Staszica and Paderewskiego Streets in Bydgoszcz


Staszica and Paderewskiego streets are located in downtown district, in Bydgoszcz, Poland. Many of the buildings along this axis are either registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship heritage list, or part of a historical ensemble of Eclectic and Art Nouveau architecture in Bydgoszcz.

Location

Streets stretch on a continuous axis, roughly south-north oriented, running parallel to Gdańska and 20 Stycznia 1920 streets on the west.
Staszica street, is long, from the crossing with Krasiński Street to the southern tip of Paderewskiego street.
Paderewskiego street, long, extends to the north Staszica till reaching the intersection with Chodkiewicza street.

History

On an 1876 map by Paul Berthold Jaekel, the pathway is indicated, without any mention of the name.
The first map to reference both streets dates back to 1908, under the following calling: Braesicke Straße and Schiller Straße.
In Bromberg address books, both axis are listed from 1905 onwards.
Paderewskiego street inception was part of a district developed in two plans, one at the end of the 19th century, another in 1903. The concept of this new area was based on a rectangular grid of streets, all located within city boundaries. This district was also convenient by the proximity of the newly built facilities, main railway station.
By 2019-2020, Paderewskiego street will be extended to the north by to join the future Music Academy Campus which is planned stand on a three-hectare plot, between streets Kamienna, Chodkiewicza and Gdańska

Naming

Staszica street was known as Braesicke Straße, from its construction to 1920 and during German occupation. Mr Braesicke was a mayor of Bromberg from 1890 to 1898.
Current name comes from Stanisław Staszic, a leading figure of the Polish Enlightenment: a Catholic priest, philosopher, geologist, writer, poet, translator and statesman.
Paderewskiego street was called Schiller Straße, from its inception till 1920, and also during German occupation, with reference to German poet Friedrich Schiller.
Patron name refers to Ignacy Jan Paderewski, a Polish pianist and composer, politician, statesman and spokesman for Polish independence.

