|
POLAND :
Warsaw
color="#0066cc
Warsaw
is the capital of
Poland
and its largest city. It is located on the
Vistula
river roughly 350 km from both the
Baltic Sea
coast and the
Carpathian Mountains
. More than 90 percent of the city was destroyed during World War
II, but the historic
Old
Town
section was painstakingly reconstructed. In 2004 the population
of
Warsaw
was estimated at 1,676,600, with an urban agglomeration of
approximately 2,400,000. Area of this city is 516,9 sq. km, with an
urban aglomeration of 1226,6 sq.km .
Warsaw
s population declined during World War II, when as many as 670,000
residents died, including the citys 375,000 Jews who were
systematically exterminated by the Nazis.
Warsaw
s population is now ethnically and religiously homogeneous. Most
residents are ethnic Poles, and the population is predominantly
Roman Catholic, though there is a small minority of Protestants. In
the early postwar period, many Poles moved to
Warsaw
from the countryside. Migration from rural areas has slowed,
however, in part because of a lack of housing in
Warsaw
The climate is temperate, with
warm summers (July temperatures average a high of 24° C/75° F and a
low of 14° C/57° F) and cold winters (January temperatures average
a high of 0° C/32° F and a low of -6° C/22° F). Snow is common in
the winter and tends to linger.
Emerging like a phoenix from the ashes of the second World
War,
Warsaw
has preserved its look of a postwar city. Its handful of historic
precincts have been meticulously reconstructed, but most of its
urban landscape is modern, from the dull products of the Stalin era
to more creative efforts of recent years.
The monumental
Palace
of
Culture
and Science in downtown is
Warsaw
s leading landmark. With the fall of Communism in 1989 and an
economic boom in the 1990s, new office blocks and hotels have
transformed the city's skyline. The city, also the capital of
Masovian Voivodship, is home to many industries (manufacturing,
steel, electrical engineering, automotive industry), comprises 66
higher learning institutions incl. (Warsaw University, Warsaw
University of Technology, Higher School of Business and Medical
Academy) and over 30 Theatres including the National Theatre and
Opera and the Philharmonic National
Orchestra.
Warsaw
's main north-south boulevard is the
Royal Way
, running from the
Royal
Castle
to
Lazienki
Palace
, the royal summer residence. This is one of
Europe
's grandest stretches of road, with churches, palaces, galleries
and museums lining the route.
©
Epa Photo Epa Janek Skarzynski
Europa Enlargement
|