Frascati () is a historic neighbourhood and inner-suburb in central Warsaw, the capital of Poland. The area extends eastward from the Three Crosses Square and covers the broad parkland and housing estates surrounding Frascati and Nullo streets, located between the Polish parliament building, the Warsaw Stock Exchange and the National Museum. The neighbourhood was named after the Italian city of Frascati.
The history of Frascati dates back to 1779, when a road was constructed from Wiejska Street to the private palace of prince Kazimierz Poniatowski (1721âÂÂ1800), lord chamberlain of the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth and brother of king Stanisà Âaw II Augustus. The sole remainder of that residence is the so-called Little White Palace (Biaà Ây Paà Âacyk) situated on Na Skarpie Street. The complex currently houses the Museum of the Earth of the Polish Academy of Sciences. The extensive gardens that once adorned the palace were designed by Szymon Bogumià  Zug and are now occupied by the 53-hectare Marshal Edward Rydz-à Âmigà Ây Park (often simplified to Marshal Rydz Park). In the early 19th century, French restaurateur Simon Chovot founded a recreational and entertainment park on Poniatowski's estates. The subsequent owners of the property, the aristocratic Branicki family, built a larger Renaissance Revival-styled chateau, which became known as the Red Palace (Czerwony Paà Âac) due to its clinker brick exterior. Designed by Leandro Marconi, the palace housed the French Embassy to Poland until 1939 and was eventually destroyed during World War II.
Another garden, situated north of today's KsiÃ à ¼ÃÂca Street (Princely Street), was established for Poniatowski between 1776 and 1779. The hilly garden contained many novelty and oriental structures, including a 15-metre minaret, a Chinese pavilion and a Middle Eastern outbuilding, which was dubbed by locals as the "Imam House" (Domek Imama). None of these remain standing today with the exception of "Elizeum", an underground brick-laid rotunda and a series of corridors and tunnels which once served as a maison de plaisance retreat for the wealthy. A neo-historic waterwell pavilion was erected after the Second World War, when the gardens were transformed into a public park.
The Frascati neighbourhood was inhabited by many notables and dignitaries, among them nobles, financiers, business tycoons, generals and statesmen like the much-detested Nikolay Novosiltsev, the council commissar in the Congress Kingdom of Poland. With the private gardens parceled in 1929, several modern villas were erected north of the Polish parliament, around today's Nullo, Frascati, Konopnicka and Senacka streets. These were once owned or occupied by Warsaw's wealthiest and most important residents. The majority of buildings and infrastructure survived the Second World War intact, particularity the ornate tenement houses at Wiejska Street. It remained an exclusive suburb under the Polish People's Republic, frequently visited by heads of state and communist officials. The large headquarters building of the Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR) was completed in 1952 on Frascati's northern edge.
At present, Qatar and Kuwait have their embassies and consulates in Frascati. A colony of embassies also exists to the south, just outside of the neighbourhood's borders and around the Ujazdów Park. Frascati is officially part of the South Downtown (Polish: à Âródmieà Âcie Poà Âudniowe) division, but remains an independent neighbourhood in its own right.