Father Stanisław Konarski Street | |
Marker Image: | Bydgoszcz |
Map Size: | 300 px |
Former Names: | Schule straße |
Namesake: | Stanisław Konarski |
Owner: | City of Bydgoszcz |
Length M: | 290 |
Length Notes: | Google maps |
Area: | Downtown district |
Location: | Bydgoszcz, Poland |
Construction Start Date: | End of the 1870s[1] [2] |
Completion Date: | 1880 |
Stanisław Konarski street is a historical street of downtown Bydgoszcz.
Father Stanisław Konarski Street follows a roughly north-south axis, from Piotra Skargi Street to Jagiellońska street. It runs parallel to the eastern edge of Casimir the Great Park.
While the main downtown (Polish: Śródmieście) thoroughfare of Bydgoszcz, Gdańska Street, had a brisk expansion after the 1830s, collateral areas (Piotra Skargi Street, Kołłątaja street, Gimnazjalna, Libelta or Szwalbego Streets) developed at a more slower pace.
First reference of Father Stanisław Konarski Street in city address book of Bromberg dates back to the mid-1870s.[1]
First map to mention the street bears the year 1876.[2]
Through history, the street bore the following names:
Actual namesake comes from Stanisław Konarski (1700–1773), a Polish pedagogue, educational reformer, political writer, poet, dramatist, Piarist priest and precursor of the Enlightenment in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
1962-1965 (building on Konarski street), by architect Jerzy Jerka,1966-1969 (tower building), by architect Bronislaw Jablonki[5]
Both buildings, (14-storey tower and the long one on Konarski Street) are additions to the 19th century original edifice, where now seats the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship administration and leadership. They are connected to the historical house via a pedestrian covered bridge, crossing over an entry to the Casimir the Great Park.
1877, 1901
The building was erected in 1872 on a design by architect Müller, so as to house the civic school for boys (German: Bürgerschule).[6] The school was initially located in the former Bydgoszcz's Carmelites monastery. It was an elite folk school, with a 9 years cycle, and pupils usually belonged to wealthy high society, rich enough to pay the high tuition fees.[7] In the mid-1880s, the Bürgerschule moved further up in Konarskiego street, where is located today the Bydgoszcz School of Fine Arts (Nr.2),[8] or, according to the Prussian street numeration, from Nr.8 to Nr.7. The edifice has been rebuilt in 1901[9] In the 1990s, the edifice housed the Foreign Language Teacher Training College, which then moved to Dworcowa Street. Since 2010, the seat of the Kujawsko-Pomorskie Centre for Education and Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Marshal's Office in Bydgoszcz are located here.
On the sidewalk grows a ginkgo identified as Natural landmark of Bydgoszcz.[10]
The building boasts historicism features, with a predominant Neoclassical architecture form. It has a "L" shape, with a prominent avant-corps in the middle of its frontage, with two storey, an attic and a basement. The entrance double portal is topped with a triangular pediment and a tympanum in which is placed a circular ornament. The facade is divided by horizontal cornices and a wide frieze on its top. The ground floor is decorated with bossage.[11]
Kuyavian-Pomeranian Heritage list Nr.A/743 & 158/A, 11 April.[12]
1875-1878, by Heinrich Gruder & Carl Rose
The school building has been designed by engineer Heinrich Gruder[13] who worked on the construction of nearby St Peter's and St Paul's Church, and executed by city architect Carl Rose,[14] who realized several other edifices in Bydgoszcz, particularly in Gdańska Street. Once completed in 1878, the building housed the Town School for girls (German: Städtische Töchterschule), having its address at SchulStraße 7.[6] In 1885, the School for girls swapped its location with the one for boys (Bürgerschule), between old Nr.7 and 8: girls moved to nowadays house at the corner with Jagiellońska street, boys to the present building at Konarskiego Nr.2.[15] The school for boys operated there till 1911, when it moved again to today's Staszica street. From 1920 to 1935, the edifice housed the Faculty for boys, Polish: Męska Szkoła Wydziałowa dla Chłopców. Having accommodated a military hospital at the end of World War II, the building resumed its initial role in 1982, when the Bydgoszcz School of Fine Arts (established 1945 by Marian Turwid) moved from Pomeranian Arts House to the precincts.[16] The edifice has undergone its last renovation in 2011, with a co-funding between European Regional Development and Polish State.
