Warsaw: Street
Places and attractions in the Street category
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- Neoclassical architecture
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Samborska Street
Samborska Street is the shortest street in Warsaw and possibly in Poland. Approximately 22 metres long, it is located in Warsaw's New Town, just off Przyrynek Street near the Polish Security Printing Works building. It was laid out in 1770 or 1771.
Jerusalem Avenue
Jerusalem Avenue is one of the principal streets of the capital city of Warsaw in Poland. It runs through the City Centre along the East-West axis, linking the western borough of Wola with the bridge on the Vistula River and the borough of Praga on the other side of the river.
Krakowskie Przedmieście
Krakowskie Przedmieście, often abbreviated to Krakowskie, is one of the best known and most prestigious streets of Poland's capital Warsaw, surrounded by historic palaces, churches and manor-houses.
Ujazdów Avenue
Ujazdów Avenue is a major thoroughfare parallel to the Vistula River in the downtown district of Warsaw, Poland.
Miodowa Street
Miodowa is a street in Warsaw's Old Town. More precisely, it links the Krakowskie Street in with Krasiński Square. It is also the name of a street in the Kazimierz district in Kraków.
Marszałkowska Street
Marszałkowska is one of the main thoroughfares of Warsaw's city center. It links Bank Square in its north sector with Plac Unii Lubelskiej in the south.
Grochowska Street
Grochowska Street is a major road located in the Praga Południe district of Warsaw, Poland. Since November 1, 1925, a tram route has run along Grochowska Street. Currently trams and many bus lines connect Praga with Śródmieście, Wola, Rembertów and Wawer.
Kubusia Puchatka Street
Kubusia Puchatka Street is a street in Warsaw, Poland named after Winnie-the-Pooh, known in Polish translations as Kubuś Puchatek. It was built in the first half of the '50s, where the ruins of annexes’ buildings used to stand. The street is 149 metres long, and in some parts it is 23 metres wide.
Rosoła Street
The Jana Rosoła Street is one of the three main thoroughfares of Warsaw's borough of Ursynów. Named after Jan Rosół, participant of the January Uprising, it links Wąwozowa Street in the southernmost neighbourhood of Kabaty with the Dolina Służewiecka, that is Warsaw's section of National road 2, itself part of European route E30.
Płaskowickiej Street
Filipiny Płaskowickiej street is a thoroughfare which links the west and the east of Ursynów. It starts nearby the Nowoursynowska and crosses: Rosoła, Cynamonowa, Lanciego, Komisji Edukacji Narodowej, Dereniowa, Stryjeńskich, Pileckiego, Polskie Drogi and Roentgena. It has its end in the crossing with Puławska.
Próżna Street
Ulica Próżna is a historical street in Warsaw, Poland. It is the only former Warsaw Ghetto street still featuring as many as four tenement houses. The street is one of the few fragments of "Jewish Warsaw" in which the climate of the old Jewish quarter is revived during the Festival of Jewish Culture – Singer’s Warsaw.
Nalewki Street
Nalewki is a former name of the Bohaterów Getta street in Warsaw, Poland, as well as a name applied to the entire borough around it. The street runs from the Długa Street in the New Town towards what was the northern outskirts of the city in the 19th century, and the neighbourhood of Muranów.
Wąwozowa Street
The Wąwozowa Street is one of the principal streets of the Warsaw's residential neighborhood of Kabaty in the Ursynów district. It runs along the East-West axis, linking the Rosoła Street with the Stryjeńskich Street.
Tłomackie Street
Tłomackie is a small street in Warsaw, Poland, in the area of Śródmieście, next to Plac Bankowy. Initially a small village square of the settlement of the same name, with time it was incorporated into the city of Warsaw and retained its traditional name. Among its most notable buildings was the monumental Great Synagogue.
Puławska Street
Puławska Street is one of the main streets of the city of Warsaw, Poland. It links the southern City Centre and the southern boroughs of Mokotów and Ursynów with the suburb of Piaseczno.
Stryjeńskich Street
Stryjeńskich Street is one of the three main thoroughfares of Warsaw's borough of Ursynów. It links Płaskowickiej Street on the north with Wąwozowa Street on the west. The name commemorates the Stryjeński family: Zofia, Aleksander, Karol and Tadeusz.
