pawian
21 Dec 2024
History / History of Poland in 10 minutes. Really worth seeing! [169]
Two peoples depend on history like none other: Jewish and Polish.
Let`s deal with the Polish approach, then.
Activists and city council historical monument conservationists raised hell after seeing that certain developing company was pulling down a ruined building in the centre of Warsaw.
The building at 8 Łucka Street is the oldest tenement house in Wola. The history of Abram Włodawer's tenement house dates back to the 19th century. It was built in 1878. It was one of the few in this part of the city to survive the tragedy of World War II.
The tenement house had been on the register of monuments since 1992, which - theoretically - obliged the owner to take care of its condition, preserve the historic elements in an unchanged form and conduct regular conservation works. In 2012, it was returned to the heirs of the former owners, then it was taken over by the company JM Invest. The developer applied to the Ministry of Culture to remove the building from the register due to its constantly deteriorating condition. The ministry refused, the company fought in court, until it finally achieved what it was striving for. Social activists from the association Tu Było, Tu Stało reported that after the last judgment of the WSA "ruling the loss of the historic value of the building, the ministry was forced to remove the building from the register".
Two peoples depend on history like none other: Jewish and Polish.
Let`s deal with the Polish approach, then.
Activists and city council historical monument conservationists raised hell after seeing that certain developing company was pulling down a ruined building in the centre of Warsaw.
The building at 8 Łucka Street is the oldest tenement house in Wola. The history of Abram Włodawer's tenement house dates back to the 19th century. It was built in 1878. It was one of the few in this part of the city to survive the tragedy of World War II.
The tenement house had been on the register of monuments since 1992, which - theoretically - obliged the owner to take care of its condition, preserve the historic elements in an unchanged form and conduct regular conservation works. In 2012, it was returned to the heirs of the former owners, then it was taken over by the company JM Invest. The developer applied to the Ministry of Culture to remove the building from the register due to its constantly deteriorating condition. The ministry refused, the company fought in court, until it finally achieved what it was striving for. Social activists from the association Tu Było, Tu Stało reported that after the last judgment of the WSA "ruling the loss of the historic value of the building, the ministry was forced to remove the building from the register".

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