Kordeckiego street is located in downtown district of Bydgoszcz, Poland. It has been laid in the 1850s. Many frontages on this street offer architectural interests: some of the buildings are registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Heritage List.
Location
Kordeckiego street runs on a south-west to north-east path: from Plac Poznański in the south to Focha Street in the north, crossing Swiętej Trojcy street on the way.
History
Kordeckiego street is registered on an 1855 address book of Bromberg and appears partially on an 1876 city map under the calling Cichorienstraße. The extension of the street in first years of the 20th century led to a change in the house numbering of the buildings.
In 1974–1975, after the filling of a portion of Old Bydgoszcz Canal, Kordeckiego street gained connection with Królowej Jadwigi Street at the crossing with Focha street in the north.
Since 2016–2017, municipal authorities launched a move towards renovating buildings in its control.
Through history, this street bore the following names:
From inception in the 1850s to 1902, Cichorienstraße (German for Chicory street);
Tenements located north of Świętej Trójcy street crossing (i.e. Nr.4,5,6,8,10,12) have all been erected after the extension of the street at the beginning of the 20th century.
The first landlord of the house was Adolf Müller, a painter.
The facade bears late Art Nouveau characteristics. Its main feature is the avant-corps overhanging the main door: it carries openings with wrought iron railings and a loggia crowned by a tented roof-like top. One can also highlight the preserved wood-carved entry door with a large transom window.
Bernard Korth was the commissioner of this villa at the very place where he had his factory of Industrial machine for water supply and drainage systems, industrial elevators and cleaning machines. The plot then occupied the entire corner between the villa and Świętej Trójcy street. Korth had also a branch on Kanal straße, today's western tip of Focha street.
Bernhard's son, Bruno, took over the business in the 1920s till the start of WII.
The villa features neo-renaissance elements and echoes similar buildings in nearby Swiętej Trojcy street (Nr.8 and 21). One can notice the heavy bossage on the facades ridges, the flower-shaped wrought iron decoration of the fence pillars, the roof lantern and the dormer tented roof topped by a finial.
View from the street
Villa Korth at the beginning of the 20th century
Side view
Flower-shaped wrought iron decoration of the fencing
Adolf Müller, the painter living at then Hippel straße 4, was also the first owner of this tenement at its inception.
The architectural elements composing the elevation show a transition to early modernism style: a predominance of straight vertical lines and very few details recall the gone Art Nouveau style (e.g. the ornamented balconies).
The house, initially located at Hippel straße 2, was owned by Artur Zemisch who ran a construction company and lived there. He was also the landlord of the tenement at 30 Swiętej Trojcy street.
Although stripped of architectural details, the facade still features two balanced avant-corps bearing canted bay windows. The ground floor is adorned with dark marble and surrounds a portal decorated with Art Nouveaustuccoedmotifs.
The house, initially at Berliner straße 6b, was owned by a smith, Anton Hertzke. It was bought in the early 1910s by Carl ßeilke, a factory manager. His widow lived there till 1926. The building has experienced a thorough overhaul in 2016–2017.
The tenement boasts two facades on the street of equivalent features: round top windows on the ground floor, the upper floors are all brick covered, with cartouches and long pilasters. Top wall dormers have ogee shapes. The corner of the building carries a thin bay window, much like a bartizan, crowned by an onion dome roof with a finial.
First registered landlord was Johann Sikorski, running a restaurant at abutting Nr.12. He did not live in this tenement.
The frontage displays a few Art Nouveau details, such as the decorated cartouches around the openings, the floral motifs on lintels or the round-shaped transom window above the main door.
The plot belonged to Johann Sikorski, a restaurateur who had the tenement erected at the end of the 19th century. Initially at Hippelstraße 1, the building had been the property of the Sikorski family till the end of the 1930s.
The tenement boasts Art Nouveau details, especially in the use of cartouches, pediments and friezes. The facade on Kordieckiego street is the most ornamented, the other one having lost its decoration. Both elevation have oriel windows with a balcony and are topped with an ogee shaped wall dormer.
View from streets intersection
Facade on Kordeckiego street
Buildings that follow are located in the historical part of the street, then named Cichorein straße with its own house numbering.
Emil ßohl, the first landlord, ran there a business selling alcohol-free beverages. His special was the champagne-weiße (white champagne without alcohol). At the time, the building was registered at 1 Cichorien straße.
Although the main frontage displays a neo-classical style, one can be surprised to discover a gorgeous Art Nouveau decor beneath the oriel window, featuring women figures, apple tree and other floral motifs.
The house, initially at Berliner straße 7, was co-owned by Heinrich Kori, a Berlin engineer, and the widow of Rudolph Kori, a lawyer in Leipzig. In 1910, the building moved to the hands of the Wedell brothers, Carl (a geometer) and Paul (a merchant): it remained in the Wedell family until the outbreak of World War II.
The tenement boasts two facades of magnificent Art Nouveau architectural style, recently renovated in 2016. One can underline the corner bay window, overhanging the entrance, ornamented with stuccos depicting two blooming trees. On both facades, a multitude of adorned motifs recall the late Secession style, echoing the Grawunder brothers' tenements erected at Dworcowa Street 45/47 during the same period.
One of the oldest buildings in the street, with an owner dating back to 1878 (Mr Lehman, a rentier) at this place then registered as 2 Cichorien straße.
Prior to this building, at the turn of the 20th century, stood there a house owned by Friedrich Hoffmeister, a bailiff. A pharmacist, Franz Brüche, bought it back and had the current tenement erected.
