- a series of six walks that they led for us
- two film screenings combined with discussions;
- a series of seven workshops and educational meetings;
- six columns presenting the history of the estate and the local community;
- the first memoir zine about Grunwaldzki Square;
- the first video postcard from Grunwaldzki Square.
Watch the video postcard
Read the zine
The project also enabled us to collaborate with the Wrocław community, whose representatives collaborated on a program of events, publications, and a video postcard, which we presented at the conclusion of our two-year project. Guides, academics, artists, educators, and those working in archives and media – each of you contributed to this endeavor, and we sincerely thank you!
„Plac Grunwaldzki – an untold story” was co-created by:
Wiktoria Didoszak, Majka Dokudowicz, Ewa Głowacka, Joanna Hytrek-Hryciuk, Anna Lewińska, Piotr Lis, Joanna Majczyk, Joanna Mielewczyk, Lech Moliński, Berenika Nikodemska, Piotr Oskwarek, Anna Pazdej, Ewa Pluta, Aleksandra Podlejska, Paweł Rychert, Agnieszka Tomaszewicz, Maciej Wlazło, Magdalena Weber, Tomasz Wszołek and Krzysztof Ziental.
We would like to thank our partners and friends of the project: Academic Radio Luz, DKF Politechnika, Wrocław City Museum, Wrocław University of Science and Technology, Wrocław Film Foundation and Zakwas Studio.
We met with thirty people who were or are currently connected to the Plac Grunwaldzki estate – living, working, or studying there at various times in their lives. Our interviewees included both seniors, adults, and young people. Each of them contributed their perspective and personal stories about how Grunwald influenced or continues to influence their lives. The transcripts of these often very personal conversations allow us to see the estate from the perspective of other residents. Their memories, sometimes contradictory or surprising, help us retell the story of Grunwaldzki Square.
Click here to go to interviews with residents of the estate.
One of the project's goals was to consolidate and disseminate knowledge about the estate's shared history and identity. The events of 1945 had a profound impact on how life in the estate developed in the following decades, both in terms of development and filling the "great void" left by the Kaiserstrasse airport, as well as everyday life on Grunwaldzki Square. One of the outcomes we developed is a series of columns in which invited speakers recount the fate of Grunwald during the various years of its existence.
LIST OF COLUMNS:
- Let yourselves be drawn into a shared reflection on life in Breslau, prepared for you by Ewa Pluta, who is involved in the daily life of Wrocław City Museum i ART TRANSPARENT Foundation: CLICK HERE TO READ THE COLUMN
- Joanna Mielewczyk, a radio journalist and initiator of the series, writes about trade in Breslau tenement houses. Tenement houses: CLICK HERE TO READ THE COLUMN
- Maciej Wlazło, a guide and author of the blog, writes about how one military decision can change the lives of thousands of people over the course of several decades, i.e. about the airport built along Kaiserstrasse. BEARD OF BRESLAU: CLICK HERE TO READ THE COLUMN
- Where did the name of our estate and one of its two main streets come from? The story of the "great void" and the concept for filling it is described by Agnieszka Tomaszewicz and Joanna Majczyk, researchers associated with Faculty of Architecture of the Wrocław University of Science and Technology: CLICK HERE TO READ THE COLUMN
- Is Plac Grunwaldzki an urban museum of modernist architecture? Krzysztof Ziental, art historian, monument and conservation expert, writes about the respect for the buildings constructed on the empty site of a German airport, and about the unique architecture in Europe from a conservation perspective: CLICK HERE TO READ THE COLUMN
- The project also resulted in two columns by Piotr Lis, a Wrocław-based researcher and archivist: CLICK HERE TO READ THE FIRST COLUMN I HERE TO READ THE SECOND
Over the two years of the project, we met regularly as an intergenerational group to reminisce, create, and discuss the history of the estate. Art and creative workshops provided an opportunity to reinterpret symbols important to Wrocław and Breslau, walks around the successive stages of filling the "great void" allowed us to learn more about the decades of history of Grunwaldzki Square, and film screenings combined with moving conversations provided an opportunity to reflect on how the war changed the lives of tens of thousands of people – both those fleeing Breslau and the first settlers resettled in the Recovered Territories.
Together with other non-governmental organizations and academic partners, we use film as a tool to initiate conversations about the effects of war and build relationships between German and Polish communities. The meetings and discussions within this project are filled with emotion, memories, and warm feelings, even if the topics we discuss are difficult and sad.
- On January 25, 2024, at 6:00 p.m., there was a screening of the documentary film "Fate" by Joanna Mielewczyk (Poland, 2023), known to you from the program "„Tenement houses”" on Radio RAM. The film tells the story of the lives of two teenagers (Jerzy and Juergen) in the besieged Wrocław of 1945. The protagonists meet after many years and recall their experiences from that time. A Pole and a German, two boys living in a war-torn city. On screen, they are accompanied by a modern teenager who, through the protagonists, discovers the past of his city. The documentary runs 60 minutes. After the screening, we met with Jerzy Podlak, one of the two main characters of the film and one of the last living witnesses of Festung Breslau, and also a Wrocław pioneer, living in the capital of Lower Silesia since 1944, as well as Piotr Lis, author of the book "Kamienice 4. Stories about places that are no longer there." The conversation was led by Lech Moliński Wrocław Film Foundation.
