Stawowa Street
Stawowa Street is one of the most prominent and well-known pedestrian streets in the Śródmieście district of Katowice, Poland. Its name likely derives from a pond that once existed behind. The street begins at the intersection with Piotr Skarga Street, intersects with, and becomes a pedestrian zone thereafter, ending at 3 Maja Street. It serves as a commercial and service-oriented pedestrian passage, recognized as a significant public space with representative and socially integrative functions. In the late 1990s, due to high pedestrian traffic, it was one of the most prominent areas in Katowice's city center. A 2005 study identified it as one of the few central areas perceived as pleasant and well-maintained.
History
In 1857, near the present-day intersection of and Stawowa Street, the Jakob ironworks was established by the Kremski, Kożuszek, Klaus, and Rosse company. It included a steam-powered forge and foundry but was dismantled by the late 19th century. Since 1871, a school has operated on the street, housing a German minority school and kindergarten until 1939. The current section of the street was developed in the 1890s as the manor area was built up after the ironworks closed. Tenements at Wilhelm Szewczyk Square remain from the southern part. On 13 October 1890, the Katowice City Council named the street Lazarettstraße. In 1911, the Gazeta Ludowa newspaper began publication with its editorial office on Stawowa Street. From 1906 to 1922, the Kuryer Śląski, founded by Wojciech Korfanty, was based at 8 Stawowa Street.In 1922, the street was renamed Stawowa Street, reverted to Woyrschstraße during the German occupation, and then restored to Stawowa Street. Until 1939, 8 Stawowa Street housed the editorial offices of Der Oberschlesische Kurier and Ostschlesische Post. During the interwar period, a horse-drawn cab stand operated at the corner of 3 Maja and Stawowa streets. At 16 Stawowa Street, a Christian Union Prayer House and a Paramount film rental office operated. At 19 Stawowa Street, the Carioka bar and Stylowy cinema were located.
On 20 April 1945, the school at 6 Stawowa Street resumed operations, later becoming. It operated there until 2017, when it was relocated to 23. Since 2023, the building has housed a private Canadian Maple Bear school, the first of its kind in Poland.
In the 1960s, buildings beyond the intersection with 3 Maja Street were demolished, including the at 19 Stawowa Street, which housed the German Jewish Concordia Masonic lodge from 1894. In the mid-1970s, a fountain featuring a 100-kilogram brass frog with water spouting from its mouth was installed near 3 Maja Street, symbolizing the former pond. The Żabka fountain became a popular meeting point for residents. On 11 December 1992, the first McDonald's in Silesia and third in Poland opened at 5 Stawowa Street. Nearby, at 3 Maja and Adam Mickiewicz streets, there are bus and tram stops operated by the Metropolitan Transport Authority.
Buildings and institutions
The following historic buildings are located on Stawowa Street:- Residential-commercial tenement ; built in 1897 by architect in an eclectic style with Baroque Revival and northern Renaissance Revival elements, designed on a U-shaped plan. In 1924, the four-storey building was rebuilt according to a design by Albert Kohler. The façade has a classicizing character, and the seven-axis front elevation is plastered. The rear annex is covered with a steep gable roof with dormer windows. Bay windows are placed on the outer and central axes, with the central one located above a carriage gateway covered by rib vaulting on transverse arches. Above it, there is a portal with decorative elements and half-columns, as well as balconies with solid plaster balustrades. The lower part of the façade features Ionic pilasters in the giant order. Baroque Revival motifs adorn the stucco decorations on the panels beneath the windows. Inside, double-flight stairs and the original baluster railing have been preserved.
- Historic tenement ; listed in the Register of Cultural Property. Built in 1906 in the Art Nouveau style by the German construction company Perl & Trapp, it was renovated in 1932. The five-story building, planned in an inverted L-shape, features a two-wing structure with a gabled roof. The seven-axis facade, lacking upper-level decorations, is asymmetrical, with the entrance gate on the third axis. Balconies have full plastered balustrades. The interior includes double-flight stairs with a wooden balustrade and windows with colored glass.
- Historic eclectic tenement ; built between 1896 and 1897 according to a design by Ludwig Goldstein, on a U-shaped plan. The building features a three-wing rear annex. The roof is gable, and the plastered, rusticated, and symmetrical façade has a remodelled basement zone. The carriage gateway, located on the central axis of the building, features a groin vault on transverse arches with decorative corbels. It is topped with an ornate portal flanked by pilasters. On the outer axes, there are balcony loggias enclosed by stone balustrades with balusters. Inside the building, double-flight stairs with the original wooden balustrade have been preserved. During the interwar period, the Ursus film rental office operated there.
- Residential-commercial tenement ; built at the end of the 19th century in the historicist style. The designer is unknown, although it is assumed that the builder Czieslik, who carried out the building's static calculations, may have been the author of the design. The seven-storey building was erected on a rectangular plan, aligned with the street frontage. It features rear and side annexes and a simple body faced with red brick, with an asymmetrical front façade and plastered architectural detailing. The carriage gateway, located on the building's central axis, is closed with a full arch and has a dome on transverse arches supported by pilasters. The gable roof has a slight slope. Rounded corners were used near the balconies. Inside, the original window woodwork and double-flight staircase with the original wooden balustrade with balusters have been preserved.
- Tenement ; built in 1896 in the North Renaissance Revival style, on a plan resembling the letter L. The design was by . The four-storey building with a basement and attic, covered with a gable roof tiled with ceramic shingles, has a compact body articulated by a avant-corps crowned with a stepped gable and a two-storey, three-sided bay window. The front façade is asymmetrical. Decorative consoles support balconies with wrought-iron balustrades. The plastered, rusticated ground floor has three bays. Moulded window surrounds were applied to the arched window openings. A bay window is located on the third and fourth axes. Beneath the windows are panels containing cartouches and plant-like decorative motifs. Floral polychromy has been preserved on the cross vault of the carriage gateway, which rests on transverse arches supported by lesenes. Inside the building, there is a staircase with windows and a double-flight stairway with a wrought-iron balustrade. During the interwar period, the building housed the Zdrój Okocimski restaurant and the sales office of the Blacha Cynkowa zinc rolling mill. Until 1932, it was also home to the Chamber of Crafts.
- Residential-commercial tenement ; built in 1893 in the North Renaissance Revival style, on an L-shaped plan. The design was by architect Ignatz Grünfeld. The four-storey, basemented building has a two-winged structure with a central avant-corps. The entrance door is located on the outer axis. The four-bay façade is symmetrical and faced with red brick, featuring plaster architectural details. The building is covered with a steep gable roof with dormers. The window openings are set in plaster surrounds, with decorative pediments placed only above the second-storey windows. Inside the hallway, the original stone flooring, ceiling facet, and ceramic wall cladding have been preserved, as well as a double-flight staircase with a metal balustrade.
- Historic tenement ; listed in the Register of Cultural Property. The four-storey, basemented building was erected on a plan close to a rectangle, with a side annex and a rounded corner. Its two-winged structure features small bay windows topped with balconies with decorative wrought-iron balustrades. The window openings are framed with plaster surrounds. The third-storey windows are topped with cornices supported by consoles, and between them are sculpted angel heads. The windows on the fourth, sixth, and corner axes are crowned with flanked domes. The façade is topped with a Baroque Revival stucco frieze and a cornice supported by consoles. Until 1939, the building housed a branch of the Bavarian Insurance Company.
- Oswald Findeisen's Baroque Revival Tenement ; built in the late 19th century in a Baroque Revival style. Originally, the façade was designed in the "round arches" style and featured rustication. The building was likely remodelled in the 1890s, at which time it acquired its present Renaissance Revival appearance. It was erected on a plan in the shape of an inverted letter L. The three-storey, two-winged structure includes a basement, an attic, a gable roof, and a small gable on the southern façade.
- Tenement at the corner of 22 Adam Mickiewicz Street and 2 Stawowa Street; built in 1906 in an eclectic style by Perl & Trapp. The five-story building, on a U-shaped plan with a three-wing structure, features corner bay windows with turrets topped by helmets and a full-arch portal.
In 2011, Stawowa Street hosted institutions such as, Police Station No. VI, the Inicjatywa Student Association, currency exchanges, bank branches, shops, commercial-service companies, restaurants, a bookstore, travel agencies, language schools, and an architectural office.