at Bocheńska Street. By 1456, the village of
Szopy was recorded in the area to the west of the Warsaw Escarpment near the road connecting Warsaw with
Puławy, now forming
Puławska Street. The settlement was owned by the Szopski family, which belonged to the
petty nobility. Since the first half of the 17th century, the settlement was owned by the
Roman Catholic order of
Discalced Carmelites. In 1795, as the area became part of the
Kingdom of Prussia, Szopy was nationalised, and in the late 18th century, the government begun placing
German settlers in the village, which became known as Szopy Niemieckie (). The Polish population settled an area to the east of Warsaw Escarpment, naming their settlement as Szopy Polskie (). A few remaining historical buildings of Szopy Polskie survive in the area of Bocheńska and Jaśminowa Streets. On 13 January 1867, the area, including Szopy Niemieckie and Szopy Polskie, became part of the
rural municipality of
Mokotów, established as part of the administrative reform in the Kingdom of Poland. The municipality was incorporated into the city of
Warsaw on 8 April 1916. In 1909, it was transferred to the municipality of
Wilanów. Szopy Niemieckie and Szopy Polskie were incorporated into the city of
Warsaw on 8 April 1916. At the beginning of the 19th century, the village of Potok was founded alongside a road now forming Potoki Street. In 1887, it had 63 residents. In the 1880s, the Fort Che, later renamed to the Piłsudski Fort in 1928, was constructed by the
Russian Imperial Army as part of the
Warsaw Fortress, a series of fortifications surrounding the city. After 1892, it was primary used as a military warehouse, and in 1909, it was decommissioned. During the
interwar period, it houses an ammunition factory. In the 1930s, the surrounding area was parceled and sold for the construction of single-family housing, expanding the nearby neighbourhood of
Królikarnia. During the
Second World War, soldiers of the
Polish Land Forces defended themselves in the fort until its capture on 25 September 1939. It was again used during the
Warsaw Uprising in 1944 by the
Polish resistance before being captured on 15 September. In 1959, a small
ski jumping venue was opened at 3 Czerniowiecka Street. It was operated by the Warsaw Ski Club, and had the
construction point at 38 m (124.67 ft). It was mostly used as a training venue and occasionally hosted ski jumping competitions. It was modernised between 1975 and 1980. The last competition was hosted there in 1989, with it continuing to serve as a training venue until the early 1990s, after which it stopped being used. It was deconstructed between 2010 and 2011. Between 1971 and 1977, the housing estate of Stegny was developed in the area of 75 ha. It consisted of apartment buildings, constated with the
large panel system technology. The buildings were made from prefabricated components, manufactured in the Służewiec House Factory (). The neighbourhood was designed by Jadwiga Grębecka, Jan Szpakowicz, and Romuald Welder, with the project receiving the Minister of Constitution Award. In January 1975, the one-millionth
public housing unit in the
Polish People's Republic, and simultaneously the 150-thousandth unit in Warsaw, was assigned in the building at 3 Marylska Street. The event was commemorated with a plaque installed on the building's façade. In 1973, the Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology was opened at 5 Sobieskiego Street. In 1979, the Stegny
speed skating rink was opened at 1 Inspektowa Street, featuring a track with dimensions of 400 m × 11 m. Prior to this, a natural ice rink operated at the location. In 1989, wooden blacksmiths building was built at 84 Przy Grobli Street, which since the late 1990s houses the Museum of Blacksmithing. Between 1981 and 1993, the Church of the Most Holy Virgin Mary the Mother of Divine Mercy was built at 9 Świętego Bonifacego Street, and between 1999 and 2003, the St. Anthony Maria Zaccaria Church was built at 15 Sobieskiego Street. Both belong to the Roman Catholic denomination. Between 1986 and 1992, the housing estate of Arbuzowa, consisting of apartment buildings constructed with the large panel system technology. It was designed by Jolanta Lipińska and Marek Mirski. The neighbourhood is located between Wilanowska Avenue, Patkowskiego Street, Służewiec Stream. On 4 October 1996, the Mokotów district was subdivided into twelve City Information System areas, with Stegny becoming one of them. Between 2006 and 2014, the housing estate of Osiedle Ażurowych Okiennic () was constructed between Przy Grobli Street, Patkowskiego Street, and Wilanowska Avenue, consisting of 13 apartment buildings, varying in height between 4 and 7 storeys, and characterized by their wooden
window blinds installed on their façades. The Fort Che was sold in 2007 by the
Polish Armed Forces to the private investors. Between 2017 and 2018, it was redeveloped as an
apartment hotel, a series of with
neomodernist residential buildings being developed in the complex. The historical fort barracks were also restored as a shopping centre with restaurants and cultural institutions. Beginning in 2016, and continuing throughout the 2010s and 2020s, the housing estate of Nova Królikarnia is being developed to the east of Sikorskiego Avenue, and to the north of Wilanowska Avenue. Designed following the principles of the
garden city movement, it consists of a series of the
modernist apartment buildings. In 2024, tram line tracks were opened alongside Jana III Sobieskiego Street, and in 2025, theg were also built alongside Świętego Bonifacego Street, ending with a
turning loop. == Characteristics ==