To the east of the Bydgoszcz castle, a suburban colony was established, close to the Brda River, where fish were caught and along which fertile soil could be ploughed.
A wall-fenced garden was arranged east of this monastery, surrounded by a dyke, which was supported by drainage ditches to protect it against flooding.
[5] During the Prussian period (1772–1918) and the WWII occupation of Poland, the street bore the name of Schiffer Straße.
This part of the city between Toruńska Street and the Brda River is nicknamed the "Rowing district" (Polish: Dzielnica wioślarzy).
After World War II, from 1952–1953, a new tram line was opened, connecting the Old Town with the Kapuściska and Łęgnowo districts.
[7] Traffic has been stopped since the fall of 2017, following the impact of construction of a 15-storey facility on the river bank by Nordic Astrum.
The club also participated in the research of the Solena wreck conducted by the Central Maritime Museum in Gdańsk.
Loggias are also present on both sides of the arched entrances,[20] with the façades displaying ogee wall gables.
[22] The faded façade still offers some details of eclectic architecture: bossage, brick pediments, cartouches and top corbel tables.
Constructed in 2022,[26] the edifice is an extension of the Sue Ryder's Psychoneurology Center for Old Age ("Polish: Centrum Psychoneurologii Wieku Podeszłego") at 29 Toruńska.
The recently added facility at 20 Babia Wieś street is a day care center ("Polish: Dzienny Dom Opieki Medycznej").
[17][14] Although badly damaged, the house mirrors other modernist edifices from the similar period in Bydgoszcz, like in Asnyka or in Chodkiewicza.
Renovated in 2021, the villa displays many architectural motifs, in particular a window above the entrance adorned with columns bearing lion heads, a triangular gable, and two urns standing at each extremity of the elevation.