Krakow's Nowa Huta - where communist utopia borders on 
					historic treasures. 
        
            
			Nowa Huta was conceived in the late 1940s, under the ruthless 
			communist rule of Poland, as an ideal 'proletarian city' tied to a 
			brand-new giant steelworks next to 
			Krakow. Now it constitutes Krakow's easternmost 18th  
			district – XVIII Dzielnica – the city’s largest, with 
			area of 7,226 hectares and some 55,000 inhabitants. Besides relics 
			of the Soviet-era architecture Nowa Huta can boasts a number of 
			worthwhile sites, from the 
			prehistoric Mound of Wanda (Kopiec Wandy) to the 
			13th-century Cistercian Monastery of Mogila to futuristic 
			churches
            of the late 20th century. 
            
			Nowa Huta translates as New Steelworks or New Foundry.  
					
  
            
			Traces of communist utopia in Nowa Huta
            
            
			Plac Centralny /Central Square/ was meant as the hub of the 
			visionary socialist city of Nowa Huta where wide radial avenues 
			meet, with concentric layers of public spaces and 
			housing
            estates called osiedle. The project has remained half-finished, 
			construction of the eastern half of the town canceled in the mid 
			1950s, so to the south Plac Centralny square still opens to vast 
			green fields. Otherwise it’s semi-circled by massive buildings in 
			the style of Socialist Realism. Their architects declared 
			inspiration from Poland’s monumental architecture of the Renaissance 
			(a deviation from the Soviet neoclassical orthodoxy) but it doesn’t 
			show much. The former prominent feature of Plac Centralny, a giant 
			bronze statue of Lenin (he had lived in Krakow from 1912 to 1914) 
			that used to dominate the square’s northern side in the years 1973 
			through 1989, has been removed and sold to Sweden. 
            
			Wide Aleja Solidarnosci – Solidarity Avenue, formerly Lenin Avenue – 
			links Plac Centralny with the vast industrial wasteland of mammoth 
			steelworks complex, now ArcelorMittal Poland, named after Lenin in 
			1954 and in 1990 renamed after Tadeusz Sendzimir, a Polish-American 
			successful inventor and industrialist. The street, intended as ‘the 
			axis of labor’ in Nowa Huta’s original town planning, ends at a 
			grandiose office 
			building of the management called Centrum Administracyjne 
			(Administration Center). An unintentional parody of the Renaissance 
			palatial architecture, the massive structure nicknamed ‘Vatican’ and 
			‘Palace of Doges’ was completed in 1955.  
					
  
            
            
			Nowa Huta’s other Soviet-era landmarks
            
            
			Osiedle Wandy and Osiedle Willowe.  
            Nowa Huta’s oldest districts were built between 1949 and 1951 on 
			both sides of today’s Mierzwy Street, two blocks east of Plac 
			Centralny square, as residential areas in a vein of a garden city, 
			Soviet style. The new town’s very first building, a block of flats 
			at 14 Os. Wandy, was completed on June 23, 1949. 
            
			Teatr Ludowy theater at 34 Osiedle Teatralne  
            Theater building of 1955 is one of less disagreeable examples of the 
			pseudo-classicism typical for the Soviet architecture of the mid 
			20th century. 
            
			Stefan Zeromski Hospital at Sieroszewskiego street  
            Nowa Huta’s Municipal Hospital was built between 1951 and 1954 as a 
			complex of 17 buildings. Its main edifice represents Socialist 
			Realism mimicking Baroque palatial architecture. 
            
			Swit Cinema at 10 Osiedle Teatralne and Swiatowid Cinema  
            The twins of former movie houses, opened in 1956 and 1958 
			respectively, exemplify the standard Stalinist architectural 
			preference for classicism. 
            
            
			Historic monuments in Nowa Huta
            
            
			Wanda Mound (Kopiec Wandy) 
            
			The ancient earthwork, 14 meters high and about 50 meters in 
			diameter, is one of Krakow’s two 
			prehistoric barrows. Its origins remain a mystery but 
			most historians date it to the 8th century. Legend has it that the 
			mound was erected over the grave of a mythical Krakow princess, 
			Wanda, who threw herself to Wisla river to avoid marriage with a 
			German prince. The Mound of Wanda is situated on the edge of the 
			Nowa Huta steelworks, some three kilometers east of Plac Centralny 
			square. 
            
			Cistercian Monastery in Mogila.  
            
			The monastery is one Poland’s most valued. It dates back to 1222 
			when the then Krakow bishop gave the village of Mogila (now part of 
			Nowa Huta) to the Cistercian monks. The originally Gothic complex, 
			with the Renaissance additions, was given a baroque facelift in the 
			18th century (fortunately its Gothic cloister has survived). The 
			monastery’s church of St. Venceslas and the Assumption of Our Lady (Kosciol 
			Sw. Waclawa i Wniebowziecia NMP) was built between 1266 and 1350 as 
			a hybrid of the Romanesque and Gothic architecture. In 1780 it 
			acquired a baroque facade and then baroque interior in 1790. The 
			church can boast outstanding works of art. – the Renaissance frescos 
			of circa 1530, plus the Gothic polyptych of 1514 and the15th-century 
			Gothic crucifix. The Renaissance Palace of Abbots dates from 1569. 
			The Cistercian Monastery of Mogila is situated at Klasztorna street, 
			some two kilometers southeast of Nowa Huta’s Plac Centralny square.  
            
			Church of St Bartholomew (Kosciol Sw. Bartlomieja)  
            
			The Mogila village parish church was built of timber in 1466. It 
			stands at Klasztorna street, close to the Cistercian Monastery. The 
			church boasts three aisles, a rare feature for the Polish 
			wooden architecture. Its side chapels date from the late 
			18th century together with the Baroque interior decoration of the 
			nave.  
            
			Krakow's municipality promotes a thematic route that links most of 
			Nowa Huta's places of interest.  
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