Eastern Promise: Polish architecture and design go large
Look East! A burgeoning market and ever-increasing connectivity has provided fertile ground for architecture and design in Poland, with little sign of a slow-down.
March 27, 2018 | 10:00 pm CUT

Warsaw's growing skyline testifies to Poland’s renewed economic dynamism, and architects from far and wide want in on the action. Daniel Libeskind's contribution to the capital is Złota 44, the country's tallest residential building. Photo: Libeskind



Award winners, side by side: Barozzi Veiga's Szczecin's Philharmonic Hall stands adjacent to KWK Promes-designed Dialogue Centre Przełomy. Photos: Hufton + Crow (top), Juliusz Sokolowski (middle and bottom)


Smaller Polish cities are just as keen to build high-quality architecture. In Poznań, the MVRDV-designed Bałtyk office complex received a number of awards for its bold architecture and contribution to the city. Photos: Ossip van Duivenbode



Studio Kwadrat's design for Gdańsk's Second World War museum is not just a bold architectural statement, but also a new landmark and a place of commemoration in Poland's sixth-largest city. Photos: Tomasz Kurek


From macro to micro: Norman Foster's Varso Tower, set to become the EU's tallest building, and Polish studio Centrala’s ultra-narrow Keret House. Renders: Foster + Partners (top) and Jakub Szczesny/Centrala


Polish design brand Noti's Termo seating, designed by Tomek Rygalik (top), and Rosco sofa installed in KWK Promes architects' Konieczny's Ark house, Krakow


The clue is in the name with Polish design manufacturer Comforty. Top: the Genotype lamp by Tomek Rygalik



Top: ITO Design's Sam table for Profim. Middle and bottom: The Chic 20H chair by Christophe Pillet and the Mickey task stool by ITO Design, also for the Polish brand


Polish brand Tre produces a range of minimalist products, designed by such up-and-coming designers as David Derksen, Daisuke Kitagawa and Aleksandra Swecz, all under the careful curatorial eye of Tomek and Gosia Rygalik


Oskar Zięta's pioneering, signature 'inflatable' metal furniture, whose distinctive and unique forms are created via the application of 'free inner pressure forming'
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