In 2004, a small southwestern section of the square, at the intersection with Waryńskiego Street, was named Pakulski Brothers Alley (Polish: Zaułek Braci Pakulskich). The name comes from three brothers, Adam, Jan, and Wacław Pakulski, who owned chain of grocery stores Pakulski Brothers, with one of them formerly placed in a tenement at 57 Marszałkowska Street, in what is now the centre of the square.[4][5]
History
Constitution Square was laid out in 1952 as the central part of a then-constructed housing estate of the Marszałkowska Residential District.[6] It was constructed on the axis of Marszałkowska Street, in place of the compact street grid with tenements, most of which were destroyed during the Second World War. During the construction, all surviving buildings were demolished. The street layout was also significantly altered, including moving Koszykowa and Piękna Streets, and building the new Waryńskiego Street.[6][7][8]
Originally, the square was envisioned to feature a large fountain at its centre, and to be a final destination of the annual International Workers' Day manifestation marches.[9][10] Its centre was instead turned into a large car park.[6]
Constitution Square was ceremonially opened, together with the entire Marszałkowska Residential District, on 22 July 1952. The same day marked the ratification of the Constitution of the Polish People's Republic, that is the square's namesake.[1]
In the 1980s, it was planned to construct there the Plac Konstytucji station of the M1 line of the Warsaw Metro underground rapid transit system. Its preliminary construction begun in 1986, before being halted in 1989 due to budgetary restrictions.[13][14] The city announced plans to resume the project in 2019, and in 2022 was presented its design.[14][15] Currently, the preparatory work is in progress ahead of the construction.[16]
Characteristics
Constitution Square is on the axis of Marszałkowska Street, and forms an intersection of Koszykowa, Marszałkowska, Piękna, Śniadeckich, and Waryńskiego Streets. Tram tracks also run along the square.[6][17] Its central section forms a car park, surrounded by the road intersection, while the outlying sections form a pedestrian area.[6][8][18] The southwestern part, next to the intersection with Waryńskiego Street, is known as Pakulski Brothers Alley (Polish: Zaułek Braci Pakulskich).[19]
The square is surrounded by six- and seven-storey multifamily residential buildings of the Marszałkowska Residential District, designed in socialist realist style.[6] This includes the MDM Hotel at the intersection of Marszałkowska and Waryńskiego Streets, the first hotel to be opened in Warsaw after the Second World War.[6][20] Parallel to it, three large candelabra pillars are placed on the square.[6] At the ground floors of the buildings around the square stores and services were opened.[21]
^ abKarol Małcużyński: Szkice warszawskie. Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza, 1955, p. 157. (in Polish)
^"Kronika wydarzeń w Warszawie 1945−1958", Warszawskie Kalendarz Ilustrowany 1959. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Tygodnika Ilustrowanego Stolica, 1958, p. 66. (in Polish)
^ abcdefghEugeniusz Szwankowski: Ulice i place Warszawy Warsaw: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1970, p. 79–80. (in Polish)
^Rafał Bielski, Jakub Jastrzębski: Utracone miasto. Warszawa wczoraj i dziś. Warsaw: Skarpa Warszawska, 2016, p. 102. ISBN 978-83-63842-27-7. (in Polish)
^ abJózef Sigalin: Warszawa 1944–1980. Z archiwum architekta, vol. 2, Warsaw: PIW, 1986, p. 237–288. ISBN 83-06-01187-2. (in Polish)
^Zygmunt Stępiński: Gawędy warszawskiego architekta. Warsaw: 1984, p. 88. ISBN 83-03-00447-6. (in Polish)
^Dobiesław Jędrzejczyk: Geografia humanistyczna miasta. Warsaw: 2004, p. 298. ISBN 83-88938-77-0. (in Polish)
^Krystyna Krzyżakowa: "Życie codzienne Warszawy dzisiejszej", Kalendarz Warszawski '88. Warsaw: Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza, 1987, p. 197. ISBN 83-03-01684-9. (in Polish)
^"Plac Konstytucji". srodmiescie.um.warszawa.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2024-08-27. Retrieved 2024-08-09.
^Krzysztof Mordyński: "Plac Konstytucji w Warszawie – eksperyment 'wielkomiejskiego' socrealizmu", Spotkania z Zabytkami, no. 2. 2008, p. 3–7. (in Polish)
^Zenon Błądek: Dzieje krajowego hotelarstwa od zajazdu do współczesności: fakty, obiekty, ludzie. Poznań–Warsaw: Palladium Architekci, 2003, p. 32. ISBN 83-89284-02-2. (in Polish)
^Tadeusz Podgórski: Zwiedzamy Warszawę. Warsaw: Sport i Turystyka, 1956, p. 182–184. (in Polish)