Palace on the Isle The principal edifice of Łazienki is the Palace on the Isle (). It was originally a baroque Bath-House erected in about 1680 by Lubomirski according to the design of
Tylman van Gameren, the most outstanding architect in
Poland at that time. The square-shaped structure had a three-side protrusion on its northern elevation. Inside was a round hall with a fountain and the hall was topped by a cupola illuminated from above by lanterns. The walls were studded with pebbles, seashells and imitated grotto. Adjoining it was a bath chamber with walls adorned by bas-reliefs. Both the building's interior as well as its exterior elevation were richly decorated with
stucco, sculptures and murals. A portion of the original decorations survived on the entrance wall of the columned portico. Also original is the Latin inscription to be read as a rebus. In translation, it states: "This house hates sorrow, loves peace, offers a bath, recommends an idyllic life and wishes to play host to honest men." To a large extent, the decorations of the main entrance hall, the Chamber of Bacchus and the Bath-Chamber all dating from Lubomirski's time, have survived. Stanislaus Augustus first took an interest in the old Bath-House in 1772. Initially, some of the interiors were restored and turned into living quarters. That coincided with a fashionable notion of fleeing palatial mansions to secludes rural abodes. In 1777, the first considerable change in the Bath-House's appearance occurred. Most notably a send storey was added to the building with a sleeping suite for King Stanislaus Augustus. Downstairs a dining-room was created which already had a classicist appearance. Fashionable roofed Chinese galleries with little bridges were added at both sides, with the western one leading to what soon would be the Royal Promenade. In 1784, a more extensive reconstruction of the Bath-House was launched according to a design by
Dominik Merlini. Two new annexes were built on the southern side, joined by a row of four columns. The classicist
façade was covered with
sandstone slabs. Four years later two new segments slightly set back from the south were added on both sides. On the northern side, they formed part of the new, monumental northern façade which featured a columned portico crowned by a triangular tympanum. The entire elevation was crowned with a stone attic embellished with sculptures by
André-Jean Lebrun. In 1793, two additional pavilions were constructed. They were joined to the palace by little bridges with columned galleries. Despite the numerous reconstructions over the years, the edifice had remained as a harmonious whole. But what started as a simple bathing pavilion had been transformed into a lavish palace. The exterior changes were accompanied by work on the interiors, most of which were given a
classicist-style appearance. A completely new interior, in the western segment added in 1788, was the two-tiered Ballroom with decorations designed by Jan Chrystian Kamsetzer. Completed in 1793, it constituted an outstanding example of the classicist style in Poland. The stuccowork and mural decorations were subordinated to architectural divisions. The axis of the composition was set off by two monumental marble fireplaces in the form of wall porticoes, featuring statues of
Apollo and Farnesian Heracles set against the shorter walls. The longer, white marbled walls decorated by vertical panneaux, painted by Jan Bogumił Plersh in the style of Raphael's grotesques in the
Vatican. Gold was the dominant colour in all chambers, especially in Solomon's Hall. The plafond, bed-mouldings and both longer walls were filled with paintings by
Marcello Bacciarelli illustrating the life of
King Solomon. It was also during the time that the interior of the former baroque grotto at the centre of the building was changed into something exceptionally monumental and serious. The walls were stuccoed in gold, grey and white and were divided with half-columns (between which neighbouring premises were entered) as well as four niches containing the marble statues of the greatest Polish monarchs:
Casimir III the Great,
Stefan Batory,
Sigismund III and
John III Sobieski. The cupola contained four tondi painted by Bacciarelli symbolizing the four virtues exemplified by the monarchs: courage, wisdom, justice and mercy. They concealed (in 1795) earlier
frescos by Plersch illustrating the times of the day which had been in keeping with the interior's previous climate. Among the other ground-floor chambers is also the portrait room and the considerably bigger picture gallery with paintings collected over time by kings and queens. A small chapel was also erected on the ground floor. It was topped with an oval cupola and the walls were divided by pilasters and panels covered with multi-coloured stucco. The first floor consists of a suite and study, the picture gallery, a royal bedroom, library and the quarters of some servants.
Classical amphitheater, and stage on the isle The classical amphitheater, inspired by ancient Greek and Roman architecture, was built on the bank of the Łazienki lake, separated by a narrow
strait from its
stage on a small isle. The amphitheater was built in 1790–93 by
Jan Chrystian Kamsetzer. Its
attic was embellished with 16 statues representing famous
poets, playwrights, and thinkers of
antiquity and of the 16th-17th centuries. In 1922 the 16 statues were replaced by 8 statues. The
stage, sited on an isle, was modeled after ancient
Herculaneum and features decorations imitating ruins in the
Roman Forum. Performances are still staged on the isle. The amphitheater and its stage provide a perfect setting on a summer evening, despite occasional noise from the
swans,
ducks, and especially the eerily hooting
peacocks.
White House The White House (
Biały Dom) is a garden
villa built in 1774-76 by
Domenico Merlini. who lived here in 1801-05 during his exile from France. Built in the form of a square, it has identical facades, adorned with
rustication, an
attic and a small
pavilion at the top. The interiors were decorated by the prominent Polish painters Jan Ścisło and Jan Bogumił Plersch. The mansion survived
World War II, and many of its interiors retain their original décor. Noteworthy on the ground floor is the former dining hall (now a salon) with scenes of Rome and Venice by Plersch. Next to it (on the western side) is the former bathroom with marbled walls and a plafond painted by Plersch, showing Zephyr and Flora. Another room in the west suite is adorned with seven fanciful views of ancient ruins set against a romantic landscape. They were painted by Antoni Herliczek. The next bedroom's walls are decorated with painted medallions showing hunting cupids on the prowls. On the second floor, only the décor of the little study has survived. Its walls are adorned with grayish-green panels into which medallions incorporating personification of learning and art have been woven.
Old Orangery The Old Orangery was erected in 1786–88 The simple, square-shaped audience area accommodated about 200 and comprised a ground floor where benches were arranged in amphitheatre fashion as well as three boxes on each wall overlooking the ground floor. The walls between the boxes were divided by pairs of pilasters, between which pilaster statues depicting women holding candles were placed. The statues were the work of Andrzej Le Brun who was assisted by Jakub Monaldi and Joachim Staggi. Above the real boxes, illusionary ones were painted to suggest yet another tier of boxes filled with a courtly, elegantly attired public. The painting was the work of Plersch who had also painted above the stage what appeared to be bas-reliefs of coats-of-arms with the crest of the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth at centre. Also painted by Plersch was the plafond depicting
Apollo in a quadriga. The painting is set in a circular frame, beyond whose perimeters bas-relief-effect medallions bearing the likeness of the outstanding playwrights
Sophocles,
Shakespeare,
Molière and Racine extend. The theatre's interior was built entirely of wood to ensure excellent acoustics. The deep stage has a slanted floor and displays fragments of the equipment of a former engine-room. At either sides of the stage, three-tiered actors' dressing rooms were found. In the west wing of the Old Orangery as well as in the corridors running along its main trunk a Gallery of Polish Sculpture has been set up. On exhibit are works dating from the 16th century up to 1939. Only a very few sculptures dating from the 16th and 17th centuries, as well as the first half of the 18th, are on display and they may be admired in Room 1. The next room contains sculptures from the latter half of the 18th century including works by Jan Jerzy Plersch, the artist's father, Franciszek Pinck and Andrzej Le Brun. Dating from the mid-19th century are works by such artist as
Paweł Maliński- the first professor of Warsaw University's Chair of Sculpture,
Jakub Tatarkiewicz,
Władysław Oleszczyński- an outstanding representative of the romantic school, as well as Marceli Guyski and Henryk Sattler, the son of the painter Korneli.
New Orangery The building was built by Adam Adolf Loewe and Józef Orłowski in 1860. Neo-classicist with eclectic elements, it was designed to shelter the collection of orange trees. The building was necessary because Tsar
Alexander II of Russia, who purchased one of the largest in Europe collection of
tropical plants from
Nieborów, could not transport it to
Saint Petersburg, due to climate conditions there. The collection's pride were long-lived orange trees (there were 124 of them in the collection).
Egyptian temple An
Egyptian temple was also built in 1822 by
Jakub Kubicki, on the southwest shore of the southern Łazienki Lake. It was placed next to the
fortress built by Stanisław Lubomirski, which protected Warsaw south of that point. In 1771 a bridge was built to it. During the Warsaw Uprising, only the northern part of the temple survived; the southern part has never been rebuilt. The Museum of Scouting is currently located in the temple.
Water tower The
Water Tower is a
neoclassical structure, built in 1777–78 and 1822 by
Jan Christian Kamsetzer and
Chrystian Piotr Aigner. It was modeled after
Caecilia Metella's
mausoleum on the
Appian Way in
Rome and currently serves as a museum of
jewelry.
Hermitage Situated outside the precincts of Łazienki Park on the opposite side of Agrykola Street, this small square building is covered with a
mansard roof that conceals its little upstairs rooms. The Hermitage once served Marshal
Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski as a retreat. For a time, a companion of King
Stanislaus Augustus, Madame Teresa Lhuiller, lived here. Destroyed by fire at the start of his reign,
Stables and Coach-houses This building was constructed in 1825–1826 in the grange area on the eastern side of Łazienki Gardens on the site of earlier wooden structures. It was designed along the lines of a simple horseshoe with a higher (one-storey) central portion used as staff quarters. The ground-floor wings directly adjoining the main (central) building were used as stables and the side wings served as coach-houses. The building was designed by Kulbicki and reflected a classicist architectural style, it contains conservators’ work-shops.
Invalids' Barracks This structure was built in 1825–1826 in the portion of the grange found at the south side of Łazienki Gardens. The one-storey rectangular building stands out for the severity of its architecture. Its designer could have been Wilhelm Henryk Minter, who built no longer extant barracks for hussars, uhlans and cuirassiers in the vicinity. Today it is the home of the Hunters’ and Riders’ Museum.
Narutowicz's house Between the stables and invalids’ barracks is a villa with a
façade adorned with round panels, while the back is marked by a three-sided projection. The structure was built in the 1830s, possibly as lodgings for senior army officers. After
Poland regained independence following
World War I, the building served for two years as the residence of
Gabriel Narutowicz before he became the first president of the resurrected Polish Republic. Today the building serves as a nursery school. This building should not be confused with Narutowicz's
villa, just outside Łazienki Park at 23 Dworkowa St., where Narutowicz stayed as president from 11 to 16 December 1922, when he was assassinated.
Bridge, with monument to King John III Sobieski , atop the bridge A bridge with a monument to King
John III Sobieski closes off the view from the north windows of the Łazienki Palace. The bridge, originally single-span, covered with stone panels, was erected in 1777–80. In 1877, when the canal was widened, two new spans were added on the east side. The central section of the bridge was designed by
Dominik Merlini. The King Sobieski Monument was designed by Andre Le Brun, who modelled it on King John Sobieski's
equestrian statue at
Wilanów. The statue's execution was made easier by a rough-hewn stone block, set aside for this purpose, that had lain at the
Szydłowiec quarry since Sobieski's time. The monument shows a rider in knight's armor astride a rearing steed whose hooves trample two
Ottoman Turks. The monument symbolizes Sobieski's victory over the Turks at the
Battle of Vienna (1683). == Buildings near the park ==