Below: I walk to the end of the platform to see the station name in lights - not the neon that Wrocław Główny has, nevertheless effective and conforming to a Polish standard for main railway stations.
Left: the stairs down to the tunnel that links the platforms and the main hall. Interesting use of metal tubing in conjunction with blue-tinted glass and light-grey concrete. Good signage and full support for disabled passengers. EU funds put to good use.
Below: the main hall, with that wonderful abstract mural which has survived the remont intact, remaining the focal point. As I wrote, along with Gdynia, one of the finest works of public art on PKP's network of stations, this photo hardly does it justice.
Below: outside, the station structure has been retained, the facade cleaned up and beautifully illuminated. Last time I was here, temporary wooden roofing was placed above the walkways to protect passengers from falling debris.
The civilisational changes happening across Poland are raising the quality of people's everyday life; we must appreciate this; it did not happen because the Big Man deemed it be so.
This time last year:
Poles and Brits go shopping differently
This time two years ago:
Reanimated - my father's car
[Still on the go, with new MOT]
This time three years ago:
Defending Poland against hybrid warfare
This time four years ago:
Another office move
This time six years ago:
PiS splits again - Solidarna Polska formed
This time seven years ago:
Tesco vs. Auchan
This time ten years ago:
My father's house
Nice photos
ReplyDeleteWhat about shops/food stands? I've noticed that in many major stations, there are large numbers of vacancies, due to PKP's extremely high desired rents.
Anonymous:
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Food stands: to be honest, I wasn't looking having just eaten an excellent schabowy with zasmażona kapusta, boiled spuds and dill.
Rent is one issue (the Scottish Restaurant typically doesn't baulk at the prices) but cooking smells another. The bigger PKP stations were run by a now-defunct outfit called Dworzec Polski S.A. between 2010-15, set up to oversee the modernisation and commercialisation of stations in the run-up to Euro 2012. It stipulated 'no cooking on the premises, only sandwiches'. Since Dworzec Polski's demise, W-wa Centralna has grown a Mucky D's and a Burger King, indeed, many PKP stations now have Scottish Restaurants on or very near the premises (Katowice, Gdańsk, Poznań, Wrocław). Maybe Gliwice's not yet in the same league...?