Wyczółki[a] is a neighbourhood, and a City Information System area, located in Warsaw, Poland, within the district of Ursynów.
[1] It is a mixed area, consisting of residencial zones, as well as business office complexes and storage warehouses.
[4] In 1805, castellan Franciszek Krotkowski, who then owned the village, built there the Wyczółki Manor House as his residence.
[11][12] Larger portion of the current City Information System area of Wyczółki remained outside the boundaries of Warsaw until it was incorporated on 14 May 1951.
[13] During the German occupation of Poland in the Second World War, the race track served as an airstrip for the fighter aircraft.
[21] On 1 August 1944, on the first day of the Warsaw Uprising, the airstrip had been attacked by the Polish resistance partisants from the Karpaty Battalion of the Baszta Regiment Group.
Later that day, in retaliation, the German forces had executed there captured partisans and a group of civilians rounded up in the nearby Służew.
It had then contributed to the development of business industry in the area, and eventually leading to the creation of the biggest complex of office buildings in Poland, which also included northern Wyczółki.
[26] On 27 June 1995, at Poloneza Street, was opened the Grabów Cemetery, operated by the nearby Catholic Church of St. Sophie Barat.
[28][29] Wyczółki is a mixed area, consisting of residencial zones, as well as business office complexes and storage warehouses.
[1][8] Near Gorzkiewki Street, is located the Warszawa Okęcie railway station, which provides transit links with the nearby Warsaw Chopin Airport.
[27] Wyczółki is a City Information System area located in Warsaw, Poland, within the north-western portion of the district of Ursynów.