The building was built in the style of eclectic with a predominance of Neo-Renaissance elements. It has two-storey, with a high basement.[14] The facade, in its central part displays a large avant-corps, topped by a pediment. The first floor is adorned with pilasters flanking lancet windows, the ground floor has a bossage decoration: on the elevation, floral friezes are visible. Both building wings are covered with gable roofs.[14] Inside, one can notice the main staircase, adorned with a wrought-iron balustrade with floral motifs. The main hall is ornamented with Tuscan pilasters and ionic order columns. On the second floor, the auditorium is garnished with a magnificent contemporary stucco work.[16]
ca 1878[17]
Since its inception, the building has been used as a sports hall (German: Turnhalle) for the different schools in the street. It is still used today as such by the Catering School of Bydgoszcz.[18]
Despite being a simple gym hall, the building, nonetheless, exposes nice architectural details such as large round top windows on street facade flanked by pilasters, a portal framing the main entry and carved wooden beams adorning the bottom of the gable.
1882-1884, by Wilhelm Lincke[11]
The building was designed to fit a Höhere Mädchenschule} school for girls established May 1853.Despite the high tuition fee, the edifice was too large and exceeded the needs.[19] Hence, the school was split in 1909-1911 into an urban high school, a four-year teachers' college and a two-year school for educators nurseries and kindergartens (German: Frauenschule). In these schools, most of the students were from German origin.[19] In 1920, the building housed the Faculty for girls, as men's one was located in the same street at Nr.2. In 1928, this girls institution received the patron name of Maria Konopnicka. Despite its success (719 pupils in 1925), the 1932 new education system put an end to the university: in 1935, the facility was combined with men's high school and moved to a building at Chwytowo street 16.[20] During World War II, the building was converted to a field hospital.[21]
In 1946, Public School Nr.6 was located there.[22] In 1952, the building housed a vocational school for clothing and catering. In 1978, the name changed to the "School of Clothing and Cuisine in Bydgoszcz" (Polish: Zespół Szkół Gastronomicznych i Odzieżowych w Bydgoszczy), converted in 1984 into the Catering School. It comprised the following departments: Gastronomic Vocational School, Technical Gastronomy, Catering for Technical Workers.[23] In 1990, the school opened new secondary vocational curriculum. In September 2006, a new building was opened, after 78 years without extension. In March 2011, the school received the ISO 9001 certificate.[23]
The original building has two-storey, a basement, and is covered with a low hip roof. The block possesses small wings, and displays three avant-corps on the street. The plastered brick facade is decorated with friezes. Each level is separated by cornices and wide geometric patterns. Each avant-corps is topped by a prominent gable, supported by corbels. Windows are semicircular, and the main door is adorned with a high brick portal.[11] The 2006 addition is located in the backyard, giving onto Casimir the Great Park.
ca 1950-1960s
This recent building from the second half of the 20th century, is a perfect illustration of functionalism style. It boasts two avant-corps on its edges. In this regard, it recalls early modern architecture tenement at Plac Wolności 7 or others in Gdańska Street (Nr.23 & 188 for instance).
1875[24]
Initially Schule straße 2, it was owned by Albert Giese, who never lived in. The building was designed as a tenement house with flats for rent. In 1900, Richard Lampe, a physician living at 35 Gdanska street, bought the tenement: as a surgeon, specialized in women's diseases, he opened a clinic in the building.[25] In 1920, widowed Janina Zabłocka and her children moved there from the Eastern Borderlands at the end of WWI. His son Tadeusz will be a diplomat and a successful entrepreneur in England after WWII, in particular with his shipping company "Tazab", allowing Poles in exile to send parcels with food and medicines to their relatives in Poland.[26]
The tenement displays Neo-Renaissance features. Each second level window of the facade is flanked with minutely designed pilasters and topped with pediment. Likewise, the main entry gate has pilasters on its sides, adorned with floral motifs.
Kuyavian-Pomeranian Heritage list Nr.A/1385, 16 September 2008[12]
1877, by Anton Hoffmann
Originally designed as a complex of renting flats, the building became in 2008 a 5-star rated hotel, "Bohema Hotel".
ca 1910[24]
Art Nouveau
Referenced initially as Schulstraße 4/5, the building was conceived as a tenement house for flat renting. His first landlord was a dentist, Sallh Jacobowski, living at Danzigerstraße 165a (now 10 Gdańska Street).[27] It then became the property of various rentiers, and accommodated an average of 15 tenants till the outbreak of World War II. Anecdotal detail, a dentist practitioner is installed today in this building.
The edifice features a mix of eclecticism (wooden loggias and balconies, neo-classical motifs) and Art Nouveau (round shapes, curved entry gate, ogee gables) style and details. One can notice, among others: