Reconstruction and memory

  • Warsaw, heard before it is seen

    Warsaw, heard before it is seen

    Old Town Market Square, Warsaw at dusk
    Photo: Rhododendrites / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

    Poland’s capital is one of Europe’s most underrated cultural cities. It does not get the same attention as Vienna or Prague, and that is part of its strength. It is not in the business of selling itself — it is in the business of being itself.

    Culture · Poland

    It is a quarter to ten on a Thursday evening, and I am walking down a stairway to a cellar in Stare Miasto, where a piano trio is finding its first ballad. The jazz here has a particular quality: it is not trying to remind you of anything else. It is its own conversation, conducted at its own tempo. Above ground the Old Town has just turned quiet enough that you can hear your own footsteps on the stones. That is how Warsaw works. Only once you’ve slowed down.


    The rebuilt city is not a copy

    Warsaw was levelled in 1944. Eighty-five per cent of the buildings disappeared. What you see today in Stare Miasto is not the original — it is a deliberate reconstruction, completed in the years after the war using Bellotto’s eighteenth-century paintings as architectural reference. UNESCO placed the area on the World Heritage list in 1980, not because the houses were old, but because the act of reconstruction was itself a feat of cultural will.

    That gives Stare Miasto a strange quality when you walk through it. It is not an old town that survived. It is an old town that was called back to life. On Rynek Starego Miasta — the Old Town square — you sit in the afternoon at a café trying to find the line between what was reconstructed and what is real. After a while you give up. It is both at the same time. That is the point.


    The Royal Route, walked slowly

    Take the slow route from Krakowskie Przedmieście and don’t hurry. The Royal Route runs south towards Łazienki, past the presidential palace, the university and the Holy Cross Church, where Chopin’s heart rests in a pillar behind the inscription “where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.” It is the kind of detail the city does not advertise. You find it if you bother to walk slowly enough.

    The walk takes an hour if you stop at the cafés you pass. It takes twenty minutes if you are in a hurry. One of those two experiences is Warsaw. The other is a transit.


    Sunday afternoon at Łazienki

    Every Sunday from mid-May to the end of September, pianists play Chopin under the famous Chopin monument in Łazienki Królewskie. Noon and four o’clock. Two concerts, free, under open sky, surrounded by old forest and water.

    It sounds like a tourist arrangement. It is not. The pianists are internationally recognised, the repertoire is serious, and the audience consists in equal parts of locals with blankets and thermos flasks, and travellers who know what they have come for. You sit on the grass or on one of the benches. There is no reservation, no stage. Just a grand piano under the trees, and a quality of listening that is rare outside the concert hall.

    Afterwards you walk through the park to Pałac na Wyspie — the palace on the water — and onwards to the orangery, where one of Europe’s best-preserved eighteenth-century theatres still stages performances. With good planning, you can have a Sunday where Chopin in the afternoon and chamber music in the evening follow each other naturally. That is the kind of day a modern luxury journey is made of. Not because it is expensive — it really isn’t — but because it is right.


    Stalin’s gift, and what went on inside it

    Rising in the centre of Warsaw stands the Pałac Kultury i Nauki — the Palace of Culture and Science — 237 metres tall, a “gift” from Stalin to the Polish people in 1955, designed by Lev Rudnev as the westernmost of Moscow’s seven socialist-realist sisters. Poles have had seventy years to find a comfortable relationship with it. They are still not done. Each generation calls it something new: pajac, strzykawka, Stalin’s rocket. It is still standing, and it is still Poland’s landmark — like it or not.

    The interesting part is what went on inside it. In the 1960s the Palace of Culture housed two of Warsaw’s most legendary nightlife venues: the Russian restaurant Trojka, and the Kongresowa restaurant with its dance floor and striptease shows. This was the beating heart of Warsaw’s nightlife during the communist period — inside a building officially dedicated to Stalin. It is the kind of absurdity the city’s residents weren’t necessarily proud of, but which they also can’t pretend away. The Palace of Culture, after all, did house culture. Including the kind that moved on the dance floor after midnight.

