Circling through Poland - with a bit of Germany thrown in.

Around Krakow

Parts of the old city wall still exists and there is a lovely perimeter park that reminded us a bit of Muenster.

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Krakow Barbican built around 1498 - "is one of only three such fortified outposts still surviving in Europe, and the best preserved."


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A very new addition to the city being built in 2010

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A nearby building



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Juliusz Słowacki Theatre. Erected in 1893.

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St. Florian's Gate (Brama Floriańska) built in the 14th century


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I have previously complained that some Polish cities didn't seem to make much use of their river frontage. Krakow certainly has put some effort in it river frontage.

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There was a park bench near here that played a song by a Polish artist when you pushed a button. We though it would only play for 30 seconds or so but it went on for over 3 minutes.


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An electric bus recharging in the middle of a busy street

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The trams were mostly pretty modern

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The seats are embroidered with Lajkonik said, amongst other claims, to celebrate the defeat of a Tatar invasion at the city walls.



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You can never go wrong ordering cakes and pastries in Poland. All of them seemed very nice

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And we got our own Lajkonik

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Former Power Station

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Kazimierz Town Hall. Built in 1414 but destroyed and rebuilt twice. This is in what was once the Jewish quarter.

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Nearby is Schindler's List Passage. Used in the the famous film.

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Images from the film

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Well of St. Stanislaus in the grounds of the Monastery of St Paul

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One of the older trams.

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You rarely came away from a Polish meal feeling hungry

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A little hole-in-the wall Pierogi place

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This road leads off from the Market Square. Obviously trams once ran through the Old Town but now it is mostly pedestrianised

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Krakow train station is pretty labyrinthine. A large shopping centre and car park is attached. You can take the lifts from the platforms directly to the roof top car park. This is also where you can take a taxi or ride share.

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I think that Krakow was the most 'beautiful' of the major cities we visited. It would certainly be pleasant to go back again.IMG20250904092223.jpg
 
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Loving this Tr and the photos but love the water spout
 
It was actually a pretty interesting train trip from Krakow to Wroclaw. For once it wasn't mostly flat rolling fields


Just before Katowice we passed by some remnants of a lost Industrial Plant. The Water Tower and Administration Building of the former "Uthemann" steelworks

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Just after Katowice we passed by a Steam Train lovers paradise. The remnants of a railyard with a water tower, part of a semi-circular Roundhouse and old engines and carriages

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Roundhouse with the turntable in front and water tower at the back

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Old rolling stock

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Gliwice Harbour - on the Gliwice Canal which connects to the Oder River.
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A couple of crossings of the canal

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This was at the end of the station platform at Wroclaw. I can't remember the last time I saw one of these in the 'flesh'. The was another one a bit further away but it was rusted out.

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Two in one video. You get a quick glimpse of the water outlet and an engine named after Jan Czochralski the man who invented the method for growing single crystals that is still used in the manufacture of 90% of all electronics that use semi-conductors.



 
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Wroclaw - pronounced vrot-slav.

It is the third biggest city in Poland with a metropolitan population of around 1.25 million. Over the centuries it as been ruled by many different political groupings but in the 1740's it was annexed by Prussia and remained 'German' until after WW2. Initially called Wroclaw the use of the name Breslau came into use in the 13th century


Unlike Krakow Wroclaw was almost completely destroyed at the end of WW2 when Hitler proclaimed it as another of his fanciful 'fortress cities'. The remaining German population was expelled after the end of the war.

Wroclaw 1945

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Wroclaw Old Town Hall in the main market square - built from the 13th century. Luckily it suffered only minor damage in WW2.

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Market Square

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Wroclaw is famous for its brass dwarf figurines. "It started with a political protest in the 1980s – the so-called „Orange Alternative” movement – to show dissatisfaction with the communist regime." -- "For example, anti-communist graffiti was regularly painted over so that its unwanted message was no longer visible. Starting in August 1982, members of the movement began painting pictures of dwarfs over the painted-over graffiti. Because wouldn’t it be ridiculous if the government censored murals of dwarfs?"

The first bronze statue did not appear until 2001 and it is now believed that there are over 700 of them in Wroclaw. We probably saw about 50 or 60 of them. hem so I will just put a few at the bottom of each post.


