Doktora Emila Warmińskiego street

1896-1897[12] Eclecticism with Art Nouveau elements The commissioner and first landlord was Hugo Rossow, a restaurateur running a pub house (German: Gesellschaftshaus).

Thoroughly refurbished in 2020, after being in a poor state for many years, the building boasts, among others, bas-reliefs, cornices, bossage elements on the ground floor and a portal with pillar strips topped by a balustrade line.

1850-1875[12] Eclecticism with Art Nouveau elements The first registered landlord was Friedrich ßetrich, a blacksmith by trade who set up a workshop producing wagons in the late 1860s.

The facade highlights now its assets: female-figure caryatids stand on both sides of the window above the gateway, supporting an elegant semicircular balcony.

One can notice the quirky entrance door, topped by a thin tiled roof and a French window giving on a wrought iron railing.

09-1910[17] Industrial architecture Initially on the place stood a dairy house, the Bromberger Molkerei, designed by Józef Święcicki,[18] which operated till the end of the WWI.

[22] The production site in Warmińskiego street closed in 1995, due to the nuisance to the environment, the plant being located in a densely built-up residential center of Bydgoszcz.

[24] Post WWII Modern architecture The first was house built in the 19th century: the architect Józef Święcicki and his family moved there a tenants from 1888 til 1890.

[30] After WWI, a metal products factory called Fema started to operate in the buildings of the former Dom Polski (1921), producing various types of furniture, locks, belt hinges, etc.

[31] Kazimierz and Edmund Sokolowski, firm's owners, placed a commemorative plaque in honor of the defunct Polish House on the wall of the factory at 11 Warmińskiego street.

The board was destroyed by the Nazis: in 1958, for the 75th anniversary of its foundation, the “Halka” Singing Society of Bydgoszcz re-placed it, on a building in the back of the street.

[32] After the fall of communism, the main edifice became a car workshop and was eventually demolished in February 2019, as part of a real estate project.

[7] 1884-1885[33] Eclecticism The building has been one of the first erected in Obrońców Bydgoszczy street under Prussian rule, initially to house a private high school for girls (German: Höhere Töchterschule), then registered at 9 Gammstraße.

[35] After the re-creation of the Polish state, the private high school kept working, for girls and boys, under the same appellation: Priwatne Liceum im.

[26] The ensemble consists of two buildings: the ex-workshop, bearing bricks giving onto the street and a faded neo-classical features house in the backyard, with terraces and avant-corps.

Registered on Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship heritage list, Nr.601287-Reg.A/968, November 12, 1992[45] 1880,[12] by Albert Rose[46] Eclecticism Friedrish Giese, a brewer at Bahnhoffstraße 7a[47] was the first owner of the house.

It is now a habitation building, where the Honorary Consul of the Federal Republic of Germany in Bydgoszcz[51] moved in 2019 -previously it was located at 49 Śniadeckich street.

The building renovated in 2019 a nice decoration on the first floor, with pediments topping windows and ornamented cartouche beneath, as well as a row of round openings below the roof.

One can underline the following elements: bossage, shell-shape pediments, window brackets and a monumental portal encasing a wooden door with a stained glass transom.

[13] Although degraded, the building -one of the oldest in the street- displays, in particular, a pilastered portal framing the door gate upon which one can still discern vegetal motifs carved out.

1850-1875[12] Eclecticism The commissioner of this extensive tenement was Dr. Hugo Bille, an ophthalmologist living at 1a Hoffmann straße, today's 3 Piotra Skargi Street.