Świętokrzyska Street
Ulica Świętokrzyska in Warsaw's city centre is one of the Polish city's principal thoroughfares. It links the city's centre with Wola borough. The street is named for Holy Cross Church, which stands on Krakowskie Przedmieście. Named after the street are a Warsaw Metro station and the Świętokrzyski Bridge.
Tamka Street
Tamka Street, ulica Tamka in Polish, is a street in the Powiśle district of Warsaw, Poland. The street runs downhill from central Warsaw toward the Vistula River and connects ulica Świętokrzyska with the Świętokrzyski Bridge.
Franciszkańska Street
Franciszkańska is a street in the centre of Warsaw, linking the New Town with Nalewki street. In the 19th century it was inhabited primarily by Jews, who converted the street into a large open-air marketplace. The name itself was derived from the Church of Saint Francis owned by the Franciscans.
Ząbkowska Street
Ząbkowska Street is one of the oldest streets in Warsaw, Poland, located in the Praga-Północ district. It runs east from Targowa Street and is around one kilometre long.
Połczyńska Street
Połczyńska Street is a major thoroughfare in Warsaw, Poland. Located in the western part of the city, in the borough of Bemowo, the street crosses the neighbourhoods of Chrzanów and Jelonki.
Sybirak Roundabout
The Sybirak Roundabout is a roundabout in western Warsaw's Ochota district, named after Poles who have been exiled to Siberia. The following streets meet at Sybirak Roundabout: on the east, Jerusalem Avenue; on the west, Jerusalem Avenue; on the north, Millennial Primate Avenue; on the south, 1920 Battle of Warsaw Street.
Czecha Street
Bronisława Czecha Street is located in Warsaw, Poland. It is part of National road 2 and European route E30. Its dual carriageway and runs mainly through forest. It is one of three roads connecting Wesoła district with the rest of Warsaw. Other two streets are Korkowa Street and Cyrulików Street.
Smolna Street
Smolna is one of the streets of Warsaw's city centre. It is entirely contained in the Śródmieście district, and runs for approximately 400m, orthogonal to the Vistula river. It is a one-way street, running eastwards from Charles de Gaulle roundabout to Jerusalem Avenue, approximately 1 km west of the river.
Marsa Street
Marsa Street is a road located in Warsaw, Poland. It is the main road from the center and eastern part of the city towards Sulejówek, Okuniew, Liw and Węgrów, as well as Nieporęt, Zegrze and Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki. It crosses the railway tracks twice and ends at the Warszawa Rembertów railway station.
Bednarska Street
The Bednarska Street in Warsaw, Poland, is a street in Warsaw's Śródmieście borough, and is the narrowest street in Warsaw. The street received its current name before the year 1743, stemming from its upper part consisting of houses inhabited by artisans, probably mainly by coopers. Officially, the name was given in 1770.
Royal Route
The Royal Route in Warsaw, Poland, is a former communication route that led southward from the city's Old Town. It now comprises a series of connecting Warsaw streets that feature a number of historic landmarks.
Wilcza Street
Wilcza is a street in Warsaw's city centre. It links Koszykowa Street in the south-eastern part of the borough with the Three Crosses Square at the Royal Route.
Bonifraterska Street
The Bonifraterska Street in Warsaw, Poland, is one of the main streets of Warsaw's New Town, stretching from Długa Street and the Krasiński Palace to Słomiński street. It is one of the most historical of Warsaw's streets.
Kościuszkowców Street
Kościuszkowców Street is located in the Wawer district of Warsaw, Poland. It connects Korkowa Street with Bronisława Czecha Street, which is also part of the national road 2. Its east side borders with King Jan Sobieski Reserve.
Wolska Street
Wolska is the main artery of Warsaw's borough of Wola. Initially Wola district was but a western suburb of Warsaw and a road leading to it was dubbed "droga wolska" - Wola road. In 1725 parts of that road closest to the Warsaw Old Town, located along the Saxon Axis, were officially renamed to "Aleja Wolska" - Wola Avenue.
Zielna Street
Zielna is a street in Warsaw city centre, Poland. Initially one of the main streets linking the southern city centre with its northern part, it lost much of its significance in 1941, when the nearby Marszałkowska street had been extended across the Saxon Garden to the Bankowy Sq.