Main edifices

Staszica Street

The street, on its first numbers, faces on the east a large green area, Lieutenant Leszek Biały square.
Tenement at Zygmunt Krasiński Street 23, corner with Staszica street
2010, by Budlex
Modern architecture
The plot at then Fröhnerstraße N°3 was first owned by Robert Böhme, also landlord of tenement at N°21. At the end of World War I, the area has been left abandoned until a first theatre, Paw, was built. It opened on Sunday 8 November 1929 with an 800-seat capacity.
It became cinema Appolo in 1931. During World War II, Nazi authorities changed its name to Bidegast. The theatre was renamed Polonia in 1945: it welcomed movies till March 31, 2003.
Once demolished, the place has been housing a brand new habitation complex, Rubinowy Dom, since 2010.
Tenement at No.1
1902-1903
Eclecticism
At its construction, the address was Braesicke Straße 2: house landlord was Albert Sawallich, first evangelical sexton.
Stripped from many original details but a facade cartouche, the elevation still display two bay windows, and a series of dormers topped by finials.
Access to the building is allowed through two large decorated wooden doors with transom lights.
Lieutenant Leszek Biały square
This green area is what is left from the urban plan developed in the 1910s by German architect Josef Stübben and called the Idyll district. At the time this part of the city had not been touched by urban growth, as Gdańska or Dworcowa streets could have been at the end of the 19th century.
Sielanka district never included this square as it was a property of Province of Posen and not owned by the municipality.
After the rebirth of Poland in 1918, the area was declared to be constructed, but no project was ever completed.
In the 1960s, a memorial has been built up to celebrate the Millennium of the Polish State. Designed by Polish artist Stanislaw Lejkowski on July 22, 1967, the project has never been entirely completed. In 2011, the city had even projects to demolish it, but it turned out to be very expensive.
The site has been given the name Lt. Leszek Biały in November 2013. Leszek Biały was a hero of the Home Army during the Second World War; under the code name Jakub, he was arrested in February 1945 by members of soviet controlled Ministry of Public Security and was murdered during interrogations on March 3, 1945.
Tenement at No.3
1903-1904, by Fritz Weidner
Eclecticism, elements of Historicism and Art Nouveau
The construction of this tenement, at then Braesicke Straße 3, was funded by Prussian city authorities and dedicated for renting. It housed up to 8 families. After 1918, the building kept its role as city rental flats, under Polish direction.
Today, it is part of the network of lodgings offered to Music school students in Bydgoszcz, together with neighbouring building at No.7. In the backyard is located an auditorium with 100 seats.
The building displays a symmetric array of loggias, on both sides of a slight round bay window topped with a wattle and daub gable. One can notice the wood-and glass gate to the concert hall, boasting a transom light.
High School No.6, at No.4
Registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Heritage list No.601432, reg. A/989, May 28, 1991
1910
Eclecticism style
The building houses a Polish high school. The institution is in the vicinity of Ignacy Jan Paderewski Pomeranian Philharmonic building, Bydgoszcz Music Academy - "Feliks Nowowiejski" and the Bydgoszcz Music Schools. No far from High School N°6 stand St. Vincent de Paul Basilica and Cyprian Norwid High School N°1. The building is registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Heritage List.
Tenement at No.5
1903-1904, by Fritz Weidner
Eclecticism, elements of Historicism and Art Nouveau
Similar to abutting tenements at No.3 and 7, No.5, at then Braesicke Straße 4, was funded by Prussian city authorities and dedicated for renting, housing up to 6 families. After 1918, the building has been managed under Polish direction, under the calling Bydgoszcz Housing Cooperative. In this building lived one of the first sponsor of the BSM project, Teofil Gackowski
The elevation is distinctive from others in the street by the presence of a triangular bay window topped by a tented roof. In addition, loggias show a more original adornment, including arched tops.
Tenement at No.7
1903-1904
Eclecticism
Initial address was Braesicke straße 5: the tenement was owned by the municipality, under the name "City apartment association" After the restoration of Poland in 1920, it changed to its Polish equivalent structure, Towarzystwo mieszkaniowe.
In 1983, it was purchased to the benefit of Bydgoszcz Music Academy - "Feliks Nowowiejski" to house music school departments and lodgings for students. Today, it is part of the network of Bydgoszcz Academy of Music teaching buildings, all located downtown; the tenement includes as well a dormitory. Together with the building at Szwalbego N°4, they offer 90 beds.
The huge building offers sleek facades on both streets. One can underline on Kołłątaja street a sharp triangular bay window topped by a high oitched tented roof with a finial, and on Staszica street a slight avant-corps topped with nice curves and simili pilasters. Both sides display a series of shed dormers, as well as entry gates adorned with a large lintel, and lighter one with flower motifs and a woman head.
Ancient shelter for blinds, at No.9
Registered on Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship heritage list, N° A/1569, August 26, 2010
1899-1901, by Karl Bergner
Eclecticism & Dutch Mannerism
Built at the beginning of the 20th century, the edifice at Roonstraße 13/14 was initially conceived as a refuge for blind children. The initiator of the construction was the director of nearby Educational Centre for Blind Children, Anton Wittig. He organized the "Society for blind people", which, till 1901, collected funds to build a shelter in home Bydgoszcz. The hostel was operational up to 1962, as part of the specialized school. Today the building houses two clinics, Śródmieście and Akademicka, and two specialist medical offices for individuals.
In 2015, city authorities have put the building on sale, with an estimated price of 3.5 million PLN.
The building displays eclectic style, with forms referring to Dutch Mannerism. Two other edifices in Bydgoszcz feature such Dutch-mannerist frontages: the former Prussian Eastern Railway Headquarters and the Lloyd palace.
Its brick facades are plaster decorated with architectural details. Slight avant-corps, ornamented with bossage, are crowned with volute adorned gables and pinnacles. Windows are topped with cornices. Main entrance on Kołłątaja street bears the inscription "Blindenheim ". It is positioned at the centre of the avant-corps and includes an ornated portal with doric columns.

