PAST (Poland)
{{Infobox building
|image =Zielna Street buildings Warsaw 2024 aerial.jpg
|caption =PAST building in Warsaw, 2024
|name =PAST
|location_town =Warsaw
|location_country =Poland
|architect =Bronisław Brochwicz-Rogoyski
|client =
|engineer =
|height ={{convert|51.5|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}
|floor_count =11
|construction_start_date =1906
|completion_date =1908
|date_demolished =1944
|status =Rebuilt (1950s)
|owner =World Association of Home Army Soldiers
|cost =
|structural_system =
|style =Historicism
}}
PAST ({{lang|pl|Polska Akcyjna Spółka Telefoniczna}}; Polish Telephone Joint-stock Company), less often known as PASTa,{{Cite web|title=PASTa - Warsaw's Architecture - Studio VK|url=https://studiovk.pl/en/warsaw-architecture/pasta/|access-date=2021-02-08|website=studiovk.pl|language=en}} was a Polish telephone operator in the period between World War I and World War II. Tallest building in Europe in 1908-1911.
It is notable for its main headquarters in the North Downtown (Śródmieście Północne) neighbourhood in Warsaw, which at the time of its completion was the first skyscraper in Poland and the tallest building in Europe. The fight for the building during the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 also added to the legend of the place.
History
The Swedish-owned company Cedergren won a tender in 1900 to expand the Warsaw telephone network. For that purpose, two buildings were built at Zielna Street in downtown Warsaw, holding the telephone exchange and the company's headquarters.
The building was built between 1904 and 1910 and was constructed in two phases. The lower part, designed by L. Wahlman, I.G. Clason and B. Brochowicz-Rogoyski, was completed in 1904-1905; the upper part was added in 1907-1910. The building was one of the first reinforced concrete constructions of its magnitude in Europe.
The Cedergren licence expired in 1922 and the building was consequently taken over by the PAST company. This is why it was referred to by Varsovians either by the name of Cedergren or PAST, or, colloquially, "Pasta" ({{langx|en|Paste}}). During the German occupation of Poland, it was the regional telephone centre for General Government. During the Warsaw Uprising, on August 20, 1944, the building was captured by Polish insurgents of AK battalion "Kiliński” after 20 days of bloody fighting. The building was severely damaged. It was rebuilt in a simplified architectural form after World War II. The company was not recreated after the war, and its assets were nationalised by the Polish communist authorities.
The historic Próżna Street is right around the corner of the building.
In 2003, Kotwica, a World War II emblem of the Polish Underground State and Armia Krajowa, was placed on top of the company's former headquarters.{{cite web| url = https://www.warriorshop.pl/n19,znak-polski-walczacej-historia-kotwicy |language=pl |title=Znak Polski Walczącej - historia "Kotwicy" |access-date = 24 April 2022}}
Gallery
File:Ulica Zielna w Warszawie na początku XX wieku.jpg|Pre-war look of the Large PAST (background) and Small PAST (foreground) buildings
File:Cedergren skycraper in Warsaw (1910).jpg|Cedergren skyscraper in Warsaw, 1910
File:PAST smoke.JPG|The PAST building burning during the Warsaw Uprising
File:PAST2 DSC0053.JPG|Present-day view of the company's former headquarters
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{commons category-inline|PAST building in Warsaw}}
- [http://www.warszawa1939.pl/index.php?r1=zielna_39&r3=0 Old and modern pictures of PAST building]
- [http://www.warszawa1939.pl/index.php?r1=zielna_37&r3=0 Old and modern pictures of neighbouring building]
- [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/gdc/scd0001/2002/20020611001wa/20020611001wa.pdf 1938 Warsaw telephone directory] published by PAST (large .pdf file)
- [https://studiovk.pl/architektura-warszawy/pasta/ PASTa - page about Warsaw architecture]
Category:Buildings and structures in Warsaw