2 abstentions, the resolution was not adopted.[20]

In June 2017, the city, in cooperation with the Association of Polish Architects, announced a competition for the design of the reconstruction of Wojska Polskiego Avenue from Zwycięstwa Square to Szarych Szeregów Square.[21] The winning project was prepared by the Archaid design studio.[22] At the end of 2020, the city announced a tender for renovation of the said section of the avenue in accordance with the winning design.[23] The tender was settled in March 2021 in favour of the MTM company.[24] The selected contractor shall be obliged to carry out the modernisation works within 24 months from the date of entering into the agreement for the realisation of each of the two investment stages.[25]

Notable objects[]

No. Name Image Construction year Heritage register Description
bezramki 1997 no A fountain of clinker mouldings designed by Ryszard Wilk and built with funds from the Szczecin City Hall and the Pomeranian Credit Bank.[26][27] Currently vandalised.
2 KinoPionierSzczecin.jpg 1907 yes One of the oldest continuously operating cinemas in the world.[28]
8 Szczecin Kino Kosmos.jpg 1959 yes The cinema building was erected in 1959. The cinema was closed in 2003.[29]
63 Szarych Szeregów Square in Szczecin (3).JPG no The tenement house where lived from 1891 to 1935.[30]
64 64 Wojska Polskiego Avenue in Szczecin.JPG 187x yes A villa built after 1870 for Heinrich Stolting. Nowadays it is the seat of .[31]
65 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 65 willa.jpg 1882 yes Villa built in 1882.[32]
66 Szczecin Wojska Polskiego 66 willa (2020) 2.jpg 1882 yes A villa designed in 1876 by C.J. Decker for the entrepreneur Quodbach.[33] Nowadays it is the seat of, among others, the Poland-East Cooperation Association.
70 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 70 willa.jpg 1871–1872 yes The villa was built for August Horn, an entrepreneur.[34] It is one of three wooden dwelling houses preserved in the Śródmieście district.
72 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 72 willa.jpg 1910–1911 yes The villa was built in 1910–1911 for a merchant named Simon. Nowadays it houses a medical clinic.[35]
73 Szczecin - Radio Szczecin.jpg yes The villa was the headquarters of the Polskie Radio Szczecin for many years.
76 SZczecin - Wojska Polskiego 76.jpg 1896–1897 yes The villa was built in 1896–1897 according to a design by Nulin Widman for Fritz Hoerder, an entrepreneur. Today it is the seat of the Catholic High School.[36]
84 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 84 Willa Lentza.jpg 1888–1889 yes Built between 1888 and 1889 in eclectic style to a design by Max Drechsler for August Lentz, an entrepreneur.[37]
92 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 92 willa.jpg 1871–1872 yes A villa built between 1871 and 1872 for Johannes Quistorp.[38] Since 1950 it has been the seat of the Voivodship Ambulance Service.[39]
97 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 97 willa.jpg 1871–1872 yes The villa was built between 1871 and 1872 for the carpenter Carl Gerloff.[40] Nowadays it houses a medical clinic.[41]
115 Wojska Polskiego 115 Szczecin 2.jpg 1897–1898 yes The villa was built between 1897 and 1898 for the town councillor Georg Grawitz.[42] It is the seat of the Tadeusz Szeligowski State Music School of the 1st Grade.
186 Budynki POLMO Szczecin w 2015 roku.JPG 1899 no The factory was established in Szczecin in 1946 on the premises of the former German factory Stoewer Werke AG. Today the office building is owned by the developer Modehpolmo.
200 Tatra KT4 122 and 141, Pogodno tram depot, Szczecin, 2016.jpg 1938 no A tram depot located in the Zawadzkiego-Klonowica neighbourhood, Zachód city district. It was opened on 22 September 1938.
211 Szczecin al Wojska Polskiego 211 zabytek.jpg 1925 yes A villa built in 1925 for the merchant Otto Lindner. At present, it houses the Public Kindergarten No. 2.[43]

Public transport[]

Tatra KT4DtM tram on line no. 1 near crossing with Piotra Skargi Street

Nowadays[]

As of 24 May 2021, the following public transport lines were running along Wojska Polskiego Avenue in the permanent traffic organisation:

In the past[]

  • tram lines:
    • normal day lines: 5 (1905–1945, 1948–1973), 7 (1934–1945, 1945–1973), 10 (1967–1973), 12 (1985–1988)[45]
    • night lines: 1N (1960–1996), 5N (1960–1973), 7N (1969–1973), 9N (1969–1996)[45]

Numbering[]

  • Zawadzkiego-Klonowica: 184–202 even, 235 – 248
  • Centrum: 1–63 odd
  • Łękno: 105–121 odd, 122–142, 143–171 odd, 185
  • Pogodno: 150–182 even, 189–231c odd
  • Arkońskie-Niemierzyn: 187
  • Śródmieście-Zachód: 2–62 odd
  • Głębokie-Pilchowo: 245–254
  • Śródmieście-Północ: 64–106

References[]

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  23. ^ Gigiel, Marcin (2020-12-26). "O tym, kto przebuduje al. Wojska Polskiego dowiemy się później, niż zapowiadano" [We will find out who will rebuild Wojska Polskiego Avenue later than announced]. wszczecinie.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2021-05-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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