Prudential House | |
---|---|
Alternative names | Prudential Hotel Warszawa |
General information | |
Type | Hotel |
Architectural style | Art Deco |
Town or city | Warsaw |
Country | Poland |
Construction started | 1931 |
Completed | 1933 |
Height | 66 metres (217 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 17 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Marcin Weinfeld, Stefan Bryła, Wenczesław Poniż |
Developer | Prudential plc |
The Prudential House,[1] officially known now as the Hotel Warszawa, is a historic skyscraper hotel in Warsaw, Poland, located on Warsaw Insurgents Square along Świętokrzyska Street. Built between 1931 and 1933 in the Art Deco style, it served as a base for the British Prudential Insurance Company. It was the tallest building in the interwar Poland.
History
At the time of its construction, the eighteen-story, 66m Prudential House was the sixth tallest skyscraper in Europe, after the Telefónica Building, the Boerentoren, the Ullsteinhaus, the Siemensturm and the Bel-Air-Turm. Built using a steel framework, it was the tallest building in Warsaw until the Palace of Culture and Science was completed in 1955. Designed by Marcin Weinfeld, the Prudential House included office space on the lower stories and luxurious apartments further up. The steel framework, which was innovative at the time, was designed by Stefan Bryła and Wenczesław Poniż. Construction started in 1931 and used up over 2 million bricks, 2 thousand tonnes of concrete and 1500 tonnes of steel.
In 1936, a 27-meter antenna was constructed on the roof by professor Janusz Groszkowski, who started the first television broadcasts in Europe from the facility. The Prudential House soon became a symbol of modern Warsaw and was featured in numerous contemporary films and advertisements.
The structure was heavily damaged during World War II, particularly during the Warsaw Uprising, when it was hit by approximately 1,000 artillery shells, including by a 2-tonne Karl-Gerät mortar shell, leaving only the steel framework standing. The artillery damage bent the tower sideways, but it survived the war and was featured on numerous anti-war posters.[2]
The tower was completely rebuilt after the war as a hotel, and its design style was changed from early modern to socialist realism. The building's original architect, Marcin Weinfeld, adapted the building to its new role as a hotel. The Hotel Warszawa opened in 1954 and included 375 rooms, a large restaurant, a café and a night club.[3]
In 2002, the Hotel Warszawa closed and the building was sold. In 2010, it was purchased by the Likus Group, which began a slow and controversial refurbishment. The façade was returned to its pre-war art deco form, while the socialist-realist interior was completely gutted and rebuilt in a contemporary style.
In November 2018, the 142-room Hotel Warszawa reopened as a luxury five-star hotel.[4]
Gallery
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Steel skeleton of the tower
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The building in a shell state
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Prudential House, before 1939
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Prudential House, 1934
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Heavily damaged skyscraper after the war
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Hotel Warszawa, 1963
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Hotel Warszawa, 2019
See also
References
- ^ Weinfeld, Marcin (1934). "Gmach Towarzystw Ubezpieczeń "Prudential" i "Przezorność" ("Prudential House") w Warszawie". Architektura i Budownictwo (in Polish). 9: 267–287.
- ^ "One Photo One Story: The Skyscraper that Became the Symbol of the Warsaw Uprising". Retrieved 2019-05-29.
- ^ "Prudential, historia jednego budynku". Retrieved 2019-05-30.
- ^ "Capital's historic Prudential tower, embodying everything glamorous about interwar Poland, reopens as luxury hotel". Retrieved 2019-05-30.