Despite its short length of roughly 200 metres (660 ft), it features many notable buildings in a variety of architectural styles, including Eclectic, Art Nouveau and early modernist.
Tenement at 5/7 Late 1930s Modern architecture Those two buildings are part of a series of similar constructions built in downtown Bydgoszcz during that period.
[10] In 1996, the building was sold by municipal authorities to a company, Shanghai Olym-Poland, which set up a hotel and a catering center for Chinese people traveling in Poland and around Europe.
[11] Tenement at N9 1910[12] Early modernism The plot at then Alexanderstraße 5 was first occupied by an insurance bank, Bersicherungsbank Teutonia till the start of the 20th century.
[6] The frontage still keeps its former shape with its large wall gable, the four balconies and some tiny motifs, bringing to mind a fading Art Nouveau influence.
Tadeusz Browicz Hospital for Infectious Diseases in Bydgoszcz, at 10/18 1898, 1911 by Józef Święcicki In 1885, the plot was purchased by priest Antoni Kielczynski, with the plan that the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, based in Chełmno,[14] would settle there.
The Bromberg address book from 1900 lists sisters with the following surnames living in the premises: Doliwa, Gralewska, Hermanska, Hoppe, Kapke, Schmidt.
At that time, the hospital had 36 beds and was maintained only by donations from Poles and landowners, among whom countess Potulicka and entrepreneurs Bronisław Kentzer and Antoni Weynerowski.
Both facades display eclectic features, which were fashionable at the time: round or triangular pediments on openings, a Mansard roof and a decorated main door (although in need of restoration) with a transom light window.