Processes of the reconstruction of Polish cities against the European background
Authors:
- Kinga Racoń-Leja
Abstract
The paper shows the phases of post-Second World War processes of the rebuilding Polish cities. The factor of times seems to be a crucial element in the evaluation, showing the changing attitudes and directions. The vast destruction of Poland during the war and enormous demographic movements as post-war consequences of shifted country borders greatly complicated further actions. The distinct Polish political situation caused major problems in understanding the identity of the cities to be rebuilt, leading to a choice between a historical reconstruction on the one hand, or a rejection of historical context on the other. These choices were strongly affected by the ideologies of Socialist Realism, Modernism, and later Post-Modernism, with its nostalgia for historicism. However the specificity of the processes showed a strong tendency among Polish architects for reconstruction. The scale and the methods of the rebuilding processes varied, which was the case of bigger cities – like Warsaw, Gdańsk, Poznań or Wrocław. In some smaller cities attempts to restore the former market places took place—presently exemplified by Opole, Kazimierz Dolny, Racibórz or Bolków. During the post-war processes multiple mistakes and problems occurred. The difficulties involved the lack of survey materials and a lack of qualified architects and planners. The replacement of the populations of cities became the most crucial matter—a typical condition in so-called Reclaimed Lands. The reconstruction was sometimes loosely conducted, leading to the stylisation of architecture. Other improvements involved reduced density or functional transpositions of the city centres. One instance of material for comparison are cities that have been divided by state borders, such as Görlitz-Zgorzelec or Frankfurt (Oder)-Słubice. The decades that followed the 1980’s brought with them distinct examples of reconstruction, carried out in the form of retroversion – in the cases of Elbląg and other cities. The processes listed by the author involve the clearing of debris and ruins, planning and re-evaluation regarding successive phases of the rebuilding processes. The summarising conclusions involve the evaluation of rebuilding processes based on the issues of: holistic continuation of the process, urban continuity, cultural heritage and “memory places” protection and most of all social engagement. The paper refers to the research conducted in recent years on the “Contemporary conditions of the cities impacted by the Second World War”.
- Record ID
- CUT98050e8a4baf4d55a39bfc0abbabd039
- Publication categories
- ; ;
- Author
- Pages
- 54-68
- Other elements of collation
- fot.; Bibliografia (na s.) - 67-68; Bibliografia (liczba pozycji) - 37; Oznaczenie streszczenia - Abstr.
- Book
- Mills Dana Dana Mills (eds.): Post War Reconstruction: the Lessons of Europe : a Symposium at the Lebanese American University, 2018, Beirut [etc.], School of Architecture and Design at the Lebanese American University
- Keywords in English
- WW2 destruction, post-war reconstruction processes, Polish cities reconstruction
- URL
- http://sard.lau.edu.lb/events/conferences/post-war-reconstruction/proceedings.php Opening in a new tab
- Language
- eng (en) English
- License
- Score (nominal)
- 5
- Uniform Resource Identifier
- https://cris.pk.edu.pl/info/article/CUT98050e8a4baf4d55a39bfc0abbabd039/
- URN
urn:pkr-prod:CUT98050e8a4baf4d55a39bfc0abbabd039
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