Komorów [kɔˈmɔruf] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Michałowice, within Pruszków County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.
It has its own suburban light railway station - Komorów WKD (Warszawska Kolej Dojazdowa).
Until the 17th century, it was mostly in the hands of the Komorowski family of the Pierzchała coat of arms or related minor nobility.
In that year Stanisław Józefowicz (married to Brzezińska) sold the estate to the previous administrator - Józef Markowicz.
Markowicz parceled out the fields of the Komorów estate and sold plots to private owners and building cooperatives in three stages: The sale was interrupted by World War II.
Komorów Garden-City was established on the initiative of the landowner, Józef Markowicz, in the area bounded by the streets that exist today: Maria Dąbrowska Avenue, Starych Lip ("Old Linden") Avenue, Norwid Str., Okrężna Str., Granicka Str., Nowowiejska Str., Harcerska and Matejki Str.
During World War II, the Warsaw intelligentsia hid in Komorów, and partisans were trained in the surrounding forests.