Wroclaw: Architectural Guide
By (Author) Marcin Szczelina
DOM Publishers
DOM Publishers
10th July 2017
Germany
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Travel and holiday guides
720.943852
Paperback
240
Width 134mm, Height 245mm
Wrocaw is one of the oldest cities in Poland with a long and turbulent history that is manifest on every corner. Throughout the ages, the city has been passed from hand to hand in many different circumstances. The city has belonged to the Poles, the Czechs, the Hungarians and the Germans. Although almost seventy percent of its urban fabric was destroyed in the Second World War, Wrocaw managed to rise from the ruins and now boasts many an architectural monument. The city currently features nearly eight thousand tenements one of the largest complexes of this type found in Poland and, furthermore, in Europe. The oldest tenements originated in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, and are surrounded by Baroque, Classicist, Art Nouveau and modernist architecture. This publication comprises a compelling selection of more than 150 buildings, from avant-garde residential blocks dating from the sixties and seventies via the Centennial Hall recognised by the American Getty Foundation as one of the ten most important examples of twentieth century modernism to modern buildings and the Ozeaneum in the Zoo.
Marcin Szczelina, architecture critic and curator; assistant to director Aaron Betsky at the XI Venice Architecture Biennale; co-curator of the 2009 EVENTO Biennale in Bordeaux; author of various texts discussing contemporary architecture and art. 2008 2009 editor at Zawd: Architekt; currently works as a correspondent for Domus magazine and as a columnist for the Sukces monthly. Expert of the Mies van der Rohe Award 2015. Co-founder of Architecture Snob and founder of Furheart Gallery an independent laboratory for testing the boundaries of architecture.