Nikiszowiec Settlement

Katowice is a city of more than 300,000 inhabitants, at the centre of one of Europe’s principal coal-mining and iron-making regions. In the nineteenth century it was part of the Prussian province of Silesia, but from 1922 was incorporated into Poland.

The suburb of Nikiszowiec is one of the most notable workers’ communities in Europe. It was built from 1908 to 1919 to provide homes for miners employed by George von Giesches Erben, a Silesian mining corporation that originated in the early eighteenth century at the Nickisch (now Poniatowski) mine, one of 14 in the Giesche (now Wieczorek) colliery complex. The housing was designed by the architects Georg (1871-1958) and Emil (1870-1937) Zillmann from Charlottenburg. The familoks (family dwellings) are arranged in nine blocks each with its own courtyard. The buildings are of three or four storeys, and some have attics or cellars.

The community of 5,000 residents was intended to be self-sufficient, and had shops, bakeries, a hospital, a pharmacy, public baths, a public laundry, playgrounds and a hostel for unmarried workers. The church of St Anne is a distinguished building in a neo-Baroque style, with stained glass by Georg Schneider of Regensburg, a 4.5 m. diameter chandelier by AEG of Berlin, and the pulpit, main altar and font by Georg Schreiner of Munich. Until 1977 a narrow gauge railway called Balkan ran parallel to one of the main streets and took miners to their work.

Nikiszowiec was designated a national historical monument in 2011. Guidance to the community can be provided by the City Information Centre. A small museum has been established in a former public wash house at No 4 Rymarska Street, a department of the Museum of the History of Katowice. The 'Association Factory of Local Initiatives' (Stowarzyszenie Fabryka Inicjatyw Lokalnych) dedicades to Niciszowiec's tangible and intangible heritage, specializing in development of the settlement with the local community.

Nikiszowiec Settlement
• Muzeum Historii Katowic, ul. Rymarska 4, 40-425 Katowice +48 (0) 32 - 2561810
• Stowarzyszenie Fabryka Inicjatyw Lokalnych, Plac Wyzwolenia 21
40-423 Katowice
Poland
+48 (0) 664 - 222044
Homepage

Admission:Free
Access for persons with disabilities:Available
Infrastructure for children:

The settlement can be visited at any time

  • Guided tours optional
  • Tours in other languages