| Hotel
& Apartments |
Star |
View |
| Grand
Hotel |
|
|
| Holiday
Inn Hotel |
|
|
| Hotel
Bristol |
|
|
| Hotel
Jan III Sobieski |
|
|
| Hotel
MDM |
|
|
| Hotel
Solec |
|
|
| Hotel
Vera |
|
|
|
| Hotel
& Apartments |
Star |
View |
| Hyatt
Regency Warsaw |
|
|
| Marriott
Warsaw Hotel |
|
|
| Novotel
Warsaw Airport |
|
|
| Novotel
Warsaw Centrum |
|
|
| Radisson
SAS Warsaw |
|
|
| Sheraton
Hotel Warsaw |
|
|
| Sofitel
Victoria |
|
|
|
Many
people still have an image of Warsaw as a dull concrete jungle, a wasteland
of Soviet-era housing with little appeal. The city does undoubtedly have its
fair share of problems and whole swathes of its suburbs are indeed dominated
by the less-than-imaginative creations of communist-era architects. But there
is far more to one of Europe’s most underrated cities, with a string of
things to see, an impressive cultural scene and an increasingly lively nightlife.
Warsaw is a real survivor – the city’s current day existence is
impressive in itself.
By the end of World War II, roughly 85% of the city lay in ruins and most of
the population had been killed, deported or sent to concentration camps. More
than a third of Warsaw’s pre-war population was Jewish, although there
are hardly any traces of this heritage remaining, as the city’s prosperous
Jewish community was decimated by the end of the war. Much of Warsaw’s
historic centre was painstakingly recreated in the years after World War II,
in a move by the communist authorities, which surprised the citizens of the
city as it much as it did the West. Some churlish critics have dismissed the
‘new’ Old Town as being nothing but an unconvincing fake, although
the loss of the original was hardly Warsaw’s fault and many of Europe’s
old towns have undergone similar refurbishment and rebuilding. Somewhat ironically,
many of today’s Old Town buildings are closer to the original architecture
than they were before destruction, as the alterations of the intervening centuries
were not incorporated in the reconstruction. The strikingly successful rebuilding
of the Old Town was finally rewarded in 1980, when the entire complex earned
its place on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
