Tomasz Pajzderski (16 February 1864 – 20 November 1908)[1] was a Prussian-Polish historicist architect.
He completed gymnasium in Śrem and studied at Charlottenburg Polytechnic and École des Beaux-Arts.
He built tenement buildings (among others on Friedrichstraße) and small palaces in Berlin suburbs.
[1][2][3] He also designed: the building of the Polish Association of Credit Cooperatives (1897–99, Związek Spółek Zarobkowych) in Posen (Poznań),[1] church in Kapuściany (1899), hotel "Bast" in Inowrocław (1900-1901),[1][2] churches in Jutrosin (1900-1902, funded by prince Zdzisław Czartoryski),[4][5] Czeladź and Ostrów.
[2] His further works included: Mikołaj Szelechow's tenement house in Warsaw (1904, with Stanisław Grochowicz),[1] Church of Saints Simon and Helena in Minsk,[2][6] churches in Lubraniec (1905-1906)[3] and Grabów (built in 1907–1913, destroyed during the Second World War),[6] chappel and manor house in Fajsławice.