Górce
Górce is a neighbourhood and City Information System area in the Bemowo district of Warsaw, Poland. It is a high-rise residential area dominated by apartment buildings. The neighbourhood features the Bemowo station of the M2 line of the Warsaw Metro rapid transit underground system.
Górce was founded prior to the 15th century, as a small farming community. It suffered significant damage from the Swedish army during the Second Northern War, recovering in the 17th century, and further developing in the 18th century. Between the 1920s and 1940s, the village became a suburb of Warsaw, with the development of single-family detached homes, and was incorporated into the city in 1951. In the 1980s, the housing estates of apartment buildings began being developed in the area.
History
Górce, then a small farming community, was founded prior to the 15th century, and was at one point owned by a knight. By 1433, it was a property of italics=no, the advocate of Old Warsaw, and was later inherited by his son, italics=no, in 1441, who also titled himself as Górczewski. After that, the village changed owners many times, among whom were italics=no, the italics=no family, treasurer of Sochaczew italics=no, captain of the Crown Army italics=no, and voivode of Smolensk italics=no. By the 16th century, it was inhabited by the petty nobility. The village belonged to the Catholic parish in Stare Babice.In 1587, Jan Zamoyski, the supporter of Sigismund III Vasa in the War of the Polish Succession, fortified with his fources at the fields near Górce, during the opening stages of the conflict.
Górce suffered significant damage from the Swedish army during the Second Northern War, and recovered in the 17th century. It developed further in the 18th century, partially thanks to the proceedings of the election seym, during which nobility members elected monarchs of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, held at the nearby fields of Młynów, Koło, and Powązki. Górce provided the attendees and the staff with housing and food. At that time, the village also included the residence of a politician and military officer Adam Poniński, and the road to the settlement was regulated from his initiative around 1775.
In 1827, Górce had a population of 282 people in 38 households. In 1867, its lands were split and incorporated into the municipalities of italics=no and italics=no. They were organised into two agricultural estates, designated as A and B. The first was state-owned with an area of 516 New Polish morgen, and the latter had an area of 500 New Polish morgen. In 1876, a plot of land in the village, near the current italics=no, was bought by italics=no, who then founded there a plantation complex, with plant nurseries, greenhouses and a show garden, managed by his family company italics=no. Currently, it is located within the boundaries of the nearby neighbourhood of Koło. The area became known after him as Ulrychów Several brickworks also developed in the area, with the largest being italics=no's factory in the nearby Jelonki. They sourced clay locally, leaving behind pits, which over time flooded, forming numerous ponds. Most of them were filled in in the 1940s, during the development of new housing in the area, with two remaining to this day within Górce being italics=no and Green Pond.
In the 1920s, Górce became a suburb of Warsaw, with its lands being sold for the development of a low-rise neighbourhood with single-family detached homes. In 1933, the village had 80 households, concentrated in the area of the current Górczewska, Siodlarska, Żeńców, Marynin, and Gromadzka Streets.
Górce survived the Second World War without major damage. During the conflict, and in its aftermath, the village rapidly developed with new housing, with people moving three after having their homes destroyed in Warsaw. Most of the new buildings were provisional structures built from wood or rubble recovered from destruction in the city. In 1950, a tram line was opened, forming a connection between Boernerowo with Koło and Ulrychów, partially crossing the current boundaries of Górce, via Dywizjonu 303 Street.
On 14 May 1951 the area was incorporated into the city of Warsaw, becoming part of the Wola district. On 29 December 1989, following an administrative reform in the city, it became part of the municipality of Warsaw-italics=no, and on 25 March 1994, of the municipality of Warsaw-italics=no, which, on 27 October 2002, was restructured into the city district of Bemowo.
In the 1980s, the area began to be developed with housing estates of high-rise apartment buildings, replacing old residential structures. It was also cut vertically in the middle by italics=no Street, the area was cut vertically in the middle by Powstańców Śląskich Street, forming a boundary of two neighbourhoods, Stare Górce to the west, and Nowe Górce to the east. In 1992, tram tracjs were built alongside Górczewska Street, as part of the line connecting Górce to the Wola Cemetery. In 1997, it was expanded further to the north along Powstańców Śląskich Street, connecting to the neighbourhood of Nowe Bemowo.
In 1991, the St. Luke the Evangelist Church of the Catholic denomination was opened at 173 italics=no Street, based in a wooden chapel. It burned down on 24 September 2004. A new temporary chapel was built in 2004, while the construction of a new church building has been ongoing since 2001.
In 1997, the italics=no district was subdivided into ten areas of the City Information System, with italics=no becoming one of them.
Between 2008 and 2011, a fragment of the Expressway S8, in form of Obrońców Grodna Avenue, was built crossing the neighbourhood.
In 2022, the Bemowo station of the M2 line of the Warsaw Metro rapid transit underground system, was opened at the corner of italics=no and italics=no Streets.
Overview
Górce is a residential neighbourhood dominated by high-rise apartment buildings. The area is divided vertically in approximately half by italics=no Street, forming smaller neighbourhoods of Stare Górce to the west, and Nowe Górce to the east. It includes the Bemowo station of the M2 line of the Warsaw Metro rapid transit underground system, at the corner of italics=no and italics=no Streets. It also has three tramlines with tracks alongside Powstańców Śląskich Street, Górczewska Street, and Dywizjonu 303 Street. Additionally, the area features the St. Luke the Evangelist Church of the Catholic at 173 italics=no Street, and is crossed by the Expressway S8, with section known as Obrońców Grodna Avenue. Górce includes two small ponds, italics=no and Green Pond.Boundaries
Górce is a City Information System area located in Warsaw, Poland, within the central portion of the district of Bemowo. Its boundaries are approximately determined by italics=no Street, and italics=no Avenue to the north, italics=no Street, and the tracks of the railway line no. 20 to the east, italics=no Street to the south, and the city border, and around the Fort III, to the west.The neighbourhood borders Groty, Fort Radiowo, Bemowo-Lotnisko, Fort Bema to the north, Koło to the east, Ulrychów to the southeast, Jelonki Północne, and Chrzanów to the south, and the municipality of Stare Babice, with the village of Blizne Łaszczyńskiego, to the west. Its boundaries mark the city border with the Warsaw West County to the west, and the boundaries with the Wola district to the east.