- On February 8, 2024, at 6:00 PM, a screening of Wim Wenders's "Design over Berlin" (Germany, 1987) took place. The film shows Berlin at the end of the wall dividing the city into two worlds. The plot of Wenders' film tells the story of two angels, one of whom decides to give up his angelic status for the love of a woman. The film runs 2 hours and 8 minutes and was broadcast with Polish subtitles. Tomasz Sikora, a German and film expert, and Krzysztof Wiewióra from DKF University of Technology.
The film screenings took place thanks to cooperation with the Wrocław Film Foundation and DFK PWr, and thanks to the courtesy of the Wrocław University of Science and Technology.
We also completed a series of walks around the Plac Grunwaldzki housing estate. The walks took place in the fall of 2023 and May 2024. We learned about the construction of the airport at Grunwaldzki Square. We also learned how socialist realist architecture and flagship modernist projects were created. Among our neighbors, we listened to stories about streets and buildings invisible to the naked eye, yet etched into the history of the estate, as well as the memories of those who lived in Plac Grunwaldzki before and after the war. We learned about the realities of life in a city ravaged by war, especially in the first years immediately after the fall of the Breslau Fortress.
Walk schedule:
- 24/08/2023, 17:30-19:30 – „Stories and myths surrounding the construction of the airport at Grunwaldzki Square” – guided tour by Maciek Wlazło.
- 31/08/2023, 17:30-19:30 – „Archiwalk around Grunwaldzki Square in the footsteps of great plans from the second half of the 20th century” – guided by Joanna Majczyk.
- 28/09/2023, 17:30-19:30 – „About the relationship between architecture and people – non-existent buildings and important people” – guided tour by Ewa Pluta.
- 5/10/2023, 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM - "In the footsteps of pre- and post-war inhabitants of Wrocław" - guided tour by Joanna Mielewczyk.
- 19/10/2023, 17:30-19:30 – „From Auditorium to Auditorium, or a walk along Grunwaldzki Square in the footsteps of modernist architecture” – guided by Krzysztof Ziental.
- 9/05/2024, 5:00 PM - 10:30 AM - "The first years after the war" - guided tour by Joanna Hytrek-Hryciuk.
Intergenerational gatherings around shared history also proved successful in the form of creative workshops and meetings, during which those interested in the history of Grunwaldzki Square or connected to this part of Wrocław could develop their passions and acquire new skills. Creating a neighborhood zine together, creating linocut works, or demonstrating workshop printing during a neighborhood picnic are just some of our ideas for connecting memories and fostering intergenerational integration in a creative and non-judgmental atmosphere. This casual format proved to be a hit and helped overcome barriers between different generations of Wrocław residents.
Schedule of meetings and workshops:
- September 23, 2023 – Majka Dokudowicz, an artist and designer from Wrocław, led a demonstration of workshop printing during the picnic of the Plac Grunwaldzki Housing Estate Council and the "Nasz Grunwald" partnership. As part of the project, Dokudowicz also led a workshop on working with the linocut technique on March 5, 2024, 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM. Both of these meetings were inspired by motifs found on the facades of Breslau tenement houses on what is now Grunwaldzki Square.
- In the fall of 2024, we focused on creating a neighborhood zine with memories of Grunwald. In the first stage, 1September 4 and October 5, 2024, from 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM and 10:30 AM to 1:30 PM, two workshops were held, led by Anna Lewińska. Together, we gathered your memories and urban myths related to the Plac Grunwaldzki housing estate. Then, we moved on to creative activities – our guide in this process, and yours, was Ewa Głowacka, a Wrocław-based artist, activist, and designer with years of experience in the independent scene. The focus of our meetings was on independent and often self-published forms of publishing, which allow for the free expression of thoughts, emotions, and artistic visions. The workshops took place 22.11.2024 between 11:00-13:30 and 2.12.2024 between 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.
- At the beginning of 2025, together with Zakwas Studio, a local ceramics studio, we invited you to co-create tiles inspired by the ornaments of German tenement houses, discovering the secrets of ancient ceramic decoration techniques. The workshop took place February 21 and 25, 2025 between 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.
- „Every street is a completely different world – stories from Grunwaldzki Square” is the neighborhood finale of the project to which we invited you March 31, 2025 (5:30-7:30 PM). The intergenerational event featured the premiere of a zine and video postcard summarizing the project, as well as creative workshops on creating postcards inspired by the estate's key architectural symbols, led by Magdalena Weber.