    Today the building still contains four theatres, a multiplex cinema, museums, a swimming pool, the Sala Kongresowa concert hall where the Rolling Stones played in 1967, and more than ten bars and a nightclub. Take the lift to the thirtieth floor and stand on the observation terrace at 114 metres. You see the modern Warsaw that grew up around the monument. It is a cityscape that tells you more about the complexity of history than any guidebook.


    Jazz in the cellar, piano in the hall

    Warsaw’s jazz scene is one of the most serious in Europe, and almost no one outside Poland knows it. The club 12on14 in the Mokotów district programmes both Polish masters and international guests, and the room is built specifically for the small-format setting. Tygmont in the centre is where the younger Polish musicians try out new material. Both share the same quality: you come for the music, not for the atmosphere. The atmosphere adapts.

    That tells you something about the city’s character. Warsaw doesn’t need to lay atmosphere on top. The atmosphere comes from people being absorbed in what they are doing. The waitress knows the concert programme. The pianist knows the audience. It is a closed circuit of engagement, and as a traveller you are allowed to step into it without being sold anything.


    Where to stay

    Two hotels carry old Warsaw forward with quality. Hotel Bristol on Krakowskie Przedmieście has been serving coffee to successive generations of writers, statesmen and artists since 1901 — and it does not feel like a museum. It is a working grand hotel where the Art Nouveau has been restored with patience rather than pomp. Raffles Europejski, next door, is the modern counterpart: clean-lined, with a contemporary art collection in the corridors and a bar where locals actually meet in the evening. That last point is the most important indicator of whether a hotel is properly placed. The locals come.

    Below both runs the Royal Route, which you can walk all the way to Łazienki in an hour, if you take it slowly.


    Avoid

    Long days that try to fit “everything at once”. Warsaw doesn’t give back much if you treat it as a checklist. Three days with one main thread per day — Stare Miasto on one, Łazienki and the Palace of Culture on another, jazz and contemporary art on the third — and you’ll get more out of the city than most tourists do in a week.

    Skip the large tourist restaurants on the Rynek square itself. The food is average; the price is not. The serious modern Polish kitchen — mineral, precise, remarkable — is two streets away, where Varsovians eat themselves.


    Arrivals from the Nordic capitals

    TravelTalk is a Nordic publication. Here is how Nordic readers reach Warsaw.

    From Copenhagen: Direct to Warsaw Chopin (WAW) with LOT and SAS, around 1 hour 45 minutes. Daily year-round.

    From Oslo: Direct with LOT and Norwegian, around 2 hours. Norway has a quiet but persistent cultural connection to Polish exile literature — several of the Polish avant-garde writers found their first Nordic translators in Oslo.

    From Stockholm: Direct with LOT and SAS, around 1 hour 25 minutes. Sweden received thousands of Polish refugees in 1968, and the Polish-Swedish cultural exchange has remained unusually rich — particularly in poetry and film.

    From Helsinki: Direct with Finnair, around 1 hour 50 minutes. For Finnish travellers, Warsaw is the city that most directly mirrors Helsinki’s own experience: a capital that has had to redefine itself in the twentieth century, and that has chosen culture as the load-bearing element.


    Factbox: practical Warsaw

    Season: May to September for the Chopin concerts at Łazienki. December for the Christmas markets in Stare Miasto, which have a particular and quiet quality.

    Language: English in all better hotels and restaurants. Polish gratefully received in shorter phrases.

    Currency: Polish złoty (PLN). Check current rates when planning.

    Hotels mentioned: Hotel Bristol (Krakowskie Przedmieście 42/44). Raffles Europejski Warsaw (Krakowskie Przedmieście 13).

    Łazienki Chopin concerts: Every Sunday, mid-May to end of September, noon and 4pm. Free admission. Confirm dates at lazienki-krolewskie.pl.

    Pałac Kultury i Nauki: Observation terrace on the thirtieth floor, ticket at the entrance from ul. Marszałkowska. The building is open daily and contains theatres, cinema, museums and bars.


    This article is for: Culture · City breaks · Poland · Central Europe · Adult travel · Music · Architecture · Reconstruction and memory