In 1814, needing to expand production into different types of printed journals, Gruenauer purchased a portion of a monastery garden within the congregation of the Poor Clares in Bydgoszcz.
The neoclassical building still stands on Jagiellońska street, close to the Church of the Poor Clares where printing continuously operated until 2005.
[4] Grünauer's print house issued a range of official documents, from Bydgoszcz's first newspaper, to the 1807 Constitution of the Duchy of Warsaw.
New owner's goal was to issue textbooks, scholarly works, fiction, Polish and foreign scientific journals, art reproductions, maps, and other publications.
This was made possible, among other things, by the acquisition in 1928 of a printing press housed in building adjacent to Bydgoszcz's jail facility at Parkowa street.
[5] In early January 1945, after the liberation of Bydgoszcz, the facility provided military printing, and published the first new city newspapers: Wiadomości Bydgoskich (Messages of Bydgoszcz), Ziemi Pomorskiej (Land of the Pomerania) and Ilustrowany Kurier Polski (Illustrated Mail of Poland).
Despite further modernizations of the print house in the late 1980s and 1990s, social and economic changes in Poland reduced production, and the company faced fierce market competition.
[4] In May 2005, the building at Jagiellońska street was bought by Opus 2 Investment Company, which built, in 2006–2007, the shopping mall Drukarnia' at this location '.
Early 2016, the complex has been bought by ASK Consulting, which decided to transform the building into a business center, Bydgoskie Centrum Finansowe.
Drukarnia houses over 50 internationally branded shops - clothing, jewelry, home furnishings, cafes, and a fitness club.