
Summer Sunday piano concert at the
Chopin statue in Łazienki Park.
'Łazienki Park' () is the largest park in
Warsaw, occupying 80
hectares of the city center. The park lies in Warsaw's
Downtown (''
Śródmieście''), on Ujazdów Avenue (''Aleje Ujazdowskie''), on the "Royal Route" linking the
Royal Castle with
Wilanów to the south. Just to its north, on the other side of Agrikola Street, Łazienki Park borders on
Ujazdów Castle.

Little White House.

A garden sculpture.

Myślewicki Palace.

The Old Orangery.

Temple of Diana.

Łazienki Park in autumn.
Łazienki Park was established in the
17th century by
Tylman van Gameren, in the baroque style, for
Stanisław Lubomirski. It took the name ''Łazienki'' ("Baths") from a bathing
pavilion that was located there. In 1764 the gardens were acquired, after his
election as King of Poland, by
Stanisław August Poniatowski.
The now classicist-style gardens became Stanisław August's life work. The park was designed by
Dominik Merlini,
Johann Christian Kamsetzer and landscape gardener
Jan Christian Schuch. The park's principal buildings are clustered around or near the Łazienki Lake and Łazienki River. Stanisław August's palace, placed on the lake, is designed as a "
Palace on the Water."
Most of the park's buildings burned during and after the
Warsaw Uprising (
1944), amid fighting among German, Polish and Soviet forces. The structures nevertheless were relatively well-preserved, compared to
Warsaw's
Old Town, and the park complex's reconstruction was completed within a few years after war's end.
Palace on the Water
Main articles: Łazienki Palace
The "Palace on the Water" (), also called the "Palace on the Isle", was established in the
17th century by
Tylman van Gameren for Stanislaus Lubomirski. From 1772 to 1793
Dominik Merlini altered the building for
Stanisław August Poniatowski, who made it his residence. The bath house was formed in
Chinese style. The park, now a beautiful medley of architectural styles, was then graced with reliefs and painted Dutch tiles. Its furniture and paintings belong to the
Classicist style. The appearance is dominated by an "Attika", carried by columns, statues of
mythological figures. The palace by the park is on an artificial island on the Łazienki
lake, and is connected by two arcade bridges to the rest of the park. The long Łazienki lake is divided by the
palace in two parts, into a smaller northern lake and a bigger southern lake. On the ground floor of the palace is the so-called "
Bacchus-room", the royal baths, the ballroom, the portrait cabinet, the
Solomon Room, the rotunda with the figures of the
Polish kings, the lower picture gallery which contains minor works by
Rubens and
Rembrandt, and the chapel. Also on the ground floor is the dining room in which the famous "
Thursday dinners" took place, to which king
Stanisław August Poniatowski invited leading artists, writers and politicians. On the first floor are the royal apartments, the upper picture
gallery, the
balcony room, the king's cabinet, the royal bedchambers, the cloakroom, and the officer's room. The Palace on the Water was burnt by Germans after the
Warsaw Uprising, and was rebuilt after the
Second World War.
White Haus
Myślewicki Palace
Old Orangery
New Orangery
Temple of Diana
In
1822,
Jakub Kubicki erected a
classicist temple to the goddess
Diana. Also called the "Temple of the Sybil," it stands in the northwest part of the southern Łazienki lake. The building is massive, but built of wood and decorated inside with
murals of
flower and
fruit motifs.
Egyptian Temple
An
Egyptian temple was also built in 1822 by
Jakub Kubicki, in the southwest part of the southern Łazienki lake. It was placed next to the
fortress built by
Stanisław Lubomirski, which protected
Warsaw south of that point. In 1771 a bridge was built to it. During the
Warsaw Uprising, only the northern part of the temple survived; the southern part has never been rebuilt.
See also
★
Thursday dinners
★
Saxon Garden
External links
★
Plan of the Łazienki Park
★
VIRTUAL TOUR Łazienki in winter.
Gallery