Pre-war planning The destruction of the city was already planned long before
its almost total destruction in 1944, even prior to the start of
World War II. On 20 June 1939, while
Adolf Hitler was visiting an architectural bureau in
Würzburg, his attention was captured by a project to create a future "German" town—Warsaw (, ), which later became known as the Pabst Plan. Friedrich Pabst prepared a technical plan for the annihilation of Warsaw and the complete ethnic cleansing of its native Polish population, with Polish Jews condemned to be the first destined for extermination. It envisaged the transformation of the Polish capital into a new, provincial German town, containing an exclusively
ethnic German population of no more than 130,000 people on the left bank supported by a slave labour camp of 80,000 Poles on the right bank of the Vistula. Warsaw's total population in 1935 was around 1.3 million, consisting of
Poles,
Jews, and other minorities, which meant that putting the new urbanization plan to work would require the complete removal of its entire population. The project included 15 separate plans and photos, and solid pre-build documentation. Among all the pages of the project the most important is a colored plan of the future town which was created by German architects in 1:20 000 scale titled
Die neue deutsche Stadt Warschau (Warsaw, the New German City). The final table bore the caption
Der Abbau der Polenstadt und der Aufbau der Deutschen Stadt (The Destruction of the Polish City and the Construction of the German City). Some parts of the project that were showing Warsaw's urban development from the second half of the 17th century until the year 1935 were based on Polish documentation from 1935 and presumably on scientific sources prepared for
Warsaw’s Territorial Development of Communication and Transportation by Prof. O. Sosnowski. All these sources were skillfully extracted long before the war. At an early stage, thanks to German deception based on the false pretense of doing scientific research, the German planners concealed the hidden agenda necessary for creating such a plan. German scholars, historians, conservators and professors of architecture, and other experts were enlisted to catalogue all of the most important and culturally significant landmarks of the city, the most exquisite churches and public buildings, and key library collections, artworks, and sculptures. The "German Varsavia" was planned to be a built on the crossroad of German
highways and
railroad networks. It covered a 6 km² built-up area plus 1 km² of Warsaw's centuries-old Prague district, for a combined 7 km² area, with parks and green areas bringing to a total of 15 km². The 7 km² of buildings was just 1/20 of the existing Polish capital city and was very different from the actual existing road network of 1939. The whole town center was to be built into a net of narrow, picturesque streets, resembling the planning of a typical German town. The modern and wide Polish capital avenues (like
Marszałkowska, Twarda,
Mokotowska, Dzika, Oś Saska, Oś Stanisławowska) would have been erased forever with all their monumental and beautiful buildings and palaces. Only the remains of the
Old Town district (without the
Polish King's Castle), the
King's Baths Palace (), and
Belvedere (), and modified parts of the Vistula riverside buildings would have been saved.
Wartime implementation of the plan After the start of military operations and the
fall of the capital into German hands the project was updated, incorporating the city's partial destruction in the September offensive of 1939. The project was soon to be included as a part of the overall
Germanization plan of the East, the genocidal
Generalplan Ost. On October 8, 1939
western areas of Poland were annexed by the Third Reich, and on October 12, 1939 the central areas of Poland were incorporated into the
General Government by Hitler's decrees. The capital of the Gubernia was placed in
Kraków (Krakau, Cracow) for security reasons. The occupying German elite was afraid of unsubdued Warsaw. The plan was to be implemented in several stages. One of the parts for the plan, the "Demolition of the Polish City and the Construction of the German City" (
Abbau der Polen-Stadt und der Aufbau der Deutschen Stadt) included a list of the Polish capital's centers of life destined for destruction, put in chronological order based on planned liquidation date. The planners also decided to use the destruction caused by bombings and fires during the September 1939 seizure of the city as a pretext for the urbanistic changes. Another part of the plan included a detailed map of the anticipated destruction showing almost all buildings destroyed coincidentally according to the original plan. In reality only 10 percent of the buildings were destroyed in 1939, with total civilian and military losses of around 12,000 killed and 66,000 wounded. In the "Small Plan" (
Kleine Planung), the population of Warsaw was to be limited to 500,000 people. The first group affected by this measure was Warsaw's Jewish population, which the German planners assumed would be removed (
Judenaussiedlung) from an area of around 482 hm² and forcibly relocated to a "
Jewish Quarter" (
Judenviertel) which was only 30% the size, i.e., 143 hm² surrounded by walls and watchtowers. In 1940, the Nazis turned the northern part of mid-town Warsaw (Wola and Muranow) into a Jewish ghetto. The
Jewish Ghetto was planned to accommodate around 30,000 of the capital's inhabitants that were of Jewish origin; however it eventually held nearly 400,000 people living in deplorable conditions. The next step for decreasing the original population of the city was the systematic displacement of people captured and destined for either
slave labor in the Third Reich or extermination in
concentration and
labor camps. As early as 1940 all inhabitants of Warsaw were subject to round-ups (łapanki) and mass shootings in the streets. Nearly 250,000 civilians were eventually murdered this way. Memorial plaques can be seen throughout Warsaw today commemorating this indiscriminate program of ethnic cleansing of men, women and children. Those who did not manage to escape were sent to death camps at
Auschwitz or
Majdanek or forced into labour in Germany. Among the 2,857,500 Poles
working as slave labor in the Third Reich during World War II, a significant percentage was composed of Warsaw and
Warsaw province inhabitants. (center, wearing a glove after a suicide attempt shortly after his arrest) at the
Nuremberg trial, with
Alfred Jodl and
Alfred Rosenberg On 6 February 1940 the German mayor of the city presented an unusual gift to
Hans Frank, the Governor-General of the Occupied Polish Territories. The gift was a full documentation of the new German town Warsaw (
Neue deutsche Stadt Warschau), the so-called Pabst Plan, prepared by German architects Hubert Gross and Otto Nurnberger. From July 1943 to July 1944, prisoners from the
Warsaw concentration camp were tasked with clearing 2.6 million cubic meters of rubble, in order to convert the former
Warsaw Ghetto into a park. == See also ==