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They often relate to their location. For example this pair was outside the Opera House

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Wroclaw Market Hall - "Designed by Richard Plüddemann, it was built between 1906 and 1908 as the Breslauer Markthalle Nr 1, when the city was part of German Empire. The Hall was renowned for its then-innovative application of reinforced concrete trusses, which was unique in Europe at the time." It survived WW2



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Inside is a recreation of a Communist Era working class cafeteria

https://www.inyourpocket.com/wroclaw/Wroclaw-Milk-Bars


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Not fancy but filling

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No chance of loss of fittings here

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Communist era consumer goods

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While we were in Wroclaw we were joined by a German friend. She visited us in Australia last year and also came to see us in Strasbourg earlier this year. Her journey to Wroclaw was almost more complicated than when she flew to Perth. She lives about 40 km out of Stuttgart so she drove for around 6 hours to Gorlitz where she left her car. Then she took a 'local' train for about a 30 minute hop across the border. She then had to wait for about 2 hours to take a 2 hour train trip to Wroclaw.

So when she suggested a place that she saw on a trip many years ago that she would like to revisit it seemed only reasonable that we agree. But it was a good choice to agree as her suggestion led us to a very interesting place. It was also a sort of companion piece to the concrete architecture of the Market Hall but with a much larger vision.

The Hala Stulecia (Centennial Hall). It was built to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Leipzig (Battle of the Nations and was initially called the Jahrhunderthalle. It was renamed as the "Peoples Hall" during the communist era but reverted back to the Polish version of Centennial Hall after the fall of the communist regime.

It was completed in 1912 - 90 days ahead of schedule. Its pioneering usage of reinforced concrete has resulted in it being given UNESCO World Heritage Status.

"We call it the “pearl of modernism in Wrocław”, and yet at the time of its creation, at the beginning of the 20th century, it had no equal in the world. It was years ahead of La Corbusier’s manifestos and handy sentences of Mies van der Rohe (Less is more), apostles of the new direction."

"Technology of the future

On 28 June 1911, the project received a formal building permit. The function-driven form translated into specific construction solutions by Max Berg. Architects all over the world rubbed their eyes in disbelief. Engineers discreetly but steadily tapped on the forehead with their index finger. The concept was an absolute novelty, also because of the material used – reinforced concrete.

The hall is a quatrefoil, i.e. quadruple leaf – symbolically this shape is reflected in our visual identification. The plan of such a complex central building has at least two intersecting axes of symmetry, and the central space is dominated by the height above the side rooms, the walls or the system of supports separated inside the building. In one word, the Centennial Hall’s structure consists of two autonomous elements. Basis in the form of curved arches and ribs and a dome resting freely like a bowler on the head of a pre-war elegant gentleman – radially meeting reinforced concrete ribs, leaning against the lower and upper rings. Terrace roofing system made it possible to install rows of windows, enchantingly illuminating the interior of the Hall. Intentionally raw, uncovered concrete surfaces reflect the sincerity and functionality of the structure, which heralded the beginnings of a modern movement in architecture (modernism)."


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It is certainly far less bombastic, and more useful, than the other large memorial to the Battle of Leipzig that we had seen in Leipzig in 2023.

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The hall is situated in a large park with an illuminated musical fountain display and various gardens and outbuildings

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There is a large café/restaurant there as well.

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Unfortunately we didn't get to see it at night

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There is an entrance fee but it includes entrance to a small but interesting museum about the hall and its history.

Currently it can seat 10,000 people

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The concrete arches form a beautiful pattern

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Internal passageway

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The hall was used as a filming location for the film The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes.
 

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Outside

The logia - curving around the fountains for several hundred metres

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The Iglica - Polish for spire. Built in 1948 and originally 106 metres tall now 90 metres. "It was originally topped by a spinning contraption of mirrors, creating an "umbrella of light" at night, but this was struck by lightning within a day of completion, and prior to the official opening"

There was a small festival on when we visited.

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Some stainless steel 'statuary'.

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Communist era 'heroic worker' style additions

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Naturally enough the was a dwarf figurine

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The fountains are illuminated but we were too early to see anything but some colour at the base of each jet.

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The fountain displays are backed with 'loud, musical accompaniment. There was a display every few hours in the afternoon and early evening rotating through a number of selections

Theme from the movie 633 Squadron by Ron Goodwin


Richard Strauss - "Also sprach Zarathustra" (Opening theme to 2001: A space Odyssey)
 

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