Renovated in 2018, the frontage is balanced by two canter bay windows topped by a terrace. The main door is gorgeously ornamented with stucco elements, as well as the facade gable extending over it. A dentil runs on top of the elevation.
Renovated in mid-2016, the villa decoration uses stucco motifs: from the columns flanking the door to the cartouches between windows to the festoons on the wall gable. Wood for the balcony or wrought iron on the railing are also utilised.
The building was erected at the end of the 19th century as the seat of dual primary schools for girls and boys, nicknamed Hippelschule after Hippel straße. Carl Meyer designed it, together with the adjacent sport hall at 22. During interwar period, the school, then named Holy Trinity, still taught girls and boys. It became co-educational school Nr.10 in 1925. At the end of WWII, the building had been housing a vocational school for several years before being handed over to the care of the University of Technology and Life Sciences in Bydgoszcz (Polish: Uniwersytet Technologiczno-Przyrodniczy-UTP) in the 1950s. On September 12, 1964, it was transformed into the High School of Engineering (Polish: Wyższa Szkoła Inżynierska) which initially ran the department of telecommunications and electrical engineering. Soon other domaines followed:
a general engineering department with a mechanical and electrical faculty (1965);
The building has an elongated rectangle footprint, with wings extending in the back side. The three-floor edifice is covered with a gablehip roof and two ridge turrets topped by a finial. The front elevation displays two avant-corps where are located the entrances. Those have decorated lancet archedportals. Facades are adorned with friezes and cornices made of dark glazed brick
Carl Meyer designed this gym hall following the same style as the one developed at N.20. This architecture recalls other gym buildings from this period in the city (e.g. at Gimnazjalna street or 4 Konarskiego Street).
Like at Nr.20, the neo-gothic edifice is garnished using glazed bricks, gothic-shaped windows and a ridge turret topped by a finial.
Emil Zemisch, a relative of Artur living at Nr.8, was the first landlord of this building. He too ran a construction business till the outbreak of WWI.
In the late 1870s, the plot initially welcomed a barn. Oscar and Heinrich Mauß commissioned this tenement in the early 1880s, located then at 15 Cichorien straße for renting purposes. In 1937, Bydgoszcz architect Jan Kossowski moved his studio to this address, where he also lived with his family.
First landlord was August Neubauer, a rentier. His son Reinhold, a barbier, lived there at the beginning of the 20th century and his wife Mathilde survived him till the outbreak of WWI.
The eclectic frontage is balanced on each side by a Neo-Baroque ensemble comprising windows flanked by a set of columns adorned at their footing with women figures. First floor openings are topped by pediments displaying feminine faces: stuccoedfestoons with flowers embellish window sills. The edifice has been entirely renovated in 2021–2022.
This old building of Kordeckiego street have been owned from its erection to WWI by the Crescioli family: first landlord was Anacleto followed by his widow Bertha. Their relative, Livia, moved to 18 Swiętej Trojcy street after the 1st World War.
The 2016 restoration underlined the frieze of the first floor as well as the window pediments of the second level, topped by a corbel table and delicate motifs.
The first landlord of this building, located at the time at Cichorein straße 12b, was Albert Trudnowski, a butcher living in the periphery of Bromberg. The Trudnowski family kept ownership till the end of the 1920s.
The balanced facade reflects an eclectic harmony of the architectural details.
One of the oldest buildings in the street, its first owner was Johann Brauer, a shoemaker; his wife was a midwife. In the 1910s, the edifice was bought by Herbert Spadk, a merchand, for renting purposes.
Similarly to the house at Nr.30, Albert Trudnowski was the first landlord of this building, located at the time at Cichorein straße 12a. The Trudnowski family kept ownership till the end of the 1920s.
The elevation style mirrors the abutting facade at Nr.30 in the use of architectural motifs.
Main frontage
Tenement at 1 Plac Poznański, corner with Kordeckiego
The plot was a garden when the street has been laid in the 1870s. The landlord at the time of the erection of the current building was Eduard Gawe, a metal craftsman.
The edifice did not suffer major changes since its inception. Once can notice the set a piled balconies on both facades, the canter oriel window at the tenement corner and the series of mansard dormers topped by minute metal tented roof.
The tenement ca 1932
View from the square
Facade on Kordeckiego
Tenement at 2 Plac Poznański, corner with Kordeckiego
Like for buildings at Nr.30 and 32, Albert Trudnowski was the first landlord of this house, located at the time at Cichorein straße 11. The tenement belonged to the Trudnowski family till the end of the 1920s.
Both balanced elevations display typical eclectic architectural details: pediments or cartouche-like lintel on windows and a table corbel above a dentil running all the way on the top.
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^As mentioned in an advertising in the 1907 Bromberg address book
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^Biskup, Marian (1999). Historia Bydgoszczy. Tom II. Część pierwsza 1920-1939. Bydgoszcz: Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe. pp. 651–700. ISBN83-901329-0-7.
^Michalski, Stanisław (1988). Bydgoszcz wczoraj i dziś 1945-1980. Bydgoszcz: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe Warszawa-Poznań. ISBN83-01-05465-4.
^Wohnungs-Anzeiger nebst Adress- und Geschäfts-Handbuch für Bromberg und Umgebung : auf das Jahr 1882. Bromberg: Mittlersche Buchhandlung. 1882. p. 72.
^ Książka Adresowa Miasta Bydgoszczy : wydana w roku 1926. Bydgoszcz: Władysław Weber. 1926. pp. 47, 79.
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Bibliography
Mackiewicz, Zygmunt (2004). Historia szkolnictwa wyższego w Bydgoszczy (in Polish). Bydgoszcz: Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe. pp. 35–46. ISBN83-917322-7-4.