Urban Architecture

The Built Form of Polish Cities

Architectural documentation of historic and contemporary urban fabric across Poland — from medieval market squares to interwar modernism and postwar reconstruction.

Updated June 2026 — Wrocław, Kraków, Gdańsk

St. Mary's Basilica and Cloth Hall on the Main Market Square in Kraków

Architecture by City

Each article examines a single city or building type through its historical layers, street patterns, and material palette.

Coloured townhouse facades on an old market square in western Poland
Wrocław

Gothic Brick Architecture of Wrocław's Old Town

An examination of the Silesian Gothic tradition — from the Cathedral Island's twin-towered Cathedral of St. John the Baptist to the Town Hall's stepped gables.

May 2026 · Urban History
Gdańsk Main Town showing Hanseatic merchant house facades
Gdańsk

Hanseatic Facades of Gdańsk's Long Street

The tall narrow facades of Długa and Długi Targ streets reflect Gdańsk's centuries as a Baltic trading hub — and the postwar reconstruction decisions that shaped what stands today.

March 2026 · Facade Study

Three Areas of Focus

Architectural Styles

Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Historicism, Modernism — each period left a distinct material and compositional imprint on Polish city centres.

Building History

Ownership changes, reconstruction campaigns, and adaptive reuse — the history embedded in individual buildings and street frontages across Polish cities.

Neighbourhood Design

Block structure, plot patterns, street widths, and public space — how neighbourhood-level decisions determine the walkability and character of city districts.

Cities Documented

Coverage spans cities with significant surviving or reconstructed historic fabric, as well as notable examples of mid-20th-century urban planning.

Wrocław

Capital of Lower Silesia. The Cathedral Island and Old Town preserve substantial Gothic brick fabric, including one of Central Europe's finest Gothic town halls.

Kraków

The only major Polish city to survive the Second World War largely intact. Its medieval street plan and UNESCO-listed historic centre remain the primary point of reference for Polish urban heritage.

Gdańsk

Formerly a Hanseatic Free City. The Royal Way and the Long Market preserve a remarkable sequence of patrician merchant houses, largely rebuilt after 1945 following the original street lines.