Paderewskiego Street

Copernicanum building, at Kopernika Street No.1
Registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Heritage list N°601363, reg.A/784
1903-1906, by Carl Zaar and Rudolf Vahl
Secession Style
The building had many owners: initially a Prussian realschule, then a city high school for mathematics and natural sciences, it housed a military hospital during German occupation. In 1923, to celebrate the 450th anniversary of the birth of Nicolaus Copernicus, the then junior high school adopted his name.
The University of Casimir the Great has been the current owner of the edifice since 2005.
Jan Kochanowski Park in Bydgoszcz
1901,by Konrad Neumann
The park is located in an area urbanized at the beginning of the 20th century; it covers 3,15 ha. It hosts an outdoor gallery of monuments of composers and virtuoso, as well as the iconic local statue "The Archer".
Tenement at No.1, corner with Adam Mickiewicz Alley
1905-1908, by Paul Sellner
Art Nouveau
Built in the first years of the 20th century on a commission by Wilhelm Knelke, a manufacturer, its first landlord was a rentier, Ferdinand Krauße. In 1908, Mr Friedländer, a banker, purchased the building: his widow lived there till the end of WWI.
This corner building displays typical tin roof above each of its bay windows. The main door features Art Nouveau motifs and patterns.
Woythaler house, at No.2
1910-1912
Eclecticism, elements of Art Nouveau
David Woythaler commissioned this villa at the beginning of the 20th century: he was the director of one of the largest manufacturers of snuff tobacco in Prussia, located at today's Focha street 18. After the First World War and the re-establishment of Poland, the villa changed ownership. In 1948, a public kindergarten had been
set up here, but moved to Fordon in the 2010s. Today, the building houses a private kindergarten.
This large villa keeps its original features: a massive avant-corps on the left side, with a terrace on the top, and a lean tower bordering the right side, crowned by a characteristic onion dome and a finial.
Tenement at No.3
1906, by Wilhelm Knelke
Art Nouveau
Wilhelm Knelke, director of a limestone factory, was the first landlord of the building, though he never lived there.
One of the oldest buildings in the street, the frontage features interesting ornaments: rosettes in a frieze crowning the transom light gate, two adorned bay windows with cartouches and a large gable dormer embellished with vegetal Art Nouveau stuccos. The tenement has been renovated in 2017.
Hübschmann House, at No.4
1904, by Rudolf Kern
Art Nouveau
Rudolf Kern designed this villa for Max Eichenberg, a rentier; at the time, the address was Schillerstraße 18. Soon, in 1910, Alfred Hübschmann, a merchant in clothing business, bought the house and lived there until the First World War.
The villa, one of the oldest in the street, is iconic of the Art Nouveau architecture in Bydgoszcz. Noticeable are fanciful metal elements, ornaments with the faces of women and fish as well as insects and plants. One can also underline the characteristic friezes featuring floral ornamentation in the lintels, in cartouches, on bay windows and at the gate. Wrought iron motifs are chiseled above the entry. The gable is topped by a delicate wattle and daub turret crowned by a finial.
Building at Adam Mickiewicz Alley No.4, corner with Paderewskiego Street
1906-1908
Art Nouveau
This building displays highly decorated balconies and bay windows. The roof boasts eyelid dormers.
Paul Sellner Tenement at No.10
1905-1907
Art Nouveau
This tenement has been designed and owned by Paul Sellner, an architect who lived in Bromberg's Prussian times. Paul Sellner created representative, metropolitan houses in the style of early modernism located in today's Bydgoszcz downtown, such as the building at Gdanska street 95.
This corner house, one of the oldest in Paderewskiego street, opens a series of frontages characteristic of the elevations on Józef Weyssenhoff Square, with corner bay window and singular wall dormer. One can notice the adorned portal and its Art Nouveau-designed door.
Tenement at No.11, corner with Zamoyskiego street 10
1910, by O.M.W. Müller
Art Nouveau
First landlord was a merchant, Julius Lüdtke.
This massive tenement is jammed with Art Nouveau details and motifs, on both facades: pillars on avant-corps decorated with festoons, an exquisite portal adorned with floral motifs up to the oeil-de-boeuf, a round avant-corps topped with a frieze near the corner and as much decoration on the other elevation with bay windows and a second ornamented gate.
Tenement at No.12
1909-1910, by Emil Dogs
Eclecticism, Art Nouveau
Initial owner of this building was Max Reschke, a carpenter master, who never lived in.
A few architecture elements are still visible on the well-balanced facade, in particular classical festoons below first floor windows. In addition, the entry portal is worth a look: two stylized pillars support the lintel topped with Art Nouveau motifs and decoration.
Tenement at No.13, corner with Zamoyskiego 15
1910-1915, by Rudolf Kern
Art Nouveau, early Modern architecture
Investor for the project was Emil Heydemann. The first landlord, Ernst Richter, was working as a railway administration secretary.
Both elevations of this large building feature architectural elements transitioning to early modernism style: straight vertical lines are predominant and very few details recall the gone Art Nouveau style. The tenement has been refurbished in 2017.
Tenement at No.14
1906, by Goltz brothers
Late Eclecticism, elements of Modernism
The building dates from 1906 and is unique because of one of its gone tenants, Józef Paderewski. In the 1930s, Józef, brother of more famous Ignacy Jan Paderewski, lived there. He was then working as a professor at both the Female High School of Humanities and Bydgoszcz Music Conservatoire.
Overall shape mirrors the abutting tenements. In the one hand, the architectural style leans to modernism, with vertical lines and fewer motifs. In the other hand, one can still notice several adorned cartouches, pillars on both bay windows and floral and curved ornamentation. During last renovation of the frontage in 2009, a new fence has been specially handcrafted by a blacksmith.
Tenement at No.16
1909-1910, by Leo Ficht
Early Modernism
Leo Ficht was also the funder of the construction.
Though intensively decorated, the main elevation features early modern elements through various geometric shapes, very few curves and the global trend for displaying vertical stretched lines. Portal motifs, gable details and some floral festoons betray the non-long-ago former eclectic style.
Tenement at No.18
1911, by Paul Sellner
Late Eclecticism, elements of Modernism
Leo Ficht, investor of No.16, also funded this tenement. The building has been owned by Ludwig Sibilski, an army tailor. His family kept the ownership till the 1930s.
Like many of the neighbouring tenements, the architectural style shifts to modernism, while keeping patches of eclectic details: the entry gate flaked by pillars and topped by a tympanum, balconies and bay windows adorned by cartouche, or symbolic group of motifs between windows.
Tenement at No.21
1910, by Emil Heydemann
Early Modernism, Art Nouveau elements
Located when erected at Schillerstraße 43, the first landlord, Otto Tarnow, a post office secretary, has never inhabited there. The edifice was mainly used for renting purposes, housing up to 29 tenants in the 1930s
Slimmer than the surrounding buildings, the edifice would deserve a refurbishment. However, one can still make out last remnants of Art Nouveau influence: cartouche filled with floral or vegetal motifs, a terrace on top of the avant-corps, or the curved wall dormer pierced by an oeil-de-boeuf.
Tenement at No.22, corner with Zamoyskiego street
1912-1914, by Victor Petrikowski
Early Modernism
Built at the eve of WWI, tenement first keeper was Otto Möller, an assistant in railway construction business, who dwelt there till the 1930s.
The edifice is one of the first in the street not to display any Art Nouveau detail, however tiny it may be. The main facade follows without reservation early modernist style. The ensemble has been renovated at the end of 2016.
Tenement at No.23, corner with Chodkiewicza street
1913-1915, by Rudolf Kern
Eclecticism & Art Nouveau
The commissioner of this tenement was an investor, Julius Berger, who also funded other buildings in the street. The first landlord was a merchant, Mr Lange, who never lived there.
Both facades combine eclectic-neo-classical style, and Art Nouveau features.
Johann Petrikowski's house at No.24
1913-1915, by Johann Petrikowski
Early Modernism
Initial address was Schillerstraße 6: the architect was its first landlord and also the project investor.
The renovation performed at the end of 2016 has brought to light the splendid balance of the main frontage, underlined by a massive avant-corps enhanced by lean ornamental pillars and crowned by triangular wall dormer bearing a large glass opening.