Tadeusza Kościuszki street, Bydgoszcz

[2] At the time, the railway from Bydgoszcz main station to Fordon and Toruń, running along present day Kamienna street, prevented any further extension to the north.

[3] During its existence, the street bore the following names:[4] 1912[5] Early Modern architecture The first owner was Veronika Szeszinski, the widow of laborer (German: arbeiter).

[6] Although the straight lines of the facade tend to reveal early modernist trends, one can still notice the Art Nouveau influence in the round bay window or the wooden pitch roof visible on top of the frontage onto Kościuszki street.

The top of the frontage is decorated with an Art Nouveau festoon motif and balanced by the presence on both sides of wall gables.

The eclectic facade boasts architectural details: pediments on windows, a corbel table and an adorned pedestal supporting a finial.

[14] Renovated in 2022, the facade boasts lean and symmetrical features: one can notice in particular the large entrance door, topped by a fanlight.

[17] Refurbished in 2022, the tenement presents two almost-similar shifted bodies boasting balconies, avant-corps, oeil-de-boeufs and wall gables.

[1] The features of the tenement, refurbished in the early 2020s, are closer to the Art Deco Streamline Moderne, en vogue in this period.

1911-1912[10] Late Art Nouveau, early Modernism The building had for first landlord Johann Kujawski, declared as "masonry builder".

[21] The revamped ensemble[3] comprises: 1910-1911[10] Late Art Nouveau, early Modernism The tenement, then at "48 Königstraße", had been commissioned by Johann Czaplewski, a master painter, who had his studio there.

Antoni asked architect Paul Sellner to design a modern factory complex[24] with two storeys, an attic, facilities for workers and a freight elevator.

[27] Distinctive style facades with eclectic details (pediments, empty cartouches, bossage on the corner elevation) mixed with plain orange bricks.

1895[10] Eclecticism The tenement was initially the property of Franz ßawlowski, a mason living at today's 26 Chocimska street, who put it for renting.

[28] Nicely renovated in 2017, both elevations exhibit stuccoed motifs around the openings, a corbel table on the eaves as well as a delicate mascaron above the entrance on Chocimska street.

1896[28] The building was commissioned by Franz Pawlowski, a mason builder,[28] at the same time as the tenement he had built at present day 16 Chocimska street.

[29] Part of the building now houses a vocational school (Polish: Zasadnicza Szkoła Zawodowa Wiedza) and "Orlik", a sport complex.

Jutrzenka is a food industry enterprise, set up in 1951 in Bydgoszcz from the aggregation of nationalized companies dating from the pre-war period.

For this purpose, Schmidt built at then "29/31 Königstraße" a factory complex with a 900 square metres (0.22 acres) hall equipped with a steam drive.

The firm was disbanded after the end of the First World War: the vast plot was constructed with tenements onto Kościuszki and Gdańska street.