Buildings along Tadeusz Kościuszko Street from the eastern intersection with Jagiellońska and 3 Maja streets westward: • tenement (its southern facade adjoins the start of Tadeusz Kościuszko Street; until 1939, listed as 2 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street). • 2 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street, where the Sanok branch of the operated before 1939. • Tenement at 3 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street, previously number 1, once owned by , who ran a delicatessen there. It also housed offices of lawyers Henryk Atlas and . Until the early 1930s, it was numbered 60. In 1932, Władysław Gołkowski operated a
Żywiec Brewery agency at number 3. • . Listed in the municipal register of Sanok monuments in 2015. • (number 5). In the 1930s, it was numbered 84. and municipal registers of Sanok monuments. From 1939, it continued under German occupation at the same address, renamed
Hermann Göring Straße. • Tenement at 15 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street, a corner building at the intersection with Ignacy Daszyński Street. In 1914, it housed the Concordia funeral home. it included Adam Słuszkiewicz's tavern and, after 1945, the . In the 1990s, it housed a Rural Department Store. Later, it became the Sanok Department Store. Previously, the site housed buildings with Kukla's restaurant and Stepka's shop. • In 1938, number 23 was assigned to a control point and medical circuit of the Social Insurance Institution in Krosno. •
Tadeusz Kościuszko Monument (with
Adam Mickiewicz Park directly behind it). Previously, the , colloquially called "cat manor", stood there before being relocated to the
Museum of Folk Architecture. • Tenement at 27 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street. From 1934 to 1939, when owned by A. Wilk, it housed the . • At number 28, before 1939, the Renaissance beauty salon operated. • Building at 29 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street. In the 1930s, it was assigned to former Sanok mayor . Until 1999, the Max restaurant was there. From November 1999 to 1 March 2000, PPHU Orlik from Brzegi Górne leased the space, planning a youth pub, managed by the Sanok Municipal Economy Enterprise. In May 2000, the owner of Palermo pizzeria won the lease tender. • Building at 36 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street, designed by Władysław Chomiak in 1926. Initially residential, it served as the
Emilia Plater Private Polish Girls' Gymnasium from 1932 to 1939. During World War II, German forces occupied it. Post-war, it was a dormitory for students of
Maria Skłodowska-Curie High School, the Pedagogical High School, and other Sanok schools until 1999. After renovation in 2000, it housed county administration departments from May 2001: Geodesy and Real Estate, Architecture and Construction, and Environmental Protection, Agriculture, and Forestry. • Tenement at 37 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street, located at the corner with (previously A. Małecki and W. Wróblewski streets). Built around 1930, it housed the Rolnik agricultural-commercial cooperative before 1939 • Building at 45 Tadeusz Kościuszko Street, home to the Sanok District Prosecutor's Office. Previously, the Płoszowski family manor stood in this area. During the Polish People's Republic, a gas station operated there.
Former numbering and buildings • During the Polish People's Republic, the Wierchy County Sports, Tourism, and Recreation Center operated at number 24. Before 1927, dairy from
Bzianka operated there. • House at number 125, residence of Dr. . • The Wyrwicz family home, where M. Wyrwicz's confectionery operated before 1930. • Before 1939, lawyer Dr. ran a law office at Tadeusz Kościuszko Street. == References ==