Actually I
was wary of renting a place in Wrzeciono (part of Bielany district). For those
less familiar with the history of that housing estate – the blocks of flat, including
the one have rented a studio (25 square metres) on the photo taken in 1969 to
the right, were erected between 1968 and 1973 for workers of Huta Warszawa and were
inhabited by those workers and their families. Needless to say the estate has
differed much from the “highbrow” Ursynów…
To the
right, council housing blocks by ul. Szegedyńska. Formely, those were two hotele
robotnicze, purchased by the Warsaw town hall in 2004 and converted into flats
for poor families. Some time ago a hotbed of manifold pathologies now is considered
a safer place. A Straż Miejska’s outpost is on the ground floor, besides a
modern multimedia library and community centre has been opened just round the
corner.
Wrzeciono
is full of contrasts. Since distances between buildings on housing estates built
in the bleak days of communism were larger, new blocks were squeezed among older ones, therefore each new development borders the old one. On top, the
distinctive feature of Wrzeciono are numerous rows of terraced garages. Sadly,
many are used as clutter boxes, instead of serving as “homes” for cars. Consequently, finding a place to park a car after 8 p.m. on a working week day
is a challenge.
Here, I
approach ul. Dorycka, the most infamous
part of Wrzeciono. The spot gained notoriety for taking top positions in criminality
statistics, for violence, thefts, vandalism, alcoholism, battles, drug trafficking,
etc. To the right, the newly built development, Przy Doryckiej. I presume buyers
of flats in there (those buying to meet their own housing needs) have little
notion of how awful location it is. To the left, Okrąglak, with the customary shop
with alcoholic beverages, open 24 hours a day for locals in need…
Back in
late 1990s a prudent citizen would not show up here even in broad daylight.
Today, one can feel safe, however while passing by an open-air drinking den, I
feared taking out a camera to snap the peculiar hangout. I could only snap
typical Pan Heniek and Pan Ziutek who have stocked up in Świat Alkoholi.
Having escaped
from the underworld, I crossed ul. Kasprowicza and headed south-west past ul.
Nocznickiego. Vicinity of the underground station has spurred a lot of new
developments between ul. Nocznickiego and ul. Sokratesa. Seemingly, the
location and the neighbourhood take one’s fancy. The catch is that a dual
carriageway (extension of Trasa Mostu Północnego) that would join S7 expressway
will run just next to tram tracks in a few years. Noise and fumes all day round
guaranteed. Hint: check the zoning plans before buying a property!
I stroll
towards my place through Wawrzyszew. Stawy Brustmanna are the most marvellous
part of Bielany I suppose. The park surrounding two ponds, each with a fountain
on the middle of it, has been brilliantly revitalised and are a lovely hangout
on summer evenings. Sadly, I shall have little time in the coming weeks to
enjoy it.
I get
closer to home, from ul. Kasprowicza I spot the chimney of former Huta
Warszawa. Their sight is far more breath-taking when they are illuminated by
setting sun. They remind of one shot of music video to U2’s one (Berlin version)…
Did I ask
too much?
More than a
lot?
You gave me
nothing
Now it’s
all I got…
2 comments:
Gritty stuff! Following developments with great interest.
[But help me out with this sentence...
"Since distances between buildings on housing estate built in the infones, therefore new development borders the old one."]
Thanks for spotting this. Must have inadvertently deleted some part of the sentence while editing. Corrected now.
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