Manhattan

torba miejska

Łukasz Paluch

Out of stock

Urban bag MANHATTAN

cotton bag, 44x42 cm, designed by Łukasz Paluch, made by PANATO

Manhattan is the residential and service complex at Grunwaldzki Square in Wroclaw, designed by Jadwiga Grabowska-Hawrylak and realised during 1967-1973.

The ‘Manhattan of Wrocław’ is one of the most recognisable building ensembles in the city. The idea of constructing a residential and commercial complex at Grunwaldzki Square came up in the early 1960s. The prestigious location required proper setting, but the pressure to apply typical solutions and standard prefabricates definitely made the task difficult. Jadwiga Grabowska-Hawrylak had to prove with her design that prefabrication does not necessarily mean monotony. By simple means, using a few repetitive elements that form with their smoothly curved surfaces a framing for balconies and window openings, there was created an object unique on a European scale. According to the author’s original plan the whole complex was to be made out of white concrete, and the climbing plants seeded in the pots hidden behind the curved covers were to creep the full height of the sixteen-storey high-rises. Although the concept was not fully executed, the buildings that came into being are extraordinary structures with plastically developed, sculptural facades.

Bookstore

Manhattan

urban bag

designed by Łukasz Paluch

Out of stock

Urban bag MANHATTAN

cotton bag, 44x42 cm, designed by Łukasz Paluch, made by PANATO

Manhattan is the residential and service complex at Grunwaldzki Square in Wroclaw, designed by Jadwiga Grabowska-Hawrylak and realised during 1967-1973.

The ‘Manhattan of Wrocław’ is one of the most recognisable building ensembles in the city. The idea of constructing a residential and commercial complex at Grunwaldzki Square came up in the early 1960s. The prestigious location required proper setting, but the pressure to apply typical solutions and standard prefabricates definitely made the task difficult. Jadwiga Grabowska-Hawrylak had to prove with her design that prefabrication does not necessarily mean monotony. By simple means, using a few repetitive elements that form with their smoothly curved surfaces a framing for balconies and window openings, there was created an object unique on a European scale. According to the author’s original plan the whole complex was to be made out of white concrete, and the climbing plants seeded in the pots hidden behind the curved covers were to creep the full height of the sixteen-storey high-rises. Although the concept was not fully executed, the buildings that came into being are extraordinary structures with plastically developed, sculptural facades.

Bookstore

Manhattan

graphics within the project Who saw… modernism?

Anna Sztromwasser

11 €

Top examples of modernist architecture in Wroclaw, Poland. Chosen for an educational project ‘Who saw… modernism’. The project was directed to children, and after a day of lectures and visiting some of the buildings, they created a 3D plan of the city’s modernist architecture. Later on, basing on their work, I designed an interactive map: http://mapa.ktowidzialmodernizm.pl . Presented buildings were exhibited across the city, and can be bought (A3 digital print) in the museum’s bookshop or online.

Manhattan - architect Jadwiga Grabowska-Hawrylak, 1973

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