More features:
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Krzysztof Kieślowski
The late Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski (1941- 1996) is known and respected the world over as a maker of great feature films....
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pl. Wolności
To find the spiritual centre of Lodz one must not go to ulica Piotrkowska, but to the bottom of it, namely to pl....
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John Godson
A Lodz success story can be found in local resident John Godson, Poland’s first black member of Parliament....
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Jerzy Kosiński
Born in Łódź, 1933, Jerzy Kosiński stands out as one of the 20th centuries great literary talents, with a life story every bit as sinister and dramatic as his books....
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The industrialists
‘Łódź was waking up, the first yelling factory whistle pierced the quiet of the early morning, then in all parts of the city others began to spring up ever more raucously and bawled in hoarse voices like a choir of monstrous roosters crowing their metal throats the call to work....
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Daniel Libeskind
Whilst most of us abandoned our architectural aspirations the moment the Lego set was mangled by the dog Daniel Libeskind has gone on to become one of the world’s most eminent architects and one of Łódź’s proudest exports....
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Wall Fresco
If you’re walking in the area of Piotrkowska 71 you probably won’t be the first person to get nailed to the floor bya zooming rickshaw....
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Fountain of Love
Standing in the shadow of the Kościuszko statue on pl. Wolnośći (right in front of Café Wiedeńska) is Łódź’s favourite fountain....
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David Lynch
The iconic film director David Lynch, whose surrealist works range from Mulholland Drive to Twin Peaks, has completed work on his latest project, Inland Empire - currently in post-production....
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In pursuit of Jacob Bronowski
Best known as the presenter of the BBC’s genuinely groundbreaking 1973 documentary series The Ascent of Man (and the best-selling book which accompanied the series), Jacob Bronowski’s central belief was that the pursuit of knowledge, the production of art for art’s sake were what fundamentally made human beings human....
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Pola Negri
One Polish name is particularly associated with the advent of film and Hollywood glamour, and that name is Pola Negri....
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Parks
On first sight Lodz looks frighteningly similar to the upturned contents of a rubbish bin. Her aesthetic glories are not obvious, however, they’re certainly there to anyone daring enough to look under her skirt....
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Marcel Szytenchelm
While much of Łódź looks like it’s ready to keel over the main drag, Piotrkowska, is something of a feast for the eyes; scrubbed, beveled and back to its best this art nouveau masterpiece is, for many, the whole reason for visiting....
Rivers of Łódź
One question you might ask in a moment of rare contemplation is where the name Łódź came from. Well, it means boat, as in the kind that appears on the city’s coat of arms. But why the boat when there’s not a river in sight? It’s a question worth pondering. The fact is prior to engineering breakthroughs this was very much a city on the water. In total the city has 18 rivers running through it, covering a staggering span of 123.9km. It was rivers such as the Ner and the Bzura that kept Łódź’s factories connected with the outside world, though over time chronic pollution led to a campaign to cover them. It was a process that lasted well into the 1920s, though now the buzzword is restoration. Already the Sokołówka has been given the beauty treatment, and next in line is the Jasień. The environmental project has so far proved a success, with trout spotted in the Sokołówka, and even a crayfish – granted, it’s not the piranha that appeared in the Wisła last year, but